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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" \u2014\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2014\n\t\nTeck Hughes at New Low; Wheat\nRallies at Chicago\n\u2014 Pa&e Eleven\nli A I\n:ial  Ll\nVICTORIA I   C\nout\nlHoO\n21 Planes Ready for Start of\nBi& Race Tomorrow\n\u2014Pa_e Nine\nVOLUME II\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-FRIDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 19. 1134\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNCMBBB IU\nBAN CLAMPED DOWN ON NELSON AGAIN\nDecision Reserved in Hearing\nof Qreenwood Murder Charge\nREVEAL TODAY\nIF CASE TO GO\nHIGHER COURT\nCourt-Room Bare as\nPreliminary Is\nCompleted\n10 WITNESSES\nHEARD IN DAY\nCharge Girl Died After\nIllegal Operator)\nPerformed\nBy I. B. CL'RRAN\n(Nelson Dally Newi staff Writer).\nORMNWOOD, B.C., Oct. IB.\u2014In\na court room bare of spectators\nthe crown Thursday unfolded evidence that may or may not aend\nMrs Qrletje Sundquest, middle aged\nDutch resident of Oreenwood to a\nhigher eourt to face a charge of\nmurder. She was accuaed of this\ncrime on Oct. 4 following tbe death\nof Mlaa Veronica Kuva, youthful\nathlete of Orand Forks. It Is alleged\nthat Mlu Kuva died aa the result\nof an illegal operation performed\nupon her by Mrs. Sundquest.\nMagistrate L. D. Dodd of Greenwood preildlng at the preliminary\nhearing, after hearing evidence all\nday,   reserved    Mi    decision   on\n(Continued ttt Page Twelve)\nU.S. Bridge Team Takes the\nLead From British at London\nStanding on 240th Hand Is 73,060 for the\nBritons and 74,050 for the\nU.S. Defenders\nLONDON, Oct. 19 (Friday) (AP).\n\u2014The United Statei bridge team\nitarted a brilliant offensive early today in it! fight to retain possession\nof the Schwab trophy, and at the\nend of the fourth day of play was\nleading the British challengers by\n990 polnta.\nAt the eoncluilon of 240 handi of\na 300-board match, the standings\nwere: United Statei 74,050, England\n73,080.\nThe United Statei team took the\nlead early today for the firit time\nfrom the Britiih challenger!.\nThe American! took the lead on\nthe 230th hand and at the 234th\nhand the standing wai: England 72,-\n240 pint-. United Statei 72,400.\nAfter 222 handi the icore was:\nEngland 70,370, United Statei, \u00ab9,-\n870.\nAfter dinner, except for occasional variation!, both teams were employing the approach-forcing lyi-\nTopped with a game bid by Mri.\nEly Culbertion which netted 820\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nMARQUIS BLAMES CANADA\nTORONTO, Oct 18 (CP)\u2014 The\nMarquis of Lothian today told the\nEmpire club here that recovery ln\nthe United Kingdom is ilowing up\nand claimed it wai hindered by\n\"nefaroui practice! concocted at Ottawa three yeara ago.\"\nThe former eecretary of David\nLloyd George declared, \"Recovery\nwill be realized only when we itlm-\nulate international trade.\" Thli\ncould be done only by liberal policies, he laid.\nLashes for Thug\nVANCOUVER, Oct. is  (CP)\u2014Pour\nyears and 10 lashes waa the severe\neentence meted out to WUUam Eroke\nboxer, hy Magistrate w,\nln  police  court  today\nvlctlon of the assault\nof William Oogorss, October\nRETURNS HIE\nOTW TORK, Oct. 18 (AP)\u2014LewU\nEsposlto. 33. son ot a reputedly well-\nto-do Bronx Junt dealer who had\nbeen missing ilnce Monday night,\nreturned home tonight. He had bees\nwidely sought ln the belief ha wai\nbeing held by kldnippera.\nEsposltlo arrived homt snortly before midnight, apparently In good\nhealth.   \u00ab\nMembers of hli family had per.\nslstently refused to dlacuti his dls-\nMcKav I appearance with police and tbe\nsouth's whereabouts during the laat\nthree 4\u00bbys were aot Immediately\nmada known.\nwuuam Einke i\nW. M. McKav 11\ny, upon  con-   ;\nt and .rottwOj\nKtober 7. |i\nDeath Toll in California\nat Seven; 100 Homes Ruined\nLOS ANGELES. Oct IB (AP)\u2014A\nlet-up wai forecast tonight in the\ntorrential rain* that have beat down\non Los Angeles and iti suburbs for\nthe past 48 houn, claiming one lite,\ncausing at leaet $150,000 in damage,\nand indirectly causing six deaths\nln traffic accidents.\nOne man wai milling. He wai Leo\nD. Dean, 25, who wai in the flood!\npath in the foothills, and fears were\nexpressed that he may have\ndrowned.\nOne body ,hai been recovered,\nthat of Donald Butterworth, 11,\nwho wai swept down a big itorm\ndrain. The child wai found burled\nIn mud. Upward of 100 hornet have\nbeen demolished or burned. Moit\nof them lay In the La Crescents\nand   Montrose  region   lashed  by\nlait New Year'i day floods.\nScorea of automobile! have been\nhopelessly stalled hub-deep in deposit! of mud. Many of them were\nbattered by debris.\nHIGH 8EAS AT NEWPORT\nHigh seas began pounding again\ntoday at Newport beach, but were\napparently concentrating on a spot\nfurther up the coaat than where\nhouses were washed out previously\nBilly Papke Jr., 25, a prue fighter,\nwai taken to a ranger station with\nbadly sprained ankles received\nwhen he ran through rising waters\nrushing down a canyon to reach his\nfamily in a parked automobile.\nPromiie of relief wai leen in the\nweather bureau'! forecait of 'fair\nweather\" for tomorrow.\nTracing    virtually   an  Identical\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nGiven Six Months\nMAYBUYGOLD\nSHANGHAI, Oct. 18 (AP) .-Minister ot Finance H. H. Kung today\n\u2022nld tt li \"highly poaalble\" that\nChina will buy gold from the United Statei. The government took\nsteps to stabilize the Chinese dollar, fluctuating wildly these laat\nfour dayi.\nTbe wild exchange fluctuation!\non the Shanghai market followed\nImposition of an Import tax ot 10\nper cent Intended to halt the outward flow of allver. on which\nChina's currency Is baaed.\nNelson, Midway and\nCranbrook Students\nGet D.B.C. Degrees\nVANCOUVER, Oct 18 (CP)-\nA total of 88 degrees will be conferred at the autumn congregation of the Univenlty of British\nColumbia on October 24, Registrar 8. W. Mathewl announced*\ntoday.\nHarold McArthur, B.A., Nelion\nMargaret Mclntoth, B.A.. Cran-\nbrook.\nJamei Douglas McMynn, B.Sc,\nMidway.\nAPPARENTLY HE DOESN'T\nASK QUESTIONS WHEN HE\nGETS UNEXPECTED CHECK\nKAMLOOPS, B.C., Oct. 18 (CP).\n\u2014J. A. Dowdlng, Kamloopa real\nestata agent, hu been found guUty\nln oounty court here on a charge\nof converting funds to hli own\nuie and haa been sentenced by\nJudge J. A. Calder to six months\nIn Oakalla prison.\nNO BEER FOR KELOWNA\nKELOWNA. B.C., Oct. 18 <CP).-\nKelowna turned down beer-by-the-\nglass ln the plebiscite held here\ntoday. The vote was 813 for and\n888 against, with 20 spoiled bal*\nlot!. Eighty per cent of those eligible voted.\nTHREE-YEAR-OLD   KILLED\nOLIVER, B. C-, Oct. 18 (CP)\u2014ltll\nthree-year-old daughter of Mn. J.\nBork Is dead here from injuries suffered when ihe wai run over by\nttw family car. being backed out of\nthe garage hy Mn. Bork.\nMONTREAL, Oct. 18 (CP)-Can\na man be prosecuted on a charge of\nforging hli own name?\nCharlei Kelly No. 1. was and still\nia agent for a Toronto company.\nCharles Kelly No. 2 is a former\ngovernment employee now on pension.\nBoth have their mail delivered at\nthe general delivery of the Montreal post office. A $7.11 check for\ncommission to Kelly No. 1 went to\nKelly No. 2, who promptly went\nout to a lecond hand itore and\nbought himself a nice new $3 topcoat*, pocketing $4 in change. Kelly\nNo. 2 now faces a forgery charge.\n$150,000 HAUL IN\nHAVANA ROBBERY\nHAVANA, Oct. ie (AP)\u2014Potto* today jailed the dty hall cwhl-fr and\ntwo ol hli assistant* after (our men\narmed with machine guns robbed\ntbe municipal treasury of $ ISO .000.\nDescribing the bandits as fing-\nstern, authorities said they took\nJose Guerra, the cashier, and hla\naides Into custody until their Investigation of the robbery, believed\nto be the biggest in modern Cuban\nhistory, had been completed.\nTWO ARRESTED\nIN ITALY FOR\nASSASSINATION\nDoctor ond 0 Youth\nAre Alleged to\nBe Leaders\nWILL EXTRADITE\nTHEM TO FRANCE\nYoung British Star*\nHunted Down by the\nInternational\nPolice\nTURIN,   Italy,   Oct.    lt    (CP-\nIlavaD\u2014 Hunted   down   by   International police, Dr. Ante Pamilrli\nand Egon Kvaternlk, believed the\nrlngleaden   In   the   anamination\nof King Alexander of Yugoalavla,\nwere   under   arrest   here   tonight\nawaiting extradition to France.\nAnnouncement   of   tha   dramatic\nclimax  to   the   police   Investigation\nof the ManelUe kUlings, extending\nInto all countriea. came only today,\nalthough Pavellch actually waa ar-\n(Contlnued on Page Twelve)\nBRITAIN ML\nSTAND FIRM\nBy HAROLD & BBAMAN\nCopyright   IBM   hr   the   Auoclated\nPress\nLONDON. Oct. 18-Oreat Britain\nstandi with tbe United SUMS,\nPrance and Italy In wanting to continue bule principles of the Washington and London naval treaties, an\nofficial source isld today.\nThat was Britain's reply to Japan's demand that the treaties he\nscrapped ind oth-r meana of limiting navies be aet up.\n\"Japan wanta equality.\" Admiral\nIsoroku Yamamoto, japaneae delegate to trl-power naval talka Stirling here next wetk, aald. He disclosed that he would ask for abolition of the 5-J-S ratio and seek\nlimitation on the global tonnage\nbasis instead.\nAa the BrltUh and united SUtes\ndelegates to the conversations established their first contact, the British\nspokesman aald hla government\nwant! the treaties continued with\nonly relatively minor charges.\nTHRONEASKIS\nDAD IS BURIED\nImpressive Scene as\nThousands Attend\nFuneral\nBELGRADE CROWDS\nHELD BY TROOPS\nMany Arrests; Widow\nand Son Weep\nPitifully\nBy CHARLES M. MEISTER\n(Copyright, 1934, by the\nAuoclated Preu)\nBELGRADE,   Oct.   18   (AP).  -\nYoung  Petar  II  ascended   Yugoslavia's throne for the first time today as hi! father,\nthe murdered\nKing   Alexander,\nwas placed in the\ngrave he himielf\nprepared at Top-\nolo. (I\nA haitlly erect- \u25a0\ned throne was\nprepared for\nPetar in the National cathedral\nwhere hia father's\nbody lay In state,\nand Petar, from\niti height, looked\ndown on the dead king and his\nweeping royal kinsmen.\nNot yet haa the bereaved young\nmonarch, hurried from his quiet\nstudies In England, to rule 16,000,-\nlouthern Slavs,  mounted  the\nKing Petar\nDiphtheria Death and Two\nNew Cases Cause of Action\nFREAK KITTEN DIES WHEN\nMOTHER REFUSES FEED IT\nNORTH DIQHTON, Men, Oet.\n18* (CP).\u2014A kitten, one of \u00ab Utter\nof five, wu born with four eyes,\ntwo notet end two mouths In the\nMt Hope Finishing company here,\naccording to company official!.\nThe kitten wai otherwise normal.\nThe mother refused to feed the\nfreak and It died.\nGausdal Case Found-\nDefinitely to Be\nParalysis\nBAN INCLUDES\nBEER PARLORS\nNov\u00bb Pllbeam, 14-year-old British\nchild film star, Is seen here arriv\ning in New York to attend the pre*\nmlere of her first picture, which\nwill open soon at a New York theater.\nINSULL LOST\n$5610,000\nStockholders Were\nSaddled With It\nIs Charge\nCHICAOO, Oct. 18   (AP).\u2014Samuel\nInsull   was   accused   by   the   U.   B.\ngovernment today of saddling upon\nhla stockholders the \u00bb56.000,000 bill\n,    tor his luckless wsr ln the stock\ngreat golden throne in his father s 4nafket wtth Cyrus Baton, Cleveland\nbig palace. Nor has he put upon his\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nSTILL HUNT\nFi\n(Cpyrlght, 1934, by the\nAuoclated Preu)\nLOUISVILLE, Ky., Oct. 18.-One\ndefinite tr-ce of the trail left by the\ndischarge! lunatic soughtt as the\nkidnapper of Alice Speed Stoll was\nfound today in Springfield, Ohio,\nand countless clues continued to\npour in from other parts of the\ncountry.\nThe car in which Thomas H. Rob-\ninion Jr., the man sought, fled\nfrom an Indianapolis apartment\nwhere Mrs. Stoll was held a prisoner for six days, was found abandoned > Springfield. A $5 bill\ngiven to a rooming house keeper\nwhere he is believed to have stayed\nlast Tuerl y only long enough to\nshave was tu:lied over to police.\nThree people reported they saw a\nman there this morning whom they\nthought was Robinson.\n\"EYEBROW\" MUSTACHES REAL HEALTH\nPROTECTION, U.S. SURGEON DECLARES\nRazor Nick on Upper Lip May\nEasily Lead to Death\nJURY DISACREES IN THE\nNANAIMO CASE\nNANAIMO. B. C, Oct. U (CPl-\nDeliberating for almoat one and three\nquarter! hours thli evening, thc\nJury hearing tha cau of oeorge\nHannay .charged with burglarising\nthe aafe of Oeorge Pearson Salea,\nLtd., failed to reach a verdict and\nwere discharged by Mr. justice Dennis Murphy.\nTwo days ago, a similar deidlock\noccurred In another charge agalnit\nthe  es-polloeman.\nThese charges wlll be traversed to\nthe next aietzei and Hannay wlll be\nrehased on two sureties of tlooo\neach.\nRETURNS FROM \"DEATH\"\nTO SUE FOR A DIVORCE\nTO  RETIRE  DEBENTURES\nNEW YORK, Oct. 18 (AP)-Shell\nUnion Oil company has called for\nretirement on November IB at 102\nand Intereit iti $26,000,000 outstanding S per cent debenture! due in\n1934, lt wu announced today,\nLONDON, Oct. II (CP)\u2014A woman\nwho waa \"luppoied to be dead\"\ncame to life today to sue successfully for divorce from her husband.\nShe Is Mrs. Emily Rodrlgues.\nThe Enoch Arden angle waa reversed ln the case of Mr. and Mrs.\nFrank Rodrlgues who parted lis\nyeirs igo, about a year after their\nmarriage. Thla year Mn. Dodngues\nuw her huiband'a name In th'\npaper and called on him to find\nthat he had married again, believing hla tint wife to be dead. The\nsuit waa undefended.\nBy HOWARD W. BLAKE9LEE\n(Auociited Prau Science Editor)\nBOSTON, Oct. 18 (AP).\u2014An upper-lip health riik that n.ay Justify\nthe \"eyebrow\" mustache as a real\nprotector, wai explained to the\nAmerican College of Surgeon! here\ntonight\nThe facial mechanisms involved\nin thii iltuation and the not infrequently fatal results, were explained in a symposium on infection! by Frederick A. Coller, M.D,\nof Ann Arbor, Mich. A person with\nanything larger than an ordinary\npimple on the upper lip, he said,\nreally ought to be in bed in a hospital because of what might happen.\nInfection of the upper lip  can\nmuch more potentially  dangerr, s ; \u00abun.\nthan similar Infection on the lower     Once there, the infection can kill\nUp. * quickly.\t\ncapitalist.\nInsull surrendered to Eaton, who\nleft hli birthplace, Pu-prash. N.8.,\nto rise to power tn the iteel induitry, aftar a financial alege back\nIn 1930, and promised to pay IM,-\n000.000, according to papen nad\nto the iury which li trying Iniull\nand l\u00ab othera for mail fraud.\nThen, the prosecution uld, tbe\nmanagement of Insull's Corporation\nSecurities company assumed the, da-\nfeat. Mlnutei of a meeting or\nJune 9, 1930, showed a promise\n\"forever to protect\" Insull from\nany lou. This action came from\nthe executive committee of the Corporation Securities company, In*\neluding Insull, hii ion. his brother,\nMartin J. Iniull, and H. L. Stuart.\nMarkets at\na Glance\n(By the Canadian Preu)\nToronto and Montreal: Induitrial\nshare! closed mainly unchanged.\nToronto mines: Lower.\nNew York: Stocks closed lower.\nWinnipeg: Wheat down *>4 to %\nToronto: Bacon hogs off car unchanged at 8.15.\nLondon: Bar silver, copper and\ntin lower; lead and zinc unchanged.\nNew York: Bar allver lower; tin\nand lead higher; line unchanged.\nNew York: Cotton and eugar\nlower; rubber and coffee higher.\nNew York: Canadian dollar up\n1-16 to 1.02 1-16.\n'MONEY-MAKING\" PLAN\nTURNS OUT A DEAD LOSS\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 18 <CP)-Lo\u00ab\nof 1300 In a \"money-making\" scheme\nhas been reported to police here by\nW. Merrln.\nSome time ago a stranger, giving\nhis name as pete Stanchuk, Ingratiated himself to the Merrln family,\naccording to report, producing a\nmachine, he declared a blank piece\nof paper would become currency\nwhen placed ln the affair with a\ngenuine bill.\nPutting 1300 Into It. the family\nwas warned against touching it till\nthe next dty., upon opening, the\nmachine showed only blank paper.\nPolice are Investigating.\nT. A. Love Calls U. B. C. M. Meeting to\nForce a Showdown on Relief Questions\nINDIANS MAY\nGETREPR1EVE\nJudgement on Appeal\nNot Ready by Date\nof Hanging\nVANCOUVER, Oot. 19 (CP)*\u2014A\nreprieve will be granted Richardson.\nEneas and Alex Oeorge, Indian\nbrothen from the Cantford reserve\nnear Merritt, who are under sen\ntence to hang Oct. 36 tor the\nmurder of Dominion Indian Con*\nstable F. B. Glsborne.\nTha reprieve will be aaked for pending the decision of the British Co*\nlumbla court of appeal which la\nhearing the appeal of the Indian!\nagalnit conviction. The court may\ndecide to reserve ite decision until\nlt meeU again in Victoria, Jan. 8.\nContinuing the erown'i ease ln\nthe appeal today Mr. Sloan con\ntended that at oommon law I\npolice officer, making an arres.t, Is\nbound to disclose the reaaon for\ntbe arrest unless the arrested pir*\n\u2022on knows he li a polloe officer.\nIf a peraon, wltb that knowldege,\nkill* tbe policeman, tbe lack ot\nnotice of arrest doee reduce tbe\ncrime from murder to manslaughter.\nFailure to give notloe did not ren*\nder list arrest illegal. Tbe giving\nof noUoa wtl't' condition subsequent to the exercise of a pr-jv^-ii\ncapacity derived, from the 'code.\nSloan aald. Onn the capacity to\narreit la proven, the arrest li pot\ninvalidated, he contended.\nGets Three Yean\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 18 (CP)\u2014Nick\nNovak. It, waa sentenced to three\nyeara in the penitentiary by Magistrate W. M. McKay In police court\ntoday upon pleading guilty to breaking Into a rooming houae, the theft\nof clothing and personal effects, and\naeven other similar charge!.\nEarl Scott, arrested with Novak,\nreceived a alx montha' sentence\nwhen he pleaded guilty to a charge\nof retaining stolen goods.\nFLOOD   STILL  A   MENACE\nBELLA COOLA, B. C, Oct. 18 (CF)\n\u2014Attempt! to blast the Bella Coola.\nriver back Into Iti old course or In\nto i new one have been unsuccessful\nto date, with nveral homes still In*\nnundated. The Hagensborg school Is\nstill Isolated by the courae the nver\nhaa taken down the Mackenzie high-\nway.\nAll Sports, Schools,\nTheaters, Etc.\nSuspended\nWith the diphtheria and poliomyelitis altuatlon taking on a\nmore serious ispect Thuraday, a\nlecond ban on publlo gathering!\nfoes Into effect at Nelion today to\nut Indefinitely.\nA diphtheria death and * definite diagnosis of new diphtheria\nand poliomyelltli casei. In tha'\nopinion of the medical itaff, makea\na complete ban neceuary. An\nepidemic cannot be oonaldered to\nexiit, however, but the iltuation\nli dangeroui and It ll neceuary ta\ntake precaution!.\nEdward Zlnkle, Ymir reildent,\nvictim of diphtheria, wai burled\nat Nelson Thunday and during tha\nday the doctor! definitely dlag-\nnoied the case of Lawrence Gaul-\ndil, 23-year-old Granite road reildent, ai thit of poliomyelltli and\nthe  caie  of 2-year-old   Patricia\nKelly ii diphtheria.\nTo date five poliomyelitli caiea\nhave been Isolated at Nelion. Walter\nMusfelt of  Nelson  wai  the  first\npatient  and  then  followed   Faith\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nMEN REVOLT\nBERLIN, Oct IB (AP).\u2014BtvaB\nIn the rank! of Nazi churchmen\nthemselvea today threatened th\u00ab\nrule of Reichsbishop Ludwig Muel\u00ab\nler and Dr. August Jaeger.\nThe spreading of the rebellion tM\nthe rank! of Chancellor Hitl_.-'a\nfaithful became apparent with tht\nformal protest of the Nazi Chria*\ntlans' leader and attorney, Christian\nKinder.\nKinder expressed lack of confl*\u00bb\ndence in Dr. Jaeger, Prussian com*\nmissioner of Proteitant churchel,\nafter protesting personally to tha\nreichschurch government. He is supported by the powerful Nazi bishops, Friedrlch Coch of Saxony and\nKarl Thorn of Pomerania.\nThe reichschurch supreme council has not escaped the rebellloiia\neplrit. Pastors Christiansen and\nLangmann and Chief Church Councillor Blrnbaum demanded Jaeger'*\nresignation.\nThe commissioner responded by\ndismissing them from office. Rev.\nFritz Engelkc thereupon presented\nhis resignation.\nHitler was reported to be so disappointed In Mueller that he cancelled an audience which had been\narranged for tomorrow.\nMONTREAL JANITOR CLAIMS TO HAVE\nINHERITED $1,500,000 AND A CASTLE\nB. C. Woman Starved\nVANCOUVER, Oet 11 (CP)-\nAn unidentified young woman li\nIn hoipital here, the victim of\nstarvation. Collapsing on a downtown itreet yeiterday evening,\n\u2022hi wai rushed to the Institution\nIn a semi-conscious condition. No\nclue to her Identity hai been\nfound.\nHIS OWN DOC LEADS THE\nFOLICE TO HOME OF MAN\nWHO SHOT COAST WOMEN\nVICTORIA, Oct 18 (CP). - A\nshow-down on the general queatlon\nof relief will be rought by local\ndelegatea of the Union of Britisht-fltunlclpalities with a further load\nColumbia municipalities at a n-r-j ofNtaxcs on land would appear to\nclal session in Vancouver Saturdax be a move forcing the municipali-\nevening. \u25a0 tlei into bankruptcy.\"\nThe meeting wai called by Mayor\nT. A. Love of Grand Forki, president of the union, following reception today of circular letter! from\nE. W. Griffith, admlnlitrator of the\nBritish Columbia department of labor unemployment relief branch,\ndealing with new regulation! replacing the old ayatem of unemployment relief. '\nThe icheme, retroactive from the\nbeginning of the month brought\nviolent protests from Mayor David\nLeemlng and Alderman P. R. Brown,\nchairman ot the finance committee\nof Victoria and Reeve William\nCrouch of Saanich.\n\"FORCING\nBANKRUPTCY\"\nDiscuislng the neceuary imposi\ntion of further burdens on the municipalities, Mayor Leeming sta'ed,\n\"any further attempt to saddle the\nAlderman Brown luggeited elimination of relief altogether, except\nin caiei fo*nerly cared for by Ihe\ncity under the Municipal act ai a\nmeans of forcing a showdown with\nthe governments.\n\"My eounell wlll not Uke the\ncut\" Reeve Crouch said. \"If the\ngovernment persists with It we\nihall throw up our handi and eut\nout relief entirely, or else, I regret to itate we ihall have to pass\nthe cut on to the relief recipients.\"\nThe change in the method of distributing federal govenunent allotments on relief was explained today.\nUnder the former system, municipal relief wai paid for on a\nthree-way basis; one-third by the\nmunicipality; one-third by the province; one-third by the Dominion.\nIn unorganized districts the province -paid half and the Dominion\nhalf.\nSUBSTITUTED GRANT\nTwo months ago the Dominion decided to wipe out the percentige\nbasis and substitute a lump si\/.i\ngrant of $150,000 for all relief in\nthe province,\nThli amount doei not cover the\nDominion'! third ihare In municipalities or hilt-share In unorganized territories. It may be ai much\nai 880,000 or $90,000 a month ihort\nduring thli winter.\nFor the monthi of August and\nSeptember, the provincial treasury\nwill absorb the entire Ion,\nAs from October 1, the munlci-\nSalitiei .nust absorb the loss in their\nistricts, but the actual cay will be\nloaned to them by the province.\nIn unorganized districts the province will nave to absorb the loss.\nThe province will continue lo pay\none-third of municipal relief coiti.\nDIVISION OF GRANT\nDivision of the federal grant of\n$150,000 between the provinces and\nthe municipalitle! will be made on\na proportionate basis on the relative expenditurei of the province\nund municipalities.\nAs an example, if the municipal\nshare of relief cost! in any one\nmonth, based on thc old one-third,\none-third system, would have been\n$100,000 and the province'! ihare\nsay $200,000, the municipalitiei\nwould get one-third of the $150,-\n000 and the province the other two-\nthirds.\nThe total municipal allotment\nwould then be divided according\nto the ratio of expenditure in each\nmunicipality.\nAt a rough estimate, the municipalities as a whole, may have to\nshoulder an extra $20,000 or $50,000\nthis winter due to the change.\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 18 (CPI\u2014Trail-\ned by hla own dog, which led police\nofflcera to hli home, w. C. osrderer\nwas arrested today on a charge of\nInjuring a penon through an unlawful aet.\nThe charge arose out of the\nwounding of Mra. Andrew Runn\nand Mra. L. Copwtake, struck hy\npelleti from a hunter'! ibotgun ln\nthe field! near Boundary road and\nthe B. c. Electrlo railway track\nthla morning.\nWhen the two women were injured, the hunters, apparently unaware of the accident, proceeded on\ntheir way.\nThe unlawful act alleged ln the\ncharge against Gardener la the discharge of firearms within ths city\nlimits.\n49 NEW PHYSICIANS\nOTTAWA. Oct. 18 (CPI\u2014Successfully paaslng the examinations of\nthe medical council of Canada held\nat Montreal and Winnipeg early thla\nmonth, 48 physician!. Including three\nwoman, ire now entitled to registration as practising doctors. Tbey\nmay become licensed ln any prov*\nMe ln Canada.\nAmong lucoessful western candidates an: Thomas Allan Lane Con-\nnold. Vancouver; Richard Warren\nGarner, port Albernl. B. C; John\nLlewellyn Little, Tainan, Formosa,\nJspan.   ,\nSo When  Draft Arrives  for\n$1,125,000 He Sends It\nBack, No Foolin'\n(FLASH)\nLONDON, Oct 18 (CP cable).\n\u2014Enquiries In London tonight re-\nveiled no record of an Inheritance\nof $1,500,000, which a Montreal\njanitor claims he hai Inherited.\nW. Halting! Davli, the Janitor,\nclaimed at Montreal he had Inherited the fortune and Nairn\ncastle. The (\/.ate wai tald to ba\nthat of hli mother.\nMONTREAL, Oct 18 (CP).-W.\nHasting! Davis Is giving up hii Job\nas Janitor of an uptown office building because he claims he hai inherited $1,500,000 and Cairn caitli\nin Scotland.\nToday his wife announced to tha\nworld they had received a draft foi\n$1,125,000, \"but we think there tl\nsome mistake about it so we sent il\nback; it ihould be for $1,500,000.\"\nThe Davises are moving todaj\nfrom their little home in the back\nof the office building where MR\nDavis haa been a janitor for tha\npait seven yeara. They are going ta\nUve with their daughter and son-ln\u00ab\nlaw. who is a plumber.\nMrs. Davis said the matter had\nonly been settled in the last thraa\nweeks.\n\"Mr, Davii cannot go over to ie\u00ab\nabout it The doctor told him tl\nwould be euicide if he did. He'! had\n16 operation! and ao long ago thl\ndoctor put a lamb's kidney in him,\nMr. Davis is 58 and even a motoi\ntrip tires him out. So he cannot (0\nover there.\"\nShe was not sure about the futun\nof the caille but she said they mlghl\nsell it\nAsked what they intended to dl\nwith thc money, Mrs. Davis replied\nihe did not know. \"Perhaps we shall\nbuy a house apd there are a lot ol\npeople we've got lo help.\"\nThe estate wis claimed to be that\nof Davis' mother.\n \u25a0\n\u2014\t\nAOE TWO -i       ii\n;    PRODUCTION OF ASBESTOS\nAsbestos production In June\namounted to 13,719 tons cornpired\nwith 12,690 md 8,938 ln the same\nmonth of 1933 md 1932. Production in the first six months of IBM\nwis 87,888 tons as against 49,880 In\n1933, 55,457 in 1932 tnd. 79,789 in\n1931.\nS$ Salt '*i*\n. V*\n\u2022\u25a0'mS\nENO'S\n\"FRUIT\nSALT\"\n,^ , FOR RESTFUL SLEEP\n\"\u00a9-\"-     \u25a0 Eno relieves indigestion\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels\n\"Finest in the Interior\"\nThe HUME HOTEL\nPHONE 787\nBreakfast 25c to 60c\nLuncheon 35c to 50c-Dinner 35c and 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarters\ntttl Bui Service Nelson B.C. George Benwell, Prop.\nHUMS\u2014V. A. Helse, Cranbrook; c.\nB, Foster, and lamily, Trail; P. B.\nBarratt, A. V. Bossons, T. Nazon,\nMr. and Mrs. Lewis, S. C. Thorpe,\n0. P. Ballentlne, Rt Clarke, J. J.\nMacKay, J. Stott, Vancourer; C. M\nA. Bums, Medicine Hat; W. A.\nArnold, D. J. MaoNell, J. A. Brusaet,\nWinnipeg: E. Nash, Kelowna; F. Wilson, Kaalo; R. 8. Cuotueley, Crawford Bay; W. R. Lawrence, C. A.\nYule,   R.   W.   Oeldrelch,   Pentlcton;\n|Leverty, F. A. Sawtees, Toronto; T. Ij,  m. MacDonald.\n^e Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is Kind\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n124 BAKER ST. PHONE 19 NELSON, B.C\nSAVOY\u2014Mrs. E. Jones, Johnson's\nLthdYig; J. E. Nix, Edmonton; Mr.\nUld Mn. R. Deane. Miss H. Deane,\nYuma, Ariz.: W. R. Green, M. L.\nBroderlck, Mn. George Burkitt,\nJohn W. Corey, Mrs. E. T. Angrig-\nBOn, New Denver; R. Buerge, Nels\nAlpsen, Nakujo; Mr. tnd Mrs. L. L.\nAdtms, Buffalo, N.Y.; H. G. Tupper,\nC. Cook, Calgary; I. R. Mtlcolm,\nGrand Porkt; Mn. C. Htrdy, Mrs.\nE. McKee, Hector McNab, Arrow\nPark; Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Ltryford,\nSpoktne; R. Rym, W. E. Boyd, Mrs.\nRothe, J. M. Birnes, A. Cermichtel,\nD. J. Bonnycirth, E. R. Hall, Vincouver.\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\ntkt  E.  MADDEN\nCompletely   Remodelled\nBot  md  Cold  Wittr\nId  tbe  HEART ot the  City\nNew Orand Hotel\nP.\"L.   KAPAK,  Prep,\nWlf hiy ind Monthly ftitei\nHot  md  Cold  Witer\nSingle too np     Double 11.50 up\nRooms f 10 \u2022 Montb tnd Vp\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon St Phone B87L\nB.   WASSICK\nSPECIAL  MONTHLY  RATES\nGood Comfortable Roomt\nMlnen' Hetd.utrters\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA. LAPOINTE, rrop.\nRooms from Wc te IIM\nMonthly $10 ind up.\nSteam heated and hot and oold\nwater la every room\nCOS Baktr St. Phone 110\nVancouver, B. C, Hotels\nN|WLY \"YbUft VANCOUVER HOME'-       *******\"'\nRENOVATED Du\u00a3fOHll HOtOl     ELEVAT0R\nA. Paterson, late ot Coleman, Alta., Prop,  800 teymourSt.. Vancouvtr\nITRANSPORTATION-Freight and Passenger\nNAY WE HELP PLAN YOUR TRIP ?\nCentral Canadian Greyhound Lines Ltd. wtll gladly send you\ntttractive pictorial booklets and complete Informitlon tbout low\nfires, frequent schedules md other trtvel fetturea of Greyhound\ntervice throughout Americi . . . .from Coast to Coast. Send this\ncoupon todty\u2014there's no obligation.\nPlant tend mt Informitlon on \u2022 trip\nFROM\nCITY\nTO  \t\nNsme   ...\nAdd rm\nCity\t\nCITY\n(PLEASE PRINT)\nProvince\nNELSON - TRAIL - ROSSLAND\nDtlly   Truck\nService\nPhone\nNelson\n77\nFREIGHT LINE\nJ. C. \"SCOTTY\" MU IR. prop.\nPROMPT    EFFICIENT    SERVICE\nAT  ALL TIMES\nLeaving Nelson\ntt 9 a.m.\nPhone\nTrail\n13 or 191\nFREIGHT TRUCKS 1\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILT\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTraU\nPhone\n135\nTRAIL LIVERY CO.\nM. H. MdVOR, Prop..\nNelson\nPhone\n35\nHENDRICKS1 KASLO-NELSON\nMOTOR FREIGHT\nSERVICE\nLEAVING KASl.O AND RETURN-MON.. WED, and TR1.\nLEAVES KASLO 8:45 AM      LEAVES NELSON 11 AM\nNelton Depot\u2014Wllllims' Tnnster, Phone\n108 \u2014 Kaslo, Phone 31\n1       PROMPT   EFFICIENT\nSERVICE\nM'LEAN HITS\nBENNETT GOVT.\nPoints to Increase in\nUnemployment\nSince 1930\nFollowing hli nomination as Liberal candidate in West Kootenay, D.\nD. McLean mide the following\nststement:\n\"I take thlt opportunity of thtnk-\ninc tht citizens of the West Kooteney riding for the confidence they\nhtvt again placed in me through\ntheir respective delegates In choosing me u the Nttlontl Libertl\nfederation standard bearer to' contest this riding upon the behalf of\nthe Dominion Liberal pirty it the\nnext Dominion genenl election.\n\"On July 20, 1930, there were\n13.0M votei ctst durlnt thtt ctm-\nptign tor this constituency, 7899\nfor my hononble colleague and opponent W. S. Esling, M.P., 5938 for\nmyself, and 429 for the granddaddy\nof public endeavor for the East and\nWest Kootenty, A. E. Witts.\n\"Our slogan during the campaign\nof 1930 was 'Principles and policies\nand not personalities' tnd trom the\nremarks after the fight wis over\nWu thlt the campaign wu well\nfought md cleanly fought by the\nLiberal adherents and the Liberal\nparty worken tnd everybody ln\ngeneral.\n\"It is predicted that In the very\nnetr future the electorate of the\nDominion of Cenidt will be asked\nto voice their views through the\nmedium of the billot box as to\nwhether the citizens of the Dominion of Canada, and the population\nof the West Kootenay wish a continuation of the 'Bennett Canadt\nfirst policy' is expounded from the\npublic plitform in 1929-30, wMlctf\nincidentally turned out to be increased unemployment, letting state\nmatters drift along without trying\nto formulate t rtroedy, tnd domination by big Interests u exposed by\nthe 'Stevens price spread parliamentary investigation.'\nIn Calgary on June 12. 1930. the\nHon. Prime Minister R. B. Bennett\nsaid:\n'\"I un convinced thtt unemployment hts now cetsed to be loctl\nand provincial, tnd hts become national ln its Importance. ,\n\" 'This it i new country and there\nis no excuse for unemployment if\ni government does iti duty.\n'\"It will not permit thii country\nwith my voice or vote, ever to bt\ncommitted to the dole system.\n\" 'I will not permit those to share\nln any benefits thlt mty accrue unless they ire willing to work, and\nmy duty Is to provide them with\nwork to do.\n\" There ire greet mtionil works\nthtt mty be undertaken ln times ot\nstress md strain, they will be taken\nsnd I promise thit parliament shall\nformulate a definite plan of permanent relief and that ptrliiment shall\ndeal with this nttlontl prtrolem,\ntnd provide amelioration to order\nthat the next winter the Canadian\npeople may not be facing the crisis\nthat ii upon us without hiving t\nremedy on hind.'\n\"Let ui visualize the conditions\not 19.11 tnd review tbem today. Is\nit my wonder that Hon. J. H. Thomas, dominions secretary in the British cabinet, md t member for the\nBritish houie of commons used the\nword humbug in miking reference\nto Mr. Bennett's propositi it th\u00a3\nEmDire conference in 1930?\n\"Today I wint to rtratnd my supporters of July of 1930 md the\nvoters of the West Kooteniy riding\nthat ln July of 1930 there wen only\n60,000 unemployed in the Dominion\nof Canada, md no slave camps. Today there are it least 700,000 unemployed, according to the government's official returns from the Do-\n THI NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELION, B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER tt. 1934 -\nRadium Ore From (great\nShipped 5000 Miles to\n\t\nBear Lake Is\nthe Refinery\nProspector Discovered\nRich Deposit by\nChance\nHOW TO BRING OUT\nORE WAS PROBLEM\nLittle More Than a\nPound of Radium\nin World\nBy CHARLES ROSS, JR.\nCentral Pren Canadian Writer,\nPORT HOPE, Ont, Oct. la-A\nsmall refinery in this little town\ncompletes the lut stage ln the romantic story of the tint radium production within the empire. Enough\nridium is refined here to potentially\ntake care of the needs of the entice\nempire for maijy decades to come.\nBehind this refinery lies a itory\not prospectors, engineers, tirmen.\ngeologists, dog teams, trcttc pioneers, all in a search more romantic\nthan tbe age-long scanh tor gold,\nmd more startling of achievement.\nDiscovery of pitchblende-carrying radium In unheard of quantities startled the world in 1930, when\nGilbert LaBlne, veteran Canadian\nprospector and geologist, led his\nhalf-frozen, snowblind, prospector-\ncompanion, Charles St. Piul, into\nthe now ftmous Echo Bty, on the\neistern shone of Greet Bear Like,\nwithin the Arctic Circle. While\nSL Piul rested his eyet in his\n\u2022gony, Liblne mtde soma excursions into the snow fields behind\nctmp tnd in  i wind-swept  spot\nPounced upon t hetvy, bltck ort.\nltchblende, he concluded. He was\nnot sure. St. Ptul would confirm\nhii find md so Liblne wilted in\nfevered expectation for the sick\nmtn's * tytt to mtnd. St. Piul\ncrewled out to see the deposit when\nht wu tbit. U wu indeed pitch*\nblende\u2014but wu it radio-active?\nStmolei of the ore were flown\nbtck fifteen hundred mllei to civilization, claims were staked, tnd\nthe Brett diicovery electrified thc\nworld.\nINACCESSIBLE COUNTRY\n\"Radium in the Arctic!\" But\nhow to bring it to the world through\n1500 miles of virtually inaccessible\nArctic wtsti! Airplanes could make\nthe Journey In eight to 12 hours.\nBut could not take out sufficient\non to mike such trinsportstlon\neconomical. By canoe end icow,\nminy portages, tnd fierce Arctic md\nsub-Arctic storms must be overcome. The litter route Ity west\necross Great Bttr Like on the Arctic Circle, and down Greet Betr\nriver to the mighty Mackenzie rlv\ner, for a long struggle against cur*\nrent, past Fort Simpson to Great\nSlave Like, icross thli vast, turbulent inltnd tea to the Great Slave\nriver, with tgtln tn upstream haul\nto Lake Athabasca and via the Athabasca river to Fort McMurray and\nthe rail head. Hence to Edmonton\nminion buretu ot statistics (more\nthan 10 timet es mmy) and in every\nprovince of the Dominion 20 cent\n\u2022 day camps under tht tedertl deptrtment ot national defence law\nunder the Dominion act of law,\norder and good government, end according to the pnai reporti through\nout the country from different\ndailies arrests, investigations, and\ngrafting is rampant, ind the ex\nploitttion of the plight of the un*\nemployed tnd the unfortunte work-\nless workers ot the country ii genenl, together with sweat shops\nprevalent, unfair business practises,\nmd destitute ranchers and farmers.\nIf it be the wish of the electorate\nof the West Kootenay people thit\nthty v.\/'i t continuation ot tne present policies, then their frtnehise\nexercised on polling day will tell,\nmd should they rebel against these\npresent conditions and Dominion\ngovernmental policies, tnd I hive\nthe honor to be the representative\nfor the citizens of the Weit Kooteniy\nconstituency in the houie ot commons it Otttwi, then I promise to\nfaithfully ttrvt etch tnd every Individual citizen to the best of my\nhumble ability, to honor md nipect\nthe confidence they hive expressed\nin rot, to it ill times work tor the\ninterests of my riding, irrespective\nof ptrty ties, ind should it be your\nwith to plice the Implicit confidence in me. thit you nave placed\nin W. K: Esling, M.P. for thlt list\n10 yeirs, then I sincerely hope when\nthe time comes for me tc step down\nfrom public life tbrough the efforts\nof your ballot, then I sincerely hope\nthat I will leave public life with\ntht love and iffection which the\ncitizens of the Wut Kootenty hive\nNow\nOpen!\nSPECIAL\nPRICES\nFRIDAY\nSATURDAY\nTWO PANTS\nMad* up In fine wer-\niteds. Hsnd finished\nclothing, at s truly remarkable price.\n$25.00\nCome and\nSeel\nCharles Morris\n511 Baker St.\nPhone 147\nHARB1NS0N WILL\nJUMETOUITRY\nFormer Nelsonite to Officiate\nat Show Here in\nNovember\nPlant (sr tht Ntlion poultry ihow\nto be htld in Nelson tbout tht middle of November tre proceeding\nrtpidly, teeording to A. Willich. Y.\n3. Harbinson. t former Nelsonite,\nbut now of Fernie, will be thl Judge\nfor tht thow.\nThlt wlll be tht first poultry thow\nheld ln Ntlson since UM.\nLARGE SILVER BULLION\n\u2022 EXPORT IN AUOU8T\nThe silver bullion export of August wu 1,037,173 ounces vtlued tt\n(477,115, compared with 655,513 it\n1253.338 i year ago. The qumtltiet\nwere distributed u follows: United\nKingdom $272,658, United States\n3129,459, British Indii 375,000.\nCanada ll now tht chief produoer ef radium for thl British\nEmpire, tnd mty, If til gou well,\nreplace the Belgian Congo u\nworld'i greatest producer. Already\nthe ndlum mlnu In Qrtit Bear\nLike htve broken the monopoly\nheld by the Belgian mini. Tht\nlayout shows Marcel Pochon,\nehamlst-ln-ohlef of the Eldorado\nMines, whioh has developed radium In Canada ind hit produced\nalready men thin flvt grams of\ntht precious radit-tttlvt metal.\nPochon Is ont ef tht world'i foremost rtJIum experts. Alio ihown\nIt tht intrant! to ont ef tht radium mines In thl Grest Bttr\nLike region of northern Alberta,\nby nil md on to eastern Cinida.\nnttrly five thousand miles in ill.\nPractically every pound of pitchblende finding itt wty to the present Port Hope ndlum laboratories\nmakes this long, bitter voyage.\nPreliminary refining Is accomplished on the property, during three\nsummer months, with machinery\nflown In piece by piece tnd is-\nsembled there. Htrdy courageous\nrlvermen haul md piddle the ore\nin bigs to the Mackenzie river scows,\nFunds for the venture ire sup-\nElled   by   Eldorado   Gold   Mines\ntd., i compmy controlled within\nthe empire.\nIn the Toronto office of this compmy, Marcel Pochon, one of the\nworlds great ridium experts and\nchemist-ln-chief to the company,\noutlined the background of this\nstruggle for the world's most pre\ncious substance.\n\"It is a struggle, but for magnificent endi,\" laid Mr. Pochon.\n\"Our plant wis constructed in the\nwinter of 1932-33 md was in operation In January, 1933. The first\nradium wts produced in May 193)3\u2014\nlust thrtt years ifter the original Arctic discovery ot Liblne, md\nt feat of speed all on its own.\nONLY POUND IN WORLD\n\"Not only had the special mi*\nchlnery for refining to be brought\noverseas, but it hid to be specially\nadipted to extraction not only of\nridium, but of silver, which is\npresent ln Itrge qumtitlei ln the\npitchblend. This process hu been\nsuccessfully developed in Port Hope\nfor the first time in history. Otherwise the process is the stmt ts thtt\nin the Belgian Congo tnd else*\nwhere,\"\nPochon's story of the drtmttlc\nstruggles Undergone to bring the\nore to the refinery strikingly highlighted the finel result.\nTo date we have produced five\nmd one halt grams of radium!\" he\nsaid proudly.\n\"Five md a htlf grams.\" The\nwriter mtde i hurried mental\nsearch md recalled a school-learnt\ntable showing there to be 480 grams\nin t pound. \"How much ndlum\nis there in the world todiy?\" I\ncountered.\n\"A friction more than \u25a0 pound,1\nwis tho reply. \"Thit Is ill.\"\n\"And the cost ptr gram?\" \"Fifty\nthousand dollars to $70,000.\"\nThe pitchblende from Great Bear\nlake shows probably the highest\nridium content of my tuch ore\nknown to exist, yet it took tlxty\nthree tons ot laboriously-transport*\nso frequently expressed toward our\npresent sitting member.\n\"Owing to Mr. Etllng's serious\nillness of lut fill and his hetlth\nbretking down (md I miy ttttt\nhere thlt I am vtry pleued to learn\nthlt he his fully'recovered, end Join\nwith you all, in your prayen for\nhis continued good health) it would\nnot be fair or gentlemanly to criticise his actions in voting with the\nBennett policies' during his presence in the house of commons. This\nI will leave to the silent vote md\nthe expression of the citizens concerned, but during my campaign I\nwill propound and expose the ineffective policies formulated and promulgated by the Conservative Darty.\n\"Once again I wish to thank Ihe\ncitl\u00abens of the Wut Kooteniy for\ntheir loyal cooperation and sunnort\nln the past, especially the officers\nand members ot the different\nLiberal locals and organizations\nthroughout the riding.\"\n\"It wlll be my ambition to try\nmd visit every city, town, village,\nhamlet and settlement ind place,\nin the constituency before election\ndty in order thtt I cm come in personal contact with vou all. to become acquainted and taAinderstand\nyour local conditions md requirements, to propound your Ideas\nshould the occasion arise upon the\nfloor of the houtt of common!, to\nbe your public servant, in the terms\nthlt public offiet mains, to protect\nyour individual interests it ill times,\nto try md mlkt conditions more^\ncomlortable tnd agrteible for thfj\nworking masses and toilirs of md\nln enterprises of our country ind\nthe Dominion, ind If I cm accomplish some of these things ind alleviate the suffering which mtny of\nyour people ire now undergoing,\ntnd betnng with very little com-\nplaint, then I will uy that my efforts upon the behalf of the citizens as a public servant ot yours\nhu not sltogether been lost.\"\ned ore to product then ttw tiny\npinhtidi of the precious substance.\nAt thtt they neirly loit IL\nOnly t limited number of oltlms\nl season may be staked on government ruling. Therefore, rich as the\noriginal claim site appeared to be,\nLiblne md SL Paul slaked only two\ninitial clslms at Echo Bay,\nRIVALS ON CLAIM\nThey left Echo Bsy ind pushed\non, still prospecting, dragging their\nsleds across the ice of the lake,\nkeeping their own counsel about\npitchblend* and silver. By tht\ntime supplies orrlved to refit them\nafter their long full winter sojourn,\nthe lake was alive with copper prospectors. They became desperately\nuneasy about their claim, in July\nsalvation arrived in form of a\ntree-lance pilot and an airplane,\nwhich they promptly hired for the\nJourney back to Echo Bay.\nAs they poised ln mid-sir pn\nlimintry to the ltndlng on the\nwaters of tht bty, their hetrti\nilmost stopped beating. From <he\nvery site of the find on which\nthey hsd staked only the two smell\nclaims, arose the smoke of \u25a0 rivt]\nctmp fire.\n\"We're sunk!\" exclaimed LaBlne.\nVery h I rtlly now they wished\nthey hid staked the full cltlm\nwhen opportunity htd faced them.\nBut the prospecting ptrty did net\nstem to be In the high spirits expected of men who sit over t vut\nfortune in metal. They teemed de-\nressed. \"Nothing here' their spokesman said, \"We're pushing on.\nThey hid failed to recognize\npitchblend. and regarded illver is\nsmtll potatoes when faced with\nore transportation from the Arctic.\nTo Lablne's Incredulous delight\nthe rival crew pused on. Liblne\nand St. Fiul staked eight more\nclaims.\nMany Nelsonites\nVisit Ainsworth\nR.  Beatty and Allan Harper\nCo by Launch and Take\nHike in District\nAINSWORTH, Oct. 18.\u2014The fine\nday on Sunday wis no doubt responsible for the large number of\nvisitors to the hot springs. A number of Nelsonites were noticed\namong those it the swimming pool.\nR. Christian of Kelowna wis t\nvisitor to Alnsworth md wu i\nguest st the Silver Ledge Inn.\nMr. end Mrs. C. E. Shitten of\nTrail were guesti at tho Silver\nLedge inn.\nR. Beatty ind Allen Harper of\nNelson occupied one ot the cottages\nat the hot springs for a few diys.\nThey came in by launch and made\nvariom tripi to places of interest\nalong the lake as wtll as hikes up\nthe mountains md visits to tht mines\naround here.\nJ. Lamath and Mike Connelly are\noccupying cottages ot the hot\nsprings. Mr. Connelly who was I\npatient in the Kooteniy Like General hospital is much improved.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Harrop and daughters Misses Muriel md Jessie Htrrop\nof Hirrop tnd their son Herbert\nHarrop of Nelson were viiltort here\nSundty.\nMr. md Mn. Guy Browell ol\nNelson were it the swimming pool\nSundty.\nMr. md Mn W. Foster of Ntlson tnd son wtrt it the hot springs\nSundiy.\nA number of Alnsworth people\nwere visitors to Nelson Siturdiy.\nAmong them were Mr. md Mrs. R.\nSherraden, Mrt. A. Ragotte. Mist\nE. Truseott, Miss Ann Htllabow\nand Alex Hallabow.\nC. E. Harmtn vlalted Roitlind\nSaturdax. '\nMr. Ealet of Nelton who hu been\nt guest it the Silver Ledge inn\nhes returned home.\nMn. J. McCtllum, Wtlcome Inn\nhtd ti her guetti Sundty, Mr. McCtllum md Morley Levick of Tnll\nalso Mrs. George McPherson and\nMalcolm McPherson md Miss Marjory Brown of Nelson. Mn. Levick\nand baby Findley who have bten\nhere ttaylng with Mn. McCallum,\nreturned home to Trail wltli the\nparty.\nHonored by\nFellows\nC. A. COTTERELL\nIn charge of C.P.R. operations\nin B.C. llnee 1925, C. A. Cotterell\nwu honored by employees tnd\noffloen of the B.C. district it t\ncomplimentary dinner It Hottl\nVtncouvtr Wednetdty evening on\ntht occasion of hit elevation to\ntht pott of assistant general manager. Employees of ill branches\nof C.P.R. tervlcet In B.C., to tht\nnumbtr of mort thin 600, gathered for tht dlnntr.\nScientists tstlmite tbat tha bottom of Oreat Bait Uke\u2014Utjh'a\n\"dead sea\"\u2014la lined wtth 400,000,000\ntons of Mlt.\nVnusual Values\nat\nWATSON'S\nSHOE\nSALE\nMen's Dreu M QC\nShoes as low it**t.-l'O\nMtn's Work #4 AC\nShots as lew it**-..-.*)\nWomen't   Dren   Pumps.\nTltt and Straps\nas low as ....\nMinei' Slippers and Oxfords\u2014SIhs\n11 to 2....\nChildren's Slippers snd\nOxfordi\u2014Siist  (M 7fi\n8 to 10'\/\u00bb ...   -Jl.lO\nChildren's Slippers and\nOxfords\u2014Sistt <M CQ\n5 to 7'\/i   .... tpl.OO\nReal Bargains\nFor AU\nTerms: Cash\nWATSON\nSHOE\nCO., LTD.\n403 Isker St\nQuality Contid-ared, Our\nPrices Are Always tht\nLowest.\nOne lamp cant fill\ntwo sockets\nTHERE are throe things to do\nwhen a lamp burns out: do without\nthe light, rob another socket, or\nhurry to the store.\nThe way to avoid all three troubles\nis to keep e carton of Laco Mazda\nLamps in your house so that replacements can be made in \u2022\nminute.\nAnd besides this convenience\nLaco Mazda Lamps cost less when\nbought by the carton. n\nyl^jgA \/MAZDA LAMPlTI\nW   A CANADIAN MADS PRODUCT\nSold by\nJ. F. Cosies\nf Ki\\MVL* Sag Cmttjtmnj.\nINCOftFORATIO SND MAT MTO\n \t\n-THE NEL&N DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER It. 1934-\nto|\n-PA8E THREE\nOne and Two\nTrouser Suits\n$19-50\nWe now have a\ncomplete stock\nof these quality\nsuits for you to\nselect your fall\nand winter suits\nfrom. All the new\nfabrics are here\nin authentic\nstyles. Models\nfor all men. Sizes\n35 to 46.\nAll-Wool\nDRESS\nSOCKS\nA fine quality all wool\nribbed dress sock. Light\nor dark grey and heather\nshades. Sizes 10 to ltft.\nWorth 59c pair. QQ*\u00a3\nPAIR    OV\nA SUPREME VALUE IN WINTER OVERCOATS\nThese coats are hard to beat at any price. They're styled in\nguard and slip-on  models  in  silver-tones,  checks,  greys  and O\nbrowns for your selection. T\nBAY  DAYS   \t\n15-95\nNEW FELT\nHATS\nNew felt hats in flecks\nand plain shades, snap,\nroll or bound\nbrims.  EACH\n$3.95\nWORK SHIRTS\nHere's extra value in tough work shirts.\nCoat style.\nBAY DAYS, EACH ..*\t\nTwo pockets.\n Sf\nWOOL WINDBREAKERS\nHere is a really high quality garment knit to fit_ perfectly from the best woolen yarns. Made with\nslash pockets  \t\n$535\nMEN'S COMBINATIONS if  u\nMen's medium weight winter combinations with long legs and sleeves. \u25bc B \u2022 ****\nPlum and white shades.    PAIR\nWOOL WORK SOCKS\nMen's all wool work socks in a good\nweight, one full size.\n3 PAIRS \t\nWORK GLOVES\nAnother shipment of these high quality\nwork gloves in cuff or gauntlet OQ-*\nstyle. PAIR   OJ\nWORK  PANTS\nA new shipment, just in, of wdrk pants in blue, grey and khaki. Well    fl\u00bb1 f Q\nmade and full cut. PAIR  \u2022pl.JJ\n1\t\nFLANNELETTE PYJAMAS\nMen's Flannelette  Pyjamas,  Full Cut for Comfort, Silk Frogs  81.40\nBoys' Flannelette Pyjamas   $1.00\nMen's Night,Shirts ,   * 100\nMEN'S DRESS-GLOVES\nMen's brown capeskin gloves with dome\nfastener and fleece lined. This  is a real ft tf    aq\nvalue. ^ M 'ww\nBAY DAYS, PAIR        \u2014\nMEN'S CARDIGAN SWEATERS\nPossibly your last chance to buy one of\nthese  fine wool  coat sweaters  at  this\nprice. Heather shades.\nBAY DAYS \t\n$1.W\nHumphrey's All Wool Pants\nCarrs Mackinaws -\t\nDoeskin Windbreakers\t\nHeavy Jumbo Sweaters\t\nHeavy Wool Work Shirts\t\nNew Turtle Neck Sweaters\t\n$3.95\n$5.95\n$2.50\n$2.95\n$1.95\n$2.95\nWOMEN'S ORTHOPOEDIC SHOES\nA specially constructed shoe in black or brown kid oxfords, made in\na combination fitting last and a built-in arch support. Sizes in AA to E.\nBAY DAYS \t\n$\u00a3.oo\n5\nYOUNG MEN'S DANCING OXFORDS\nA dressy black calf balmoral cut oxford with a plain vamp, solid\nleather heel, light weight Goodyear welted sole, made especially for &\/_>* QQ\ncombined dancing and street wear. *^*\nBAY DAYS \t\n5\nMEN'S LECKIES WORK BOOTS\nGet a B. C. product by buying a Leckie Work Boot.    6-in. top\nBlack, oil grain, blucher front. Plain vamp with solid\nleather sewn and nailed sole.\n$4.50\n10-in. top\n$6.95\nGROWING GIRLS' SHOES\nJust In\nA complete line of growing girls' black and brown calf, blucher and\nbalmoral cut oxfords, also a special black Scotch grain shoe in all *L*_%   QC\nsizes and all fittings. Sizes 4 to 8 in A B C and D fitting. \u25bc ^\nBAY DAYS   \u00abF\n8:30 Special\nWHITE FLANNELETTE\nSHEETS\nonly,  size  70x90.  Reg.  $2.75\nCHECK TEA TOWELS\nLarge size cotton tea towels, green and gold check\npattern. A limited quantity. 1 P<*\nSPECIALLY PRICED, EACH\nIRISH LINEN GLASS TOWELS\nA remarkable value for this event. Good size with\nlettered borders. Red only. QP<>\nBAY DAYS, 2 FOR , JJ\nFRILLED CURTAIN SPECIAL\nNever such value as these. Nice quality, well finished,\nand full lengths. Frills of rose, blue, gold, green or\norchid. Complete with tie-backs. i_ti\nBAY DAY, SET  -VJ\nBABY BLANKET SPECIAL\n24 only, cozy baby blankets, size 30x40. Nursery designs in blue or pink. C*\\*r\nBAY DAY PRICE, EACH  J if\nENGLISH SHADOW CLOTH\n45-inch shadow cloth in rich colors, new designs. All\nnew goods. Specially priced for Q(\\\u00a3\nBAY DAYS, YARD  OS\nHEAVY ENGLISH PILLOW SLIPS\n42-inch slips of superior quality very hard wearing\nand splendid weight. (M AA\nBAY DAYS, 3 FOR <pl.UU\nNEW PRINT VALUE\nNew 1935 patterns in a new quality print. Beautiful\npatterns and all guaranteed colors. 36 inches OP-?\nwide. BAY DAYS, YARD   Ltd\nIRISH LINEN CLOTHS\nRainbow bordered crash cloths in a 50x50 size. A\nreal value leader.   . QQ-;'\nBAY DAYS, EACH    W\n\"GREEN BOND\" SHEETS\nThese good weight and even weave sheets have that\nextra size so much desired. 81x100. No filling. A\nremarkable HBC value. d\u00bb0 7C\nBAY DAYS, PAIR  tfL.ld\nSALE OF PONGEE SILK\nThis makes splendid curtains and drapes, and a favorite for children's wear and lingerie. 29 inches wide.\nEven and smooth weave. Ordinarily sold at\n49c yard. BAY DAY, 3 YARDS FOR\t\n$1.00\nWHITE SHEET SPECIAL\nWabasso sheets ip a 72x90 size.  Nice weight and\nfree from dressing. Come early for these, just a few\nBAY DAY, EACH $1.00\nHBC PURE FOOD SPECIALS\n193\u2014PHONES\u2014194\nButter\u2014Kuby Creek or\nHudsonia; per lb\t\nSunlight Soap\u2014\nPer carton \t\nLux Flakes\u2014\nLarge pkg\t\nPrlnceH Soap Flakes-\nLarge pkg.     \t\nLucerne Beaut\/ Toilet\nSoap\u201412 cakes \t\n260\n180\n210\n170\n390\nFORT GARRY TEA\n\u2014Per Ib. \t\nFORT GARRY\nCOFFEE\u20141-lb. tin\nDemonstrated Saturday only\n650\n500\nOrange   Marmalade\u2014\nAylmer; 4-lb. tin ....\nNelton  Brand Jam\u2014\nAU varieties; 4-lb. tin\nBee Ce* Tomatoes\u2014\nChoice, 2s tall; 3 tins\nBlack  Label Pineapple\n\u2014Sliced, 2s; per tto V\nBlack  Label Pineapple\n\u2014Cubes, 2s; per tin\nPork A Beans\u2014Aylmer,\n2s; 3 tins \t\n490\n490\n250\n150\n170\n250\nSPECIALS FROM THE\nHARDWARE DEPT.\nGalvanized Wash Boilers, eech . $1.25)\n30\u201460 Watt Lamps, each 15<!\n$1.00 Dust Mops\u2014each 69-0\nC. A B. Ketchup\u2014\n14-oz. bottle      \t\nButter Nut Peanut\nButter-\u20144s; per tin .\nRlleyi Toffee\u2014\nPer lb\t\nChocolate Peppermint\nPattlet\u2014Per lb\t\nKing Oscar Sardines\u2014\n2 tins    \t\nTuna Flah\u2014Fancy\nwhite, \"As; per tin \t\nKellogg's All-Bran\u2014\nLarge pkg\t\nShredded Wheat\u2014\nPer pkg\t\nRed River Breakfast\nCereal\u2014Per pkg.\nRed Arrow Graham\nWafer-t-1-lb. pkg\t\nChristie's Snowflake\n8odat\u2014Large pkg.\nBananas\u2014\n2 lbs\t\nHead Lettuce-\nEach   *\t\nCauliflower\u2014\nPer lb\t\n\"Fort Garry\" Tea and Coffee\nAlways Leadsl\n190\n530\n500\n290\n250\n190\n230\n100\n170\n190\n180\n230\n50\n100\n\u25a0titetotff\nGIRDLES and\nCORSELETTES\nInexpensive garments that\nwill give good support,\nlightly boned, and finished with four hose supporters.\n\u00bb1\n.OO\nMore\nSunday\nNite\nDresses\n$3.95\nEvery wardrobe should\nboast of at least one of\nthese rough crepe dresses, for going places.\nMany delightful styles to\nchoose from in leading\ncolors.\nFur-Trimmed Coats\nDon't be caught unawares by Old Man Winter, when we\nhave coats that carry style as well as comfort for so little\nmoney all this season's new materials and are lavishly trimmed O\nwith fur collars and cuffs. Strong lining and warmly interlined. \u2122\nPopular dark shades. Bay Days\u2014\nJUMBO KNIT TOQUES\nRegular 49c\nChildren will welcome these, when the\ncold weather arrives, shades are scarlet,\ntan and white. BAY DAYS\t\n25\n8:30 SPECIAL\nChildren's Foil Weight Bloomers\nMothers! This being a special purchase, it will be to\nyour advantage to stock up now. Natural and cream\nshades. Sizes 2 to 4 years. 1 ft*\n1 HOUR ONLY, PAIR    IU\nNEW VELVET TURBANS\nFlattering models of silk velvet, that\nwill   lend  smartness   to  any  costume. -04%   gttm\nShades are wine, green, blue, brown and \u25bc _\u00a3*95\nblack.  BAY DAYS        *****\nKIDDIES'\n3-PIECE\nWOOL SUITS\nReg. $2.95\nWonderful value in these\nwooly sets, consisting of\ncoat, sweater, leggings\nand cap to match. Shades\nare tan, blue and green.\nSizes 1 to 3 years.\nBAY DAYS\u2014\n%2M\nHosiery! Hosiery!\nHosiery!\nA wonderful saving on these service weight pure silk full-\nfashioned  hosiery.   Nice   range  of  colors  to    .\nchoose from. All sizes in stock. These are sub- djL^_\\_\\\nstandards of $1.50 lines.\nBAY DAYS, PAIR ....\nSALE OF\n\"Perfect\" Silk Hosiery\nRegular $1.00\n300 pairs, first quality, full-fashioned silk hosiery. A beautiful hose, splendid for general wear, in semi-\nservice and chiffon weight. Choose from season's fashionable shades. Sizes 8Vi to lOVi.\nBAY DAYS, PAIR \t\n79'\nWomen's Celanese Hosiery\nA practical everyday hose. Invest in a supply of\nthese af this low price. Good range of colors.\nSizes SVi to 10Vz.\nBAY DAYS, PAIR \t\n29*\nWOMEN'S SUEDE FABRIC GLOVES\nSmart new styles, gloves to suit every type of costume. In plain slip-on\nor novelty stitched. Fashionable shades. Sizes 6 to 7Vi.\nBAY DAYS, PAIR \t\n5*\nNEW NECKWEAR\nA large assortment of\nnew  neckwear.  All   new\nstyles  in  crepes,   piques,\nsatins and celanese.\nBAY DAYS,  EACH\n39\nNEW SILK SCARVES\nFor the bright note of your costume.  Full  length\n. scarves to give your suit or coat its fin$l bit of dash.\nNice assortment to choose from. CM\nBAY DAYS, EACH  03\nNEW BRIDGE CLOTHS\nMade of fine quality rubber, finished with narrow frill\nor self color. Colors, red, green, blue and orange. tAt>\nBAY DAYS, EACH  JU\nWOMEN'S SILK and\nWOOL ANKLETS\nNew shipment just in of women's silk\nand wool ankle socks, in shades of\nsand, jockey, nassau, and white. Sizes\nSVi to 10.\nBAY DAYS, PAIR\n.*.-:\u25a0-.:<\u25a0.\u25a0:\u25a0 \u25a0: *-:\u25a0_ \u25a0...:\u25a0\nMJMKSL\n.JNCOIIPO^ATED $.\u00ab*\u25a0 WAY,)\u00ab.3i3i\nSPECIALS FROM\nTOILETRIES  DEPARTMENT\nAspirins, 100s   98^\nEno's Salts   79^\nColgate's Tooth Past  21\u00ab>\nPhillip's Magnesia   391\nCream of Olives   39\u00a3\nJergen's Lotion   43\u00a3\nPond's V. and C. Cream  39\u00a3\nKruschen Salts, giant size   69^\nJueen's Health Salts  39e>\nMujol    7~tp\nHBC Malt and C. L. Oil  7dt*\nPebeco, Pepsodent and Ipana\nTooth Paste   39p\n\u2022\n PAOE FOUR -\n-THI NELSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. l.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 19. 1SJ4-\nMEIMH9\nMiss M. Bradshaw Is\nBride of Arnold\nKempthome\nSOOTH SLOCAN, B.C., Oct. 18.-\nThe marriage ot Mlaa Mary Bradahaw to Arnold Kempthome was\nsolemnized at tbt church ot Redeem-\ntt_, Nelson, Tueaday, Oct. lt, Rev.\nW. J. Silverwood officiating.\nThe weddint waa quietly celebrated, only the immediate relatives\n' of tte family being present, Hilliam\nH. Bradshaw, the brides father, Miss\n. Meg. Brabshaw, sister, Mr. and Mrs.\nT. A. Weildonand Miss Edith Brad-\nthaw, uncles and aunts.\nMr. and Mra. Arnold Kempthome\nhtve left for Vancouver Island.\nThey will make their home at Duncan.\nA social day of the Badminton\nOub al No 3 Plant had for hostesses in the afternoon Mrs. Alex F.\nMcDonald, and in the evening Mrs.\nW. A. McCabe and Mrs. W. Walk-\nleSr.\nYAHK RESIDENT\nVISITS COLEMAN\nYAHK Oct 18-Henry Mateon.\nMr. and Mra. H. Moore and Mrs.\nEdward Maier were motorists to\nCranbrook this week.\nF. A. Lazenby wu a visitor at\nColeman, returning Wedneaday.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Vaas and daughter, and Mrs. McKinnon returned\nto Spokane last week after visiting\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Allan.\nMrs. S. J. McCortney and son\nPaul, Misses Annla McCortney, Evelyn Revans and Joe Brogan were\nvisitors to the latter's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Alex Brogan in Cranbrook Sunday. Ragnor Stun accompanied them to Cranbrook, en\nroute to Canal Flat,\nCyril Harrison and Joe Brogan\nspent a few days in Frank this\nweek.\nC. R. Higgins of Crows Nest spent\na day in town this week en route\nto Creston.\nHenry Matton, Ralph Rlngstad\nand Lela Birch were visitors to\nCranbrook Monday.\nDon Pratt of Femie is spending\nsome time in Yahk.\nHans Wetton spent Tuesday in\nCreston.\nMrs. Tom Elyen and daughter\nwere visiting friends over the week\nend at Canal Flat.\nWhen mosquitoes are to be mounted for scientific study the; are\nkilled bv electrocution beciusa this\nprocess leaves, the 'Wlnts attended.\nAfter All *.\nthere's\nNothing Like\nREAL\nMAYONNAISE\nand now it's at\nthe Lowest Price\nt\nin History\nT\u00abU? ill of ut aa ifford the very finest retl\nmayonnaise in tin country. I mean Beit Fooda\nMayonnaise, of course. For this grand real m-yonn.ii*\nis aow io low la price thtt it actually com no mon\nthta we in uked to pay for substitutes!\nA PRODUCT\nOF B. C\n\u25a0OliniiiuimrinnillB*\nBest Foods\nBast Foods is mada with oalr \u25a0**&*\n24-hour salad oil, (rashly bnkaa\neggi, choio vinegar and imported\nspins. All double-whipped for\nthat marvelous velvcty-smoothnsss.\nAnd, too, Beat Foods is delivered\nto trocen in small shipments so\nthat wa get it delightfully fresh,\nalways!\nBuy\ntu\nPAYS DOCTORS\nRELIEF CASES\nCranbrook Makes a\nNew Deal; Increase\nPower Sales\nCRANBROOK Oct lS-At the\nOctober meeting of the Cranbrook\ncity council, with Mayor Roberts\nand Aldermen Scott, Balment. At*\nridge, Flowers, Little and Collier\npresent there wu further discussion\nof the matter of medical attention\ngiven families on relief. On motion\not Aldermen Little and Balment it\nwas decided that thc council authorize payment to Drs. Green and\nMcKlnnon of the amount ot $1 per\nmonth, per resident family on city\nrelief, this payment to include the\nduties at preaent performed by Dr.\nGreen as medical health officer, the\narrangement to be effective, as from\nJanuary 1, 1934.\nApplication from Albert Larson\nfor transfer ot his hotel licence from\nthe Jap Rooms to the Royal hotel,\nwas read. The transfer was approved.\nAn application from E. W. Pearson\nfor water connection to property\nnear the hospital on the new lake\nroad was recommended by the\nworks committee, provided the users\nadvance cost of material to be refunded in water rates. The application was approved.\nA letter from the Cranbrook\nBrewing company, Ltd., applying\nfor reduction ln water rates, also\nrecommendation from the works\ncommittee that the application be\nnot panted, was read. The recommendation of the works committee\nwas spproved.\nA letter from the conductor of\nthe Cranbrook Symphony orchestra\napplying for a grant of $150 to purchase a bassoon and a viola for\nthe orchestra waa read and Vincent\nFink, who wu present, addressed\nthe council on the matter. After discussion the matter wu beld over\nuntil Mr. Fink could obtain further\ninformation u to wbat terma the\ninstruments could be\/obtained at.\nThe light committee preaented a\nreport showing thtt 22 services were\nconnected and 15 cut otf, leaving t\nnet gain Of teven active services--\nnet gain in active services for the\nyetr to dtt* ia 11.\nIn the Slatervlll* section six polw\nwere reset on varioua parts o! tbe\nsystem. One pole (replacement) and\nOne new anchor and guys wu Installed.\nOne new street light wu Installed\nat the southeast corner Dennis and\nHanson and new secondary wires\nstrung on Clarke avenue, Louis\nand Edwards.\nOn the radio Interference work\n38 man-hours were spent.\nThe consumption waa 73,880 killo-\nwatt hours, against 71,800 killowatt\nhours for August, and 72,453 killowatt hours for September, 1933.\nThe report of the worka department showed in the water report 19\nservice orders were attended to and\nthree leaks repaired. Supply conditions continued satisfactory there\nbeing a surplus run-off of approximately four and a half million gallons per day at the city reservoir.\nThe report ot sewers was disposal\nworks have been visited and cleared,\nsix manhole covers were raised or\nlowered to conform to new street\ngrades. 200 feet of new six-inch\nbranch sewer hM been constructed\non East Garden lane from North\nBaker lane to Kootenay street\u2014\nthis work being done under the unemployment relief works program.\nGrading and gravelling has been\ncarried out on the following streets:\nNorbury avenue, Watt avenue. Han-\neon avenue and raising ot boulevard\non west side of French avenue trom\nKains to center of block 316 to prevent floodlng\u2014a five-foot cinder\nwalk bu been laid on thl latter\nsection to replace worn wooden\nsidewalk.\nGravelling on the above section\nhas not yet been completed owing\nto lack of crushed gravel. Government gravel crusher is now being\ninstalled and gravel to complete\nthese streets will be available next\nweek.\nConstruction of 30-inch concrete\npipe tor section 5 ot the Smith creek\nNEW CENTRAL TOWER AND LIBRARY OF\nUNION THEOLOGICAL COLLEGE OPENED\nGood\t\nHousekeeping\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMenus, Recipes and Hints\nMenu Hint\nBated potatoes -*\nCreamed Tuna Ptsh\nCottage Cheeae Salad\nLemon Pla       Tea\nCream tuna  flab  In  tbe   d<\nboiler, or you may put tt int.    .\nbaking  dish   when  finished,  cover\nwith crumba and brown.\n60101.\n.Jj Best foods\nBEVflKKrill\nToday's Recipes\nCottage Cheese Salad\u2014Minee an\nonion and mix wltb cottage cheese.\nPut In small greased bowl and chill\nWhen ready to serve, turn out on\nplatter and surround witb lettuce\nleaves. Serve wltb Prench dressing\nKBU.Y, DOUGLAS \u00ab: CO. LTD.\nBul-iit****   Diiifibutor,\nFACTS AND FANCIES\nStandard Beelpe for Cream Soops\nThree tablespoons butter, one\ntablespoon minced onion, three\ntableepoona flour, thru eupa milk,\none teaspoon salt, pepper, one and\none-half sups ground or strained\ncooked veketables. Melt butter, add\nonion, and cook one minute, stir\nI In Hour and seasoning and add\nmilk gradually. Stir over tlm until\nemooth snd creamy. Hav* ready\nabout on* and one-hall cups of\nground or strained cooked vegetables, (allied vegetables may be\nused). Add to first mixture. Reheat and add more seasoning lf\nnecessary. A dash ot nutmeg with\noea soup, of cloves with tomato, ot\noelery aalt with potato, of piprlk*\nwith corn, will Improve the flavor.\nMinced parsley ma; be sprinkled on\ntop. Preparation time, ten minutes.\nIf freshly cooked vegetables sre\nused, add the stock In which thsy\nhave been cooked and reduce the\nmilk ln proportion. If tomatoes sre\nuaed, add One teaspoon ot sugar\nsnd one-fourth teaapoon ot aoda\nbefore combining wltb cream asuce.\nWIFE PRESERVERS\nTry this: Make a biscuit dough,\nfit lt into a deep pi* tin. Peel and\nallce a large apple, and arrange th*\nslices over the top of th* dough.\nSprinkle with brown sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg, dot with butter,\nand bak* in a hot oven, 425 degrees, for 30 minutes.\nstorm sewer is continuing it the\nskating rink\u2014460 lineal leet of pipe\nhaving been constructed to date.\nThirty horses wefe impounded\nduring the month, one being sold\nto recover pound expenses, the remainder being released to owners.\nThirty married persons with 81\ndependents and eight single persons received city direct relief to\nthe value ot $751,85 of which the\ncity's share is $250.62, nine persons\nwith 23 dependents -nd four single\npersons were issued provincial government direct relief to the value of\n$228.30. Program of unemployment\nrelief works has been commenced,\n43 men putting in 548 man-days\nwork at a cost ot $1797.55 during\nSeptember, the city's share of cost\nbeing $592.52, bringing up the total\nof the city's share of direct relief\nand relief works to $843.14 for the\nmonth.\nThere were three arrivals and departures at the city airport during\nthe month.\nThree building permits were issued, the estimated value being $375.\nNEW DENVER AID\nHAS A BIG YEAR\n$100 Donited to Hospital Repair Fund; Equipment\nGiven\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Oct. 18.-\nAnnual meeting of the Hospital\nLadies aid was held at the homo ot\nMrs. J. Draier with the president,\nMrs. J. Dil per in the chair.\nTwo new members were enrolled making a total ot 19.\nThe annual report wu read by\nthe secretary and showed that thc\naid hu had a very successful year.\nThey have supplied the hospital\nwith six pair ot sheets, six men's\nnight shirts, three ladiee gowns,\ntwo ptir slippers, baby vests, 10\nyards flannelette, 10 yards unbleached cotton, four hot water\nbottles, one dozen wash cloths, a\n2-burner oil stove and have had a\nlaundry tub Installed. It donated\n$10(1 to the hospital board repair\nfund.\nThe aid had raised money by\nholding 11 whist drives during the\nyear; a miscellaneous shower and\ntea at the hospital; a sewing bee at\nMrs. Thompson's; and from several\ndonations from people in the community. New sheets were made,\nold onea repaired and eeveral pillow cases were made.\nThe balance from the previous\nSear was $209.03 and receipt! for\nie year totalled $174.75. Expenses\nwere $228.69, leaving a balance of\n$155.09.\nThe following officers were elected:\nPresident\u2014Mrs. J. Draper.\nVice President\u2014Mrs. R. Clever.\nSecretary-treasurere \u2014 Mrs. E.\nBeggs.\nBuying committee\u2014Mrs. Angrlgnon and Mrs. J. Irwin.\nPremier  Pattullo  Says  Is\nDuty of Science and Religion to Cooperate\nSewing committee\u2014Mrs. Thomp-\nMrs. C. Vandergrift,\n\u25a0Mrs.\nSmith\nson and Mrs. C.\nVisiting commltte*\nand Mrs. Young.\nAfter the meeting Mrs. Draper\nand Miss Elsie Cechelero served tea.\nThose present were: Mrs. Clever,\nMrs. J. Geer. Mrs. Levy, Mrs. J. Irwin, Mrs. R. Thompson, Mrs. T.'\nFlint, Mrs. J JB. Smith, Mrs. Young,\nMrs. Angrignon, Mrs. H. Gunn, Mrs.\nO. V. White, Mrs. Charles Vandergrift and Mrs. Beggs.\nConfident the \"next\" war will be\nfought it high speed, France and\nItaly are stressing the Importance of\ncooperation between tanks and fast\narmored cars on land, and airplanes.\nTfieSECRfT of DELICIOUS Qj^f\nA good pie brings more compliments than anything elae you can\nbake! Even if you're a beginner\u2014you can make pies that are\nastonishingly line by following these easy St. Charles recipes\u2014crust\nso light and flaky\u2014fillings so smooth and creamy\u2014what pastry!\nBorden's Special Pastry\nIU cups lour.\nU teaspoon baking powder.\nM teaspoon salt.\nM cup shortening.\n2 tablespoons ice wtter.\n2 tablespoons St Charles Milk.\nSift flout and measure. Add baking pow.\nder and salt. Sift again. Cut in shortening.\nBind St Charlea Milk and water. Som*\nflours absorb mor* liquid than others.\nAdd just enough to make mixture slide\ntogether. Roll on slightly (loured board.\n(In mixing and rolling handle u little\n\u2022s possible to insure flaky crust) Makes\non* pi* shell.\nNOTE: For Baked Pi* Shell bak* 15\nminutts In a hot ortn (4)0' F.) or until\ndelicately browned.\nCustard Pic\nIK cups St Charlei Milk.\n1H cups water.\n\u2022\u2666eggs.\nH cup granulated sugar.\nH teaapoon salt\nUnbaked pie crust (9 inch)'.\nGrating of nutmeg.\nBland St. Charlu Milk, water, slightly.\nbeaten tggs, sugar and salt together.\nLine pi* tin with unbaked pie crust\nBuild up fluted edge. Pour in filling.\nSprinkl* with nutmeg. Bake in a hot\noven (400* F.) to set edgt. Decrease\nheat and bake about 40 minutes in\nslow oven (300\u00b0 F.) A knile blade\ninserted will come out clean when\ncustard is done\nVANCOUVER, Oct. IB (CP)-The\nnew central tower end library of\nUnion Theological college on the\nUniversity of British Columbia\ncampus has been officially opened\nby Premier T. D. Pattullo.\nThe premier expressed firm belief in a coming spiritual renaissance, saying that, through sheer\nnecessity, the world is moving toward an enlightened atmosphere.\n\"It will be in** duty .' science and\nreligion to cooperate in order to produce the balanced world order,'' ,.c\ndeclared. \"There it and can be no\nconflict between science and\nligion. The more a man knows the\nuniverse, the more he respects the\npower that made it.\nIMPORTANT ADDITION\n\"This new library will be lm*\nportant addition to the educational\nfacilities of British Columbia. There\nis nothing graver than our responsibility to the youth of this country\nOur duty is to provide education\nand opportunity for them in times\nof stress and turmoil. Union college\nis endeavoring to do its share.\"\nHe congratulated the board of\ngovernors utfon erectio of the additions to the coll:.*;*:.\n\"I wish wc could run the govern\nment of British Columbia on the\nsame terms\u2014free of debt,\" he said.\nThe place of religl n in the national life was stressed by Dr. L. S,\nKllnck, president of .he university,\nwho declared \"the edut. tlont. sys-\ntem of . e present day needs re*\nligion and theological colleges at\nthe university remind students that\nthe church stands for the best religious thought of the day.\"\nTHUfc SPIRITUAL\nOUTLOOK NEEDED\n\"More than a purely intellectJ.il\nculture is needed in the province.\nScience lU:o patriot!-.., is not\nenough. It is too restricted in its\nvision. A true spiritual outlook Is\nalso necessary for a proper measure\nof values. We need young men who\nwill turn disorder > order, uncertainty and weakness into confidence and rower.\"\nRev. J. G. Brown, D.D-, principal\nof Union college, expressed nis\ngratification that the library was\nopened tree of debt,\n\"More young men than ever before are offering themselves for\nthe ministry and, on the campus ol\nthe University of British Columbia,\nthey have unequalled opportunity\nto gain strength and knowledge in\nperfect equality with their fellows,\"\nhe said.\nODLUM AND\nMALKIN OFFICIATE\nPresentation of the new building\nwas made by Brig.-Gen. V. i>. Odium on behalf of the building committee and was accepted by W. H.\nMalkin, chairman of the board of\ngovernors of Union college.\nRev. H. E. Horton, cl.airman of the\nVancouver presbytery and Rev. W.\nBrewing took part In the devotional\nperiod and amon* Lhose on the platform were Rev. W. H. Vance, principal of the Anglican college, members of the board of governors _..id\nsenate of Union college and members of the professional staff.\nThe Women's Educational club,\nVancouver branch, entertained the\nguests after the ceremonies.\nDEBATERS FIND\nLEAGUE TOO WEAK\nCan't Prevent War, Is Decision of Judges at Fernie\nFERNIE, B. C, Oct 18.\u2014Resolved\nthat as it exists today the League\nof Nations is incapable of abolishing war\". This was the question debated by pupils of the Fernie high\nschool at a public meeting Wednesday evening. Supporting the affirmative side of the proposition\nwere Agnes Peterson, Lawrence\nColes and William Trusler with\nThomas MacDonald, Ian Dufour and\nCharles Bruce opposed. A large\naudience listened with interest to\nthe arguments advanced. The teams\nwere well balanced throughout the\ndirect arguments but a sweeping\nrebuttal with which Miss Peterson\nclosed the debate brought victory\nto the affirmative side. The judges\nwere Mayor H. E. Douglas, Dr. J.\nE. Gee and C. G. Duncan. Mona\nAsselstine occupied the chair. A\nmusical program rounded out the\nevening. This included Santa Lucia\nand Moonlight Sonata, high school\norchestra; Cock Robin, Boy's Glee\nclub; mouth organ selection, Henry\nVerklrk; Passing By, Girls' Glee\nclub; And the Big Bad Wolf was\nDead, Boys' Glee club; and Blum-\nenlied as an instrumental number by\nMiss Cottingham, D. Butala and K.\nF. Alexander.\nBorden's St. Charles Milk makes a wonderful improvement, too, in\nsoups, creamed vegetables, puddings ... but be sure you buy\nSt. Charles\u2014thc evaporated milk with the fresh natural double-rich\nmilk flavor!\nTHE BORDEN COMPANY LIMITED\n50 Powell Street   \u2022   - Vsnepuvtr\nA?o*dmS\nSICHARLES MILK\nMade in British Columbia - Condensary, South Sumas;,','......]\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C., Oct. 17.-A\nnumber of Rossland Odd Fellows\nand Rebekahs motored to Northport\nand were thc guests of the North-\nport Rebekah lodge, at a very pleasant social evening. The following\nwent down from here: Mr, and Mrs.\nG. H. Clegg, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac\nGlover, Mr. and Mrs. Zentner, Mrs.\nM. A. Henderson, Mrs. M. M. Butorac, Mrs. A. Hale, Miss Dora Mil-\nlctt. M. H. Hoyte, J. Marshall. R.\nJ. Portman. Robert Anderson, Herbert Martin. H. Lowes, M. Purcello,\nand A. E. Walters.\n. .   \u00bb   .\nThe Past Chiefs' club of Maple\nLeaf temple, Pythian sisters, met\nof Mrs. W. \"\nMinor Repoirs\non Baker Street\nMinor repairs are being made on\nBaker street by the Nelson public\nworks department. The work is being done mainly along the street\ncar line where the cement has\nbroken away. The holes are'being\npatched with tarvia.\nFATHER OF NELSONITE\nIS DEAD AT CALT, ONT.\nGALT, Ont, Oct. 18 (CP)-Robert\nCook, life-long resident of Beverley\ntownship, died today at his home in\nValens. He was 86 years old. Mrs.\nRobert A. Peebles of Nelson, B.C.,\nIs a daughter.\nPERRY CHARGED\nWITH CONVERSION\nCourt Stenographer Is Out on\n$3000 Bail\nFrederick Gordon Perry ot Fernie, charged with theft by conversion, is out on $3000 bail and two\nsureties ot $1500. Perry, who is well\nknown through the district, having\nacted as court stenographer at several points, is alleged to have converted $1118.80 trom Income, property, and school taxes, amounting to\n$1800, funds of the Natal Trading\ncompany.\nat the home <\nD. Willson,\nThose  present\nTuesday evening.\nwere Mrs. William T. Trembath,\nMrs. Frank G. Bray, Mrs. T. White,\nMrs. Gilbert 1\"-*y, Mrs. John Cox,\nMrs. Leslie C. I -'ntosh, Mrs. Howard Ferguson snd the hostess.\n\u2022   \u00bb   \u2022\nMiss Amy BirohUl of Los Angeles, who has been visiting relatives throughout the Interior of\nBritish Columbia, left yesterday '\u00bb\nmotor for Spokane, en route to her\nhome.\n. \u2022 .\nMrs. W. D. Willson and Mrs. W.\nI J. McKay spent yesterday in Trail.\nI the guests of Mrs. P. R. McDonald.\nOCTOBER\nfhat sense of places jutt vacated, of rustling\nleaves only now growing still, the shadow of a\nwhisper through the grasses, gives certainty to tht\n\u2022 belief of wise, work-a-day folk that fairies are making magic, that gnomes are poking each other and\nwinking merrily in hidden corners. It comes with\nthe strange lucid goldnest that fills the sunset atmosphere of autumn, when earth and sky, land and\nwater fade into glowing, misty, amber light,\u2014without beginning and without end. The bridge that\nspans the river ends in nothingness, the mountains\nmelt into the sky, the long winding road leads into\ndim space.  Have you, too, noticed it?\nCHARLIE MORRIS needs no\nIntroduction to the shopping pub-\nN lie of Nelson,\nbut today I'm\ndelighted to introduce his new\npremises at 511\nBaker Street\na modern, snappy little store\nwhere you'll find the sot of service you like. And Just between\nyou and me, his opening specials\nare amazing value. Suits and\nhats for tsthw*!, Sweaters for\nyoung Buddy! Shirts and socks\nfor the working man. Drop In!\nYou'll like the new store immensely.\n\\ tflmmmmmmmJp,\n\u2022c] ~H>\n\"GOODBYE AGAIN\"! Sheer\nwit and amusing situations in this\nbright comedy of the Little Theatre Association vie with the\nclever acting of Miss Eileen Dill\nand Mr. Fred Weir to give you\nan exceptional treat. Whether\nor not you like to laugh, you'll\nhold your sides from the beginning to the end. It's a stage play,\nonly, not cluttered up with a\nmovie on the side.\n*}-\n\u00abf\u00bb\n\"Dated\" Bacon is the latest fad, produced by one of\nthe largest packing firms.\nHousewives\u2014attention!\nThey're here! Fresh from their\ntissue wrappings, \u2014 brimful of\nstyle and pep and smartness, in\ntime to watch tha big boys come\nromping down the diamond.\nGood-looking new shapes including brims and oversize berets, all\nstuck with quills at arresting angles or tip-tilted cockily to show\nyour curls. Shop for your hat at\nENFIELD'S and you'll find hats\nthat are hats!\nThe highlights of Paris openings are reflected ln these Informal\nevening or Sunday night dresses.\nYoung, glorious new fashions in\nsilks, crepes, velvets,\u2014in today's\nmost    talked-about     olors.    Be\nhaughty, provocative, devil may-\ncare!  Be, gran'e-dame    ln    the\ngrand mai.ner! Bo a sportswoman\nin the swagger style! Be what you\nwill-but let the D. 4 C. DRESS\n8H0P do the job for you.   No\none can do it better.\nPolished woodwork and shining floors add a sparkle to dingy\nrooms you don't know about until you've tried it. You don't Uks\npolishing floors? Tut, tut! It's all\nin the polish and the polisher!\nThat good furniture cream or liquid polish that smells ot pin*\nwoods takes off old marks and\nbrightens up old vamish as good\nas new, while the floor wax that\ngoes on as smooth, as smooth,\ntakes no elbow grease to rub it in\nand then, all you have to do it\ndust with a mop and Presto! a\nwell-kept house! Ask the WOOD,\nVALLANCE HARDWARE COM.\nPANY. They know what you\nneed! And did you know that aa\nwell as mops and polishers at\nspecial rates, they have an electric polisher you can rent by\nthe hour? 'Tts so!\n\u2022Cl] ~>\nThe tunic frock and tht\nbolero type frock stand out\nas the favorite of fashion\nfor general day clothes.\nBoth of these styles are nice\nfor the average woman who\nwants to be out a good deal\nof the day.\nReal baseball players! Who\ndoesn't want to talk and dance\nwith them at the\nBASEBALL DANCE\nin the Eagle Hall on\nMonday, when the big\nfellows get together\nfor a frolic after the\nbig game? It's a\nhome run for you,\nyoung fella, and a\nwinning game, to take your girl\nfriend to this dance. What a\nthrill!\n-A\u2014\u2014fr*\nNecklines on the up and\nup, are having a high old\ntime this season. They hug\nyou around the neck and\nflatter you just for smartness. In short, they are the\nfashion of the moment. If\nyour neckline is right, your\ndress is the dress of fashion.\n<3 f>\nEvery available witch and goblin has been Invited to hold high\ncarniv*' at the\nannual HOSPITAL DANCE\nin the Eagle\nHall, on Friday, O t.),. b e r\n26th. Get into\nthe spirit ot the\nevening, for the\ngoblins will get\nyou in thc\nspooky witching hours at this\njolly Informal dance, where \u2022\nspecial menu, varied entertainment and u..usual prizes will\nmake this a perfect revel of fun\nand am* I ment. Don't miss this\nexciting dance.\n\u2022Ct\\ ' i ~>\nAnd so, until next week   Adieu\nLilly CAnn*\n\"Her* and Thar* With Llll)\nAnne\" appears every Friday In\nThe Nelson Dally News.\n *~^\nMRS. LEARY IS A\nNAKUSP HOSTESS\nEntertains at New Home;\nNew Discussion Croup\nIs Formed\nNAKUSP, B. C, OcL 17,-Mn. C.\nS. Leary wu \"at home\" at her\nspacious new home on Lake avenue. In receiving the guests, Mn.\nLeary was assisted by her mother.\nMrs. Jordan Williams ot Edge-\nwood.\nBronze chrysanthemums, beautifully arranged, and pale yellow tap-\nen in allver scones, graced the\ntea Uble, which was presided over\nby Mn F. Rushton and Mn. W.\nG. M. Hakeman. Acting as serva-\nteun were Misses Miriam and Wlnnlfred Jordan and Miss N. Granger.\nThose present were: Mrs. F. Rush-\nton, Mn. W. G. M. Hakeman, Mrs.\nJordan Williams, Misses Miriam and\nWinnlfred Jordan, Miss N. Granger,\nMn. F. H. Jordan, Mrs. F. L. Benton,\nMn. R. McWhirter, Mn. C. E. Turner, Mn. A. Turner, Mra. W. Wright,\nMrs. W. Johnstone, of Silverton,\nMrs. E. C. Johnson, Miss Nellie Johnson, Mn. G. D. Stibbe, Miss P.\nSheffield, Mn. J. Parent Sr., Mrs.\nN Masters, Mra. N. A. Herridge,\nMiss M. H. Butlin, Mrs. P. Younp,\nMn. A. Cowan, Mra. Steenhoff. Mrs.\nE. Munn, Mn. H. Clarke, Mn. J.\nGrigg.\nMr. and Mn. H. Sunstrom of Burton were visiton in town.\nDISCUSSION GROUP FORMED\nThe Nakusp \"Fortnightly\" was the\nname given to the Discussion Group\nwhich met for a preliminary meeting here. The purpose of the organization is to dscuss matten ot\npresent day importance and it is\nopen to all who are interested in\nauch debates. An organization committee was formed as follows: Rev.\nC. Addyman, B, Parkinson, H, Ker-\nshaw, Mra. E. Oxenham, Mrs. R.\nS. La Rue, Mias Betty Allan.\nL. Cadden of Burton was a visitor here Friday.\nA meeting of the Nakusp Fire\nBrigade was held when reporu\nwere received of a recent drive for\nfunds which snowed a total of\n884.45. It was reported that 100 feet\nof new hose had been purchased\nana anotner 100 feet is to oe orderea\nimmediately.\nSUNDAY SCHOOL REOPENS\nThe Glenbank United Church Sunday scuool reopened for the winter months on aundi>y. The otficera\nare: superintendent. Miss A. Bowes;\nsecretary-treasurer, J. Gardner;\nteachers, E. W. Bill, Miss R. Bailey,\nMiss N. Johnson; organist, Miss H.\nGardner.\nMrs. A. Savage of Ladner, worthy\ngiw,i<- matron vi tne oraer of Eastern atar, anu Mis. rlonney of\nVancouver were enteitainea by the\ni-uucusp cnapter. following an interesting meeting a sumptuous ban-\nquu WuS serveu.\nMiss Victoria Evans, Mrs. C. L.\nHutz and A. Jeffrey of New Denver were visiton to the Nakusp\nhot springs.\nMiss R. Zadra was a visitor here\nfrom New Denver.\nMrs. W. B. Johnstone, Miss Eileen\nJonnstone, Miss Hicharason of Silverton were motor visitors here.\nMrs. Scia of Silverton is a guest\nof Mrs. J. Norris.\nMiss Florence Hartford of Ross-\nlajia who spent a week as guest of\nher sister Mrs. David Powell has\nleft.\nA. B. Stanley motored to Slocan.\nMn. R. Isllp has left for Vernon.\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. Stones and\nMra. Stones Sr. of Burton motored\nto Nakusp.\nB. C. McRobert of Gilbert Plains\nManitoba, has been a guest at Pine\nLodge.\nJ. McLeod of Edgewood was a\nvisitor here. \u25a0\nR. Bradley and L. Walton motored from Burton.\nMr. and Mra. S. Smith who have\nbeen holidaying at Halcyon were\nMILADY'S\nFASHION SHOPPE\nMiss Georgina Brown\nwmwwumxwwi\nJUST WHEN YOU\nNEED THEM\nNew Evening\nand Dinner\nGOWNS\nfor the Hospital Ball\nOur Miectlon it btautlful and\ndlltlngulthtd and extremely\nvaried \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 Molrt, TafftU,\nVelvet and Crepe with Lamtt\nRhlnttont and Fur Trimmings.\nTry a\nWALL ST.\nLunch\nSATISFYING\nHEALTHFUL\nECONOMICAL\nMEN on the Exchange, working under terrific\npressure from 10 o'clock 'till 2, long ago discovered this lunch which has become standard\non Wall St. It consists of crackers (or bread)\nand MILK. It gives them all the nourishment\nthey need ... it is easy to digest ... and they\nderive new energy and vigor from it. Give it\na trial for 10 days. See if it doesn't make you\nfeel keener for work after your lunch hour. But\nbe sure to ask for Curlew milk because it's the\nmilk that's creamier\u2014rich and has that refreshing country flavor.\nCURLEW CREAMERY\nPALM DAIRIES LTD.\nBUTTER ICE CREAM MILK CREAM\nALL PERFECTLY PASTEURIZED PRODUCTS\n\u2022 THI NIUON OAILY NIWI. NILSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. OCTOBIR 1\u00bb. 1934-\nguesta of Mr. and Mrs. T. Hopkins\nleaving next day tor Blakeburn.\nCapt C. S. Leary, MP.P. has returned from Nelaon.\nDr. and Mrs. G. D. Stibbs have returned from Burton and Edgewood.\nR. Barlow has returned from\nPenticton.\nG. Dodds was a visitor ln New\nDenver.\nDr. C. A. Courville spent a day\nat Burton.\nMiss Sarah Wilbe has returned\nfrom RenaU where she had been\nvacationing at her home.\nMr. and Mrs. I. B. Schledal entertained at dinner. Whist was played. GuesU were Mr. and Mn.\nG. J. Horsiey, Mr. and Mra. O.\nSa:*,*a*om. Mr. and Mrs. F. Johnson,\nand family.\nMn. A. Dunn bas as her guest, her\nmother, Mrs. Colgrave of lidgewood\nWinners of the recent golf competitions wer* B. Parkinson and\nJ. W. Butlin. Prizes of golf balls\nwere donated by JVilllam Morgan,\nW. Maxwell and F. Rushton.\nMrs. L. J. Edwards has left for\nVictoria where she will visit her son\n-in-law and daughter Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. McAfee.\nWhist Drive HeU\n.Denver Aid\nbyN.\n13 Tables in Play; Bridge\nClub Elects Dr. Francis\nPresident\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Oct. 18. \u2014\nA very successful whist drive was\nheld at the K. of P. hall by the hospital Ladies aid. Thirteen Ubles\nwere in play. After cards refresh-\nmenU were served by Mrs. J. B.\nSmith and Mis. Young, In charge for\nthe evening.\nPrizes for the evening were awarded to Mre. Isaacson, R. Lind, J.\nDepretto and M Dumont, first;\nMn. G. BurkiU, Mra. O. Johnson.\nMra. H. Gunn, and Miss Elsie Cechelero carrying off consolation.\nW. Cliff, employed at thc Whitewater mine, was a visitor at his\nhome here.\nA great deal of work has been\ndone to the Vicarage. Rev. McMorlne has arrived and expecU to\nmove in as soon as the renovating\nis completed.\nRev. T. Reed, Mr. Merril, F. Garrett and Miss V. Coombs, motored\nover from Kaslo for tbe picture given in the United Church, under the\ndirection of Rev. Reed.\nStill more improvements are going on at the Legion hall. A new\nflag pole Is being erected which will\nbe a great asset It will be approximately 45 feet high, on the hinge\ntype. The work is being done by\nlocal members.\nMrs. Coombs and daughter Gladys\nhave left for Kaslo on a short visit\nwith friends.\nMrs. i-\/.ver, Misses Dora and Ad-\nelaine Ciever and Mrs. Alex Trick-\nett were visitora in Nelson and Harrop.\nwork at the hospital has been\ncompleted for the time being. A\nnew furnace has been insUlled,\nseptic Unk and considerable work\nuone on the plumbing; the cellar\nnas been enlarged, giving much\nmore room. Altogether a great deal\nof time and money has been spent\non the Ladies' Aid has held whist\ndrives through the summer months,\nin order to do a little toward helping with improvements.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Millar, Miss H.\nBoates and V. McDonald were\ndown from Sandon.\nAmong those to attend the track-\nmeet dance in Nakusp were: Mr.\nand Mrs. Broughton, Mr. and Mn.\nHamilton, Miss T. Olsen, L. Truseott, Mr. ond Mrs. Alex Trickett,\nConnie Sells, W. R. Green and M.\nBroderick.\nMrs. Angrlgnon and dty iter\nMrs. A. Greenlaw have left tu visit Mr. and Mrs. A. Angrignon at\nDeer Park.\nMrs. H. Thomlinson is a patient in\nthe local hospiUL\nMn. Forseoerg who has been\nspending a few days visiting her\naaughter in town has left for her\nhome in Nelson.\nMn. Faminoff has left for her\nhome in Perry's Siding after spend\ning some time in tbe local hospiUl\nwith a broken leg.\nMn. C. Thring had as her gueste\nMarion Dailess, Kitty Haig, Dorothy Passmore, Austin Moore, F.\nWoodrow, Tommy Stensin of Nelson and Miss M. Harding and Jack\nHarding of Silverton and Hope\nGeorge of New Denver.\nO. Enockson is confined to hiB\nhome with a sever* cold.\nLands 14-Lb. Silver\nTroot Near Sanca\nCRESTON, Oct. lS-The biggest\nsilver trout ever brought in by a\nlocal angler was a 14 pound silver\ntrout and the successful angler was\nMrs. Arthur Reed of Creston, who\nlanded the prize while fishing ,in\nKootenay lake in the vicinity of\nSanca. In addition to the local honon claimed for the fish it can be\nsaid it is one ot the biggest Uken\nln the lake for some seasons back.\nR. B. SUples of Kelowna was\nhere Tuesday attending a sharehold-\nere meeting of Creston Reclamation\nCompany, limited, at which important business in connection with\nflats dyking was up for disposal.\nH. A. Powell and son, Hawkshaw,\nwere renewing acquaintances at\nCranbrook during the week.\nMrs. John Spratt was a visitor at\nCranbrook, a juest of her daughter,\nMiss Aileen Spratt, who is on the\nnursing sUff at SL Eugene hospital.\nMrs. J. S. Irvine of Fernie spent\na few days here with her sister,\nMrs. Mallandalne, returning from\nSpokane.\nJ. W. Dow, one of the pioneer resi\ndents of the district, is undergoing\ntreatment at Cranbrook hospital.\nEx-reeve L. C. McFarland. now\nresident at Penticton, was a visitor\nhere for a few days.\nMr. and Mra. Walter Barrett and\nson, Bob, of Cranbrook are holidaying here with Mra. Barrett's\nmother, Mrs. E. Garfield.\nMra. Jim Reld was a week-end\nvisitor with Mr. Reld who is employed at Nelson.\naatedfnrelitlNgFM    tsR.WfeFbi\ny.x.tivySgMwVbzobe\nMore color is prophesied In the\nfashion picture this fall, by P. A.\nVogelman, director of the color\nfashion bureau of one of the large\nsilk companies. There Is a \"definite\nfeeling that social life will be elaborate this winter,\" says Vogelman;\n\"consequently there will be a trend\naway from the uniform black of\nmore dreary years.\"\n^SOCIETY\nThla column la conducted by\nMrs M J Vignetfx Al' newt of t\nsocial nature including receptions,\nprivate entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages, etc will appear\nin thi. column Telephone Mra\nVigneux at her bome. 610 Silica\nComplimenting Miss Emma Kahle,\nwhose marriage takes place nex.\nweek, Mn. E. J. Shardelow, 1204\nFront street, entertained recently\nat a pretty miscellaneous shower.\nThose present were Mrs. Leslie\nFickard, Miss Jeannettc Pickard,\nMn. W. Wylie, Mn. Alex loanan,\nMrs. Elmer Calbick, Mrs. R. D.\nBarnes, the Misses Dora and Mina\nKahle. Mrs. Arthur Oliver, Mrs. E.\nBoyes,    Miss    Edna  Fraaer,  Mn.\nhomas S. Peake, Miss Maisle Peake,\ni_rs. Fisher, Mrs. Melncczuk, Miss\nJuliana Melneczuk, Miss Dorothy\nCarble, Miss Peggy Davis, Miss\nViolet Palmer, Mr. and Mrs. Fred\nBlakeman, Mr. and Mrs. W. A.\nTriggs and Frederick Miles of Trail\nand Miss Ema Kahle.\n...\nMiss Ethel Marshall of Silverton\nis a city visitor.\n...\nMrs. Bertha M. Simms, 618 Latimer street, and her son Wesley\nhave  Uken  up  residence  at  309\nCarbonate street.\n...\nMrs. A. Hastings and daughter\nViolet of Trail were Nelson visitora\nrecently.\n...\nA quiet wedding was solemnized\nTuesday at 11 a.m. at the Church of\nthe Redeemer, Fairview, by Rtrr.\nW. J. Silverwood who unite\/ in\nmarriage Mary Ida Bradshaw, second daughter of W. Bradshaw of\nWarwickshire, England, and Arnold\nKempthome, New Zealand. The\nbride and groom are making their\nhome at Duncan, Vancouver Island.\n\u2022  ...\nJulian Yeatman of South Slocan\nis   attending   Business   college   in\nNelson.\n...\nW. F. Trant, post office Inspector\nof Vancouver, is a Nelson visitor.\n...\nWilliam Winstanley of Crescent\nValley returned last night from\nSpokane, where Mn. Winstanley is\na patient in the Sacred Heart hospital.\n...\nMn. C. M. Sharp leaves this\n.lorning on a visit to Vancouver.\n...\nM. Mauchlin of Arrow Park is a\nNelson visitor.\n...\nDr. Douglas Corsan of Fernie returned last evening after attending\nthc executive meeting of the Anglican synod.\n...\nThe members of the Excelsior club\nof St. Paul's church were hostesses\nrecently at a miscellaneous shower\nhonoring Miss Emma Kahle, whose\nmarriage Ukes place to Frederick\nMiles of Trail next week. Thc affair\nwas held at the home on Delbruck\nstreet of Mrs. F. A. Martin. Mrs.\nMartin was assisted by Miss Mildred\nMartin and Leonard E. Pascoe.\nDecorations were carried out in\nmauve and yellow. Those present\nwere Miss Alice McDougall, Mrs.\nPascoe, Mrs. William Anderson. Mra.\nA. T. Richards, the Misses Eileen\nand Bessie McKenzie, the Misses\nDora and Mina Kahle. Mrs. J. Al-\nmony, Mra. Arthur Oliver, Miss\nKate Darrough, Mra. E. Boyes, Mrs.\nE. L. Hediey, thc Misses Irene and\nGrace Laughton, Mrs. William Talbot, the Misses Nellie and Tina McKenzie, Mn. Martin, Miss Mildred\nMartin and Miss Kahle.\nMr. and Mrs. C. S. Leary of Nakusp were city visitors yesterday.\nJ. R.  Pyper, Kamloops broker,\nvisited Nelsor  '   \u25a0'\"'. the week,\n\u2022  *   .\nMrs. H. Parker of Slocan City and\nher'daughter leave this morning for\nVancouver, where they will visit\nMrs. Parker's son-in-law and daugh\nter, Mr. and M-r \" -ne WaUon.\n...\nT. A. Goody..tr.u.- represenUtive\nof the Spokane International railway with office in Spokane, spent\nyesterday in town.\nMrs. Percy Coates returned yesterday from a visit in Edmonton.\n...\nR. T, Dean of Deanshaven visited\ntown yesterday.\n\u2022 ...\nMr. Lancaster, M.E., of the Silversmith mine at Sandon waa in thc\nciv* yesterday to meet Mrs. Lancaster, who arrived on the Great Northern from Spokane.'\n...\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas McNeish of\nSlocan City was among shoppers in\nNelson yesterday.\n...\nA. Chapman ot Vancouver is a\ncity visitor.\nW. J. Sullivan of Trail was a Nelson visitor Wednesday.\n...\nMrs. Errol L. Wright, Baker street,\nleaves this morning for Vancouver\nwhere she will visit ot the home of\nMr. and Mrs. H. G. WrlghL\n...\nMiss Hazel Marahall, who has\nbeen relieving on the BUff of thc\nKootenay Lake General hospiUl for\nthe past few weeks, has returned to\nher home in Silverton.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. T. Allen, who have\nbeen guesU at the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George\nAllen, Baker street, for the past\nw.-*ek  leave  today  for  the  Reno\nmine.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. Percy Araas, 018\nLatimer street, have taken up rui-\ndence at 310 Carbonate Btrcet.\n...\nJ. Spiers of Kaslo was a Nelson\nvisitor Wednesday.\n...\nMrs. Roy Heatlunan, Chatham\nstreet, Fairview, cnterUined Wednesday afternoon at a miscellaneous\nshower in compliment to Miss I.ena\nZetuck of Edmonton, whose marriage to Harry Bareska of Vilna,\nA1U\u201e Ukes place soon. Those present were Mrs. H. Wassick, Mrs. J.\nBrindsley, Mrs. }. DawBon, Mn. N.\nSellnger, Mra. J. C. Crosby. Mn. J.\nKnowles, Mrs. W. Nahl, Miss Rose\nKuntz, Miss Mary Medwick, Mra.\nM. Kuntz, Mra. H. Olson, Mra. C.\nLeplnski.\nH. Aylwln of New Denver vlalted\nNelson yesterday.\n...\nMn. P. H. Bush leaves on a visit\nto Vancouver this morning.\n...\nFrank Abey, druggist of Rossland,\nwas in town Wednesday.\n. |.   .\nMn. H. D. Dawson recently entertained the members of Circle No. 3\nof Trinity United church at her\nhome on SUnley street wben those\npresent were Mrs. W. E. Waaaon,\nMn. Bertha M. Simms, Mrs. Thomas\nGerman, Mn. Reginald German,\nMn. J. E. Annable, Mn. G. O. Stratton, Mra. Robert Eunaon, Mn. T. S.\nJerome, Mn. H. D. Dawson, Mrs. W.\nA. Weatherhead. Mn. David Proudfoot and Mn. T. R Wilms.\nA pretty ceremony took pUce at\nthe home of Mr. and Mn. G. S.\nBaker at Fruitvale when their eldest daughter, VloletU Grace, waa\nunited in marriage to Benjamin\nEdwin Murgatroyd of Cranbrook,\nRev. C. E. Mott officiating. The\nbride was charming in a gown of\nblue with black accessories. Miss\nHope Baker was her sister's bridesmaid, becomingly gowned in blue\nwith large picture hat to match. J.\nH. McLean supported the groom.\nThe wedding supper was served\nfrom an attractive Uble centered\nwith the wedding cake. The rooms\nwere UUefully decorated with\nbronze and yellow chrysanthemums.\nMra. G. S. Baker, mother of the\nbride, received in a gown of brown\nvelvet with touches of cream satin.\nToasts were proposed by Rev. Mr.\nMott and J. McLean. Mr. Murgatroyd responded sulUbly. After a\nshort honeymoon along Kootenay\nlake the young couple will Uke up\nresidence In Cranbrook.\n.   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. H. Rosling leaves this morning on a visit to Vancouver.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. John Mulr of Slocan\nCity visited Nelson Wednesday.\nMiss Irene Edmondson of the\noffice staff of the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospiUl leaves today on a\n10-day vacation to be spent in Vancouver.\n...\nPhilip Holmes of Procter leaves,\nfor Vancouver this morning. '\nNATIVE SON OF\nCRANBROOK WEDS\nCRANBROOK, Oct. lS-Miss A.\nMcCartney, Miss H. McGrath, Mrs.\nH. Larsen, Mra. A. Rattray and\nMiss J. Rattray of Yahk were Cranbrook visiton. at the fint of the\nweek.\nHarry Collier and Wally Clarke\nspent a few days at Creston.\nMiss Lois Graham of Kingsgate\nis visiting her uncle and aunt, Mr.\nand Mn. G. Patmore in Cranbrook.\nMrs. J. B. Henderson has left\nfor Seattle. She will visit her daughter, Mn. H. Wetterer, at Kingsgate,\nand from there she wlll Uke heY two\ngrandchildren, Marilyn and Maureen Williams, to their parenU In\nSeattle.\nR. Halpenny, who bas been working bt Sawmill creek, has left for\nhis home In Edmonton.\nH. J. Collier and Miss Audrey\nCollier were Kimberley visitors at\nthe first of the week.\nW. P. McCullough of the B.C.\nSpruce Mills is in Cranbrook on\nbusiness from Wasau, Wis.\nMra. J. A. Hamilton of Yahk was\na Cranbrook visitor at the flnt of\nthe week.\nA wedding of widespread interest in East Kootenay took place in\nSt. Mary's Anglican church, Kerria-\ndale, on Thursday evening, October\n11, when Ethel Rose, youngest\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Fier-\nheller, was united in marriage to\nJohn Moss Cummlngs, B.A. Sc.,\n\u2022khi of Mr. and Mrs. John G. Cum-\nmings of Cranbrook. Rev. C. S. Mc-\nGalfin officiating. The bride's gown\nwas of traditional white satin worn\nwith a veil and cap, of orange\nblossoms. Miss Grace Badenoch, who\nacted as bridesmaid, wore a costume of midnight blue velvet. The\ngroom was supported by Richard\nKing. Lewis Cunningham and Gordon Cummlngs acted as ushers. After a honeymoon on Vancouver\nIsland Mr. and Mrs. Cummings will\nreside in the Dalhousle apartmente\nin Vancouver.\nMr. Cummings is a native born\nson of Cranbrook and attended public and high school In the city. He\nis a graduate of the Univenlty ot\nBritish Columbia, class of '32, where\nhe was affiliated with Sigma Phi\nDelta fraternity.\nMr. and Mrs. Lancaster of Newgate are guesU of Mr. and Mn. V.\nZ. Manning while Mr. Lancaster\nattends the Farmers' institute meeting.\nMr. and Mrs. Hayes of Saskatchewan are guesU of their daughter.\nMrs. J. D. McGillivray and Mr.\nMcGillivray. ,\nMra. H. A. McKowan and Miss\nEleanor McKowan have returned\nfrom a short visit to Mn. G. Cart-\nwright ln Erickson.\nW. POINT SHUTTLE\nCLUB UNDER WAY\nRex Taylor Is Elected President; Miss D. Caskill,\nSecretary\nWILLOW POINT, B.C., Oct. 18.-\nThe Willow Point Badminton club\nheld its annual meeting In Chrystal\nhall. Rex Taylor presiding in the\nabsence of the president, T. Rosling.\nThe officers appointed for the\ncoming season were: Rex Taylor,\npresident; Miss D. Gar kill, secretary\ntreasurer; and Charles Blunt executive member and capUln.\nPlay will be resumed both for\njuniors and seniors arounds the\nfirst of November.\nA vote of thanks was given W.\nP. Dickson for acting as auditor.\nA meeting of the Willow Point\nWomen's institute took the form of\na 'bee' In order to get ready a\nbundle of clothing and so on for\nthose in need ln Nelson.\nThe majority of the members are\nbusy picking and packing apples,\nand therefore it was Impossible to\nhave the regulkr meeting. Mrs. L.\nde Cocq, Mrs. J. Learmonth, Mn.\nC. Shannon, Mrs. G. Sutherland,\nand Miss D. Jackson attended, the\nlatter two ladies serving tea.\nCOLLIERY MEN\nVISIT CORBIN\nCORBIN, B.C., Oct, 18-A. M.\nAllen, secretory treasurer of Corbin Collieries Ltd., Spokane, and\nH. Anthony of Elmendorf and Anthony Co., Spokane were visitor!\nto Corbin.\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. Almond have\nreturned from a vacation spent in\nSeattle where they were guests of\ntheir son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. K. Glidden Crocker.\nNine extra desks sent in from\nCranbrook by Inspector Manning\nhave been insUlled ln the junior\nroom of the Corbin tchooL The\ntotal enrollment of the two divisions numben 82 pupils, the highest record.\nThomas Fawley has returned after\nvisiting Fernie, a guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Fawley.\nMrs. A. E. Rear and young daughter Thelma are holidaying in Vancouver.\nMiss Louise Reynolds of Fernie spent a day In Corbin.\nMr. and Mn. Paris Baratelll, accompanied by their son, John, spent\nseveral days in Spokane visiting\ntheir son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mn. George Cormier.\nRoss Workman spent the weekend in Coal Creek a guest of his\nparents, Dr. and Mn. W. Work-\nin honor of A. M. Allen and H\nAnthony of Spokane E. L. Warburton entertained at his home.\nInvited guesU included Mr. and\nMrs. F. W. Regcr, Mr. and Mn. M.\nF. Kimpton. Miss Louise Reynolds\nof Fcmle, Mr. and Mrs. J. White,\nMiss M. Tully, Miss S. G. Timaeus,\nMr. and Mn. M. M. Gibson and Bob\nPettigrew.\nConstable R. B. MacKay who has\nbeen in Creston on sick-leave for\nseveral weeks has returned to Corbin to resume his duties.\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Nelson of\nCranbrook, have Uken up residence ln Corbin.\nJohn Strabiak has returned from\nan extended holiday spent in Europe.\nMiss Betty Elliot and Miss Peggy\nGibson who attend Fernie High\nschool spent the week-end in Corbin visiting their parents Dr. and\nMn. R. S. Elliot and Mr. and Mrs.\nM. M. Gibson respectively.\nMrs. J. Simpson has returned to\nher home in Coal Creek after having spent a week in Corbin with\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. Walter Hall.\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. Teberghlen and\nyoung son Walter Henry were Coleman visiton during the week.\nConsUble Vise who has been relieving in Corbin as provincial\nconstable during Constable Mac-\nKay's absence, has been transferred\nto Fernie.\nMr. and Mra. t. J. Roberta Jr.,\nSpokane visited Corbin.\nAeronautical \u00abng<neen now detect\ntlows ln metal parU of airplanes bj\nsprinkling whit* Iron salt on them.\nTht talt gstbtrs In flnt lines resembling scratches. Thew lines rep-\nretent cracks tn tht aUel.\nSalvation Army,\nCalgary Church\nEach Get $125,000\nCALGARY, OcL 18 (CP)-Offi-\ncen of the Salvation Army and the\nChurch of the Redeemer, the Anglican procathedral. got a welcome\nsurprise when official word of the\nlegacy left them by Eleanor Tompkins, was received here.\nIt has been made known that\neach organization will get 1125.000\nand not (25.000 as first reported *.n\npress despatches from the old country. The bequests were staled in\nEnglish pounds and not dollars as\nfirst undentood.\nPioneers in church and charitable work, Mr, and Mrs. Tompkins\nlived in Calgary for many yean.\nBOMBAY ICP) - Three months'\nImprisonment and a fine of $96 was\nimposed on Ismail Gaznavl, a journalist, when the magistrate held he\nhad \"made serious allegations\nagainst a responsible officer (a\npolice commissioner! without making the slightest attempt to verify\nthem.\"\nufcS\n\u25a0PAOI FIVI\nBonnington Man\nIs to Be Married\nBONNINGTON, B.C. Oct. W.Robert K. McFadden has left by motor for Banff where his marriage was\nto Uke place to Miss Jay Duncan\nWednesday. Mr. McFadden waa accompanied on the trip by his mother\nMrs. McFadden and his brother\nJohn Kawklns who went to attend\nthc wedding.\nMiss Mollie Irving of Tarrys il\nthe guest of Mra. W. C. Motley.      .'\nMrs. Turner Lee is leaving to attend the quarterly meeting of the\nKootenay Diocesan board to th*\nM.S.C.C. which is to be held in\nKaslo.\nMrs. T. W. Slader has returnsd\nto Nelson after spending a few\ndays, the guest of Mra. G. Noel\nBrown, Corra Linn.\nTh* best waterproof clgarett*\nwrappers ar* made from cow's milk.\nThe casein from milk ctn be mad*\nInto a non-porous wrapp\u00bbr which la\nperfectly   molatuw-proof.\nYOU WILL ENJOY THE\nRICH BEEF GOODNESS IN\nIT SATISFIES\nBADMINTON\nStart the Season right with a new \"ATLAS\"\nRacquet. Get perfect satisfaction with a racquet\nstrung with good grade strings.\nPrices to Suit All!\nRACQUET PRESSES\u2014RACQUET COVERS\nTRU-FLITE Ne. 1 SHUTTLES\nRACQUETS RESTRUNC and REPAIRED\n\u2022Hlpperson Hardware\nCompany Limited\nLook for the Red Hardware Store\nPHONE 497 BOX 414\nLADIES! ATTENTION!\nSaturday Only\nWe are showing a complete new line\nof CREPE DRESSES, which are remarkable for quality, style and price.\n, One Price Only _.  $5.95\nNOTE: No approvals on thlt special.\nGodfreys1 Limited\n\"The Home of Greater Values\"\nFORMERLY CHAS. MORRIS LTD.\nJS*.   Opp. Standard Cafe\nPhon*\n270\nTHE QUAKER METHOD OF EASY BREAD BAKING\nyBmuiTlklwig\nThe easy, quick,\nQuaker way\nWith Quaker Flout snd the\nQuakat Method you can make\nbresd or rolls without kneading\u2014\nor setting the sponge overnight.\nYour baking will be lighter and\nmore delicious too \u2014snd you\nwill always be certain of first-\nclass results.\nSend coupon below for full information of this modern, easy\nbread baking method.\nQuaker Flour is an all-purpostifiitr\nequally good for making delicious\ncakes and pastry.\nQuaker Flour\n^\u25a0V Always the Same \u2022 Always the Bert\nfor Bread, Cakes and Pastry\nValuable Baking Book FREE\nTbt Qtuktr Ottt CooptiV\n-tukttooa.Suk.\nPlMMS-mdm*\nof Eaty Bread\nNam*\t\nof booklef'Th* Quaker Mstlkod\ntf\nAddrtit.\nDtomtr't Nome-\nSOLD SY\nOVERWAITEA LTD.\nNELSON\nB.C.\n PACE SIX-\n-THE NILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. OCTOIER 11. 19$4-\nDRIVE AHEAD\nDYKING FLATS\nNew Machines Speed\nUp Work; Goot\nRiver Diverted\nOffiSTON. Oct 18.-With an additional dragline, and another bull-\ndoser of more than double the horsepower ot the one originally in tue,\nCreaton Dyking Company, limited\nil making great stridea in the operations on the flata.\nOn Oct. 8 Goat River wai iuc-\nQeeafully diverted from its old course\ninto its new channel recently excavated by the dragline. The new\nGoat courie ll 26 feet deep and\nabout 500 feet long. This diversion\nshortens ttie course of the Goat\nacross the flats by four miles, running it into the Kootenay at the\ncrooked bridge. Since it waa diverted it ll noticed that the Goat\nhai lowered about six inches up as\nfar ai the first bend. This goes\nto ihow that thii new condition\nli going to be a great help in rid*\nding thii stream of its surplus wa*\nter each spring.\nC. H. Robinson, Impecor of flah-\nariei, wai here at the time the\nstream waa diverted for the pur-\npoint of diversion into the new chan-\ndeierted the now-abandoned stretch\nget shallow.\nFor the present a small bridge\nhas been built across the new channel for thc convenience of West\nCreston reiidents and the haymakers. Thla structure will only be\nrequired until such time at the\ndyke across the old river channel is completed when the dyke will\nbe used as a road.\nArthur Hurry of West Creiton has\nbeen awarded the contract for a\naupply of poles to be used as piling to be driven for protection along\nthe Goat diversion in order to\nriver in its spring floods.\nThe dyke ii itretching out toward the Kootenay. with over a\nmile of it constructed to the full\nheight of ten feet. This section of\ndyke is the heaviest piece of con-\nitruction on the whole job. The big\nscrapers are going strong, 24 hours a\na day.\nPreparation! are uderway to commence draining the varloui iloughi\nand small lakes ln the dyked area,\nIncluding Luke's and Indian Lake!,\nand the ilough at the ferry, which\nappear to be the main one.\nAccording to Information given\nby dyking company official! the\naouth end dyke from Dow'i to the\nKootenay river will be completed\nby the end of November.\nOn Thunday another dragline wu\nUnloaded at Wynndel and ii now\nat work on the north end dyke\nwhich will have to be erected to\na height of 15 feet in order to keep\nput the back wateri of Kootenay\nlake. Thli machine ii of the North-\nwast design, with 50-boom and of\none-yard capacity. It li expected to\nhave the dragline that has been\noperating at the diversion at work\n\u00bbt the north end before the end\nM the week. At preient thii machine ll buiy cleaning out the core\nfitch of tbe dyke at the old Goat\nUver channel.\nConiidering that green handi have\nlud to be trained to operate the\npig wheel acrapers and that the\ntwo machine! have been at work for\nIaaa than a month, dyking company\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0ffflrifilj and Engineer Heath ex-\npreai themielvei as 1,'Shly pleased\nWith tha progress that hai been\nmade, particularly with operations\ncarried on in wll formation that\nWill be the wont encountered, according to the teit holei put down\n\u2022long the entire length of the 14\nmiles of dyke. ^^^^^\nBRAMTFORD, Ont, Oct. IB (CP)\u2014\nJt refrigerator car was loaded here\ntoday wltb fruit and vegetablea tor\nthe drought-stricken areaa ot western Canada. The large amount of\nfruit and vegetable! contributed bj\ntbe easterners made lt necessary to\ncall for another car which will arrive here tomorrow.\nMiss All-America\nAWARDS PLOURDE\n4 $647 MID COSTS\nCourt Sustains Action Against\nHenry Meyerhoff and\nAmusement Company\nThe all-American girl, \"Mill\nAmerica,\" title wai won by Loulie Sohiialtz, 17-year-old blonde\nbeauty of New Orleani In the\namateur beauty conteit finals\nstaged at the Chicago world'i fair.\nMill Schmalti competed agalnit\nbeauty queens from all parti of\nthe United Statei to annex the\ntitle.\nSheriff Is Named\nUnder Curator Act\nOlga Fredrich Wishes to Complete Payment on Portion\nof Land\nPBC06. Terse, Oct. 10 (CP)\u2014Joe\nHlnson, Pecot pharmacist, found today he la an heir. A great-grandmother, at Weatherford, left an eatate yeari ago and it Is finally being settled. Joe's share li l-8448th\npart of the eitlmated 8420O cstste,\nor. In round figures, about 60 cents.\nA Ball of Lead in Stomach\nIF you're troubled\nwith distress from\nstomach, gas, and\nyour blood becomes\npoisoned, there is\nnothing so good as\nDr. Pierce's Golden\nMedical Discovery.\nRead what Mrs.\nHilda Magnuson of\n541 Alexander Ave.,\nWinnipeg, Mao., has to say: \"Two years alo\nmy stomach troubled me. I would become\nbloated with gaa and there waa inch a\nheavy feeling ln the pit of my atnmach like\n\u2022 ball of lead. My appetite was poor and 1\nfett so tired and weary. I used only one\nbottle ef Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and It rid me of the atomach dlstresa\nand I felt fine in every way.\"\nWrite Dr. Pierce'a Clinic, Buffalo, N. Y.\nNew sise, tablets SO cts., liquid $1.00. Lares\nlbe, tablets or liquid, JUS. AU drugglsu.\nSheriff M. S. Harper wai named\nofficial admlnlitrator under the curator'! act for tbe estate of Mlkl\nKobzey, who has been milling since\n1933. Olga Fredrich, who bought a\npiece of land from Kobzey, had\nonly paid a portion ot the entire\nprice for It and wished to complete\nthe payment and receive title for\nthe land. Kobzey formerly resided\nIn Nakuap but tbe land ln question\nIs  In  Rosemont..\nKobzey was last heard of at Montresl where he left on one of the\nocean liners for Danzig, via Liverpool, on Oct. 7, 1932. He wai an Aui-\ntrlan.\nOlga Fredrich has already paid\n8280 on the land and 1313.4a remains to be paid. H. C. Irving acted\nfor the petitioner.\nLeo Plourde waa granted 1841.70\nand cost! In county court by Judge\nW. A. Nisbet, the amount named tn\nhis ault agalnat Henry Meyerhoff and\nthe Creecent Amusement comptny\nPlourde's action against Mrs. Helen\nMeyerhoff wai dismissed hy the\ncourt. The Bum named by Plourde\nttu for services rendered to Meyerhoff and the company. E. P. Dawson,\nof Brown ind Dawion, appeared\nfor the plaintiff, R. C. Irving for\nHenry Meyerhoff and the crescent\nAmusement company and C. H.\nHimllton. of wragge md Hamilton,\nfor Helen Meyerhoff.\nWOMEN ASK FOR\nPROBE OF ARMS\nOTTAWA, Oct. 18 (CP). - The\nNational Council of Women today\ncalled upon the Canadian goverif\nment to take the initiative in proposing that \"a full and untrammelled\" investigation be now opened into the operations ot British\nmanufacturer! and traffickers in\narms. The investigation, it wai ex-\npresily itated, ihould include any\nCanadian subsidiariei of these firms.\nOn motion of Mrs. A. C. Bagley,\nof Vancouver, seconded by Mrs.\nWalter Lyman, of Montreal, the\ncouncil approved the. resolution\nsponsored by the local council of\nwomen of New Westmimter.\nFORMS FINISHED\nFOR PAVING JOB\nFormi are now about completed\non the concrete paving project on\nthe corner of Baker and Railway\nitreeti to Vernon itreet. paving wlll\ncommence soon and will be laid over\nthe top of the hard-top tarvta surface. Thli u mother job in thi\nprogram to better Nelaon striata\nand to aid ln further opening up\nthe traffic to Vernon itreet.\nCan't Rent Taxis\nto the Drivers\nVICTORIA, Oct. 18 (CP)- The\nagreement between five taxi driven and the Empress Taxi tt Sightseeing company of Victoria, by\nwhich the company rents its cars to\nthem on a basis of nine cents a\nmile, the company furnishing gas,\noil and tires and making repairs, is\nin the opinion of the board of .industrial relations, intended to have\nthe effect either directly or indirectly of defeating the true intent\nand object of the Male Minimum\nWage act, an order of the board\nstated today, and the carrying on of\nthe agreement is prohibited.\nMiss Stevens \"Fair\"\nMONTREAL, Oct. 18 (CP)-Con-\nditifln of Miss Sylvia Stevens,\ndaughter of Hon. H. H. Stevens,\nminister of trade and cdmmerce,\nwas reported at the Montreal General hospital lonight as \"fairly satisfactory.\nSOUNDS LIKE A COMIC\nSTRIP EPISODE\nPUEBLO, Colo., Oct. 18 (CP)\u2014\nMelvin Shaner wrecked his motorcycle on a kindergarten chair in a\nchurch basement. Shaner, his machine out of control, rode through a\nfilling station, across vacant lots,\nthrough a hedge and into a basement\nwindow of the First Baptist church.\nHe was unhurt except for t\nscratch on his head.\nSCOUTS ACQUIRE\n10 MORE ACRES\nTRAIL. B.C., Oct. 18-Roisland-\nTrail Boy Scout association has\ncompleted arrangements for the purchase of an additional 10 acre! at\nFruitvale which will round out the\nScout camp lite at that point and\ngive the association title to 30 acres\nall told.\nThe most recently acquired 10\nacres adjoins the 20 acrea previously acquired. It wai purchased directly from the government to which it\nhad reverted.\nThe most recent purchase wai\nmade possible by private individuals\nwhose contributions were much appreciated by the Scout association.\nFlashes From the Wires\nWASHINOTON (AP)\u2014United Statu\ntreasury's 13.000,000.000 stabilization\nfund li 90 per cent Intact, it wu\nlearned, scotching rumori that thi\nmoney wu being tiled for dealings\nln government bond!, illver and\nforeign exchinge on a icale of much\nlarger thin is now ihown to have\nbeen possible.\nSKATTU, (API\u2014Babe Ruth'i team\nof American leagua all itari won a\ntree hitting game from another American league all itar aggregation,\n9 to e, on their exhibition tour here\n8YDNIY, HAW. (AP)\u2014Delay ln\nadjusting the wlreiew tranamlttei\nInstalled ln hU big plane cauaed\nBlr charlu Klngsford Smith to post.\npone until Sundiy the starts of hi!\ntranspacific flight.\nVANCOUVER, Jick Fongren, 311.\nof Vancouver, took a two-out-of-\nthree fall victory from Bonny Mulr,\n316, of Auitralli, ln the main event\nof a wrestling card here.\nSIATTM iAP)-Relfel Uquor in.\ntereita won two victories, tempered\nby one defeat, when Judge Jeremiah\nNeterer severed two of the Reifel\nsubsidiaries from thi government'!\n17 million dollsr civil iult, refuting\nto dismiss the principal company, the\nBritish Columbia distilleries.\nVANCOUVIR, (CP)\u2014dene Tunniy\nformer world'i heavyweight boxing\nchampion, arrived enroute to Interior britlih Columbia where hi\nwill look over some mining propertlee ln which he is Intereited.\nMONTRBAL   (CP)\u2014Widely   known\nIn the Cinadlan fruit trade, Rou\nMorrison, aecretary-treasurer of the\nfruit brokerage firm of Marshall and\nMorrlion, died here, aged 48.\nVANCOUVIR (CP)-Britlih Columbia'! 1934 Rhodes Kholu wlll be\nHlected Dec. l, Sherwood Lett, ucretary of the Rhodet Kboiarihlp\nMiectlon oommlttee ot B, C. announced.\nORINFILL, Suk. (CP)-UheraU\nnimed J. A. MicOowin, Summer-\nberry, candidate ln Qu'Appelle feder.\nil constituency.\nBUENOS AYRES. (API\u2014HH O.\nEverts, well known American fiction\nwriter; died on board the 86. Malolo\non which hi wu returning from\nSouth America on a trip for hli\nhulth.. The body will be lent on\nto boi Angeles, hli bome.\nVANCOUVER, (CP) \u2014 Hon. las\nMackenzie, Liberal member In the\nhouw of commons for Vincouver\ncenter, wu unanimously nominated\nto conteit that wt In the next federal election.\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014a ipeclai executive meeting tonight of the Canadian Rugby Football union decided\nthit the senior final would be played ln eastern Canada again this\nyeir.\nWINNIPEG (OP)-John I. McFarland, genenl manager of the central\nselling agency of the Canadian wheat\npool!, told a private gathering of\ndelegates to the annual meeting ot\nthe Manitoba wheat pool he expected to retire ln about a year.\nFLIERS ALL SET TO BID FOR BIG\nPRIZE MONEY INRACETOMORROW\nMILDENHALL, Eng., Oct. 18 (CP-\nAP).-With clow to 12.000 milei of\nland and sea, mountain and plain,\ndesert and forest ahead of \\*si), a\ngroup of sturdy fliers tonight were\neither djperately fixing last-minute mishap! or juat plain praying\nfor a fair itart on the England-to-\nAustralla air race Saturday.\nTonight was their last complete\nrest before 21 planes, many specially\ndesigned for the race, roar away\non the long flight to Melbourne\nseeking a prlte of (90,000 for pure\napeed\u2014and it may be under three\ndayi\u2014or the 810,000 additional prize\nfor the slower handicap division.\nAll planet at thc airdrome have\nbeen weighed and checked, except\nthat of Miu Jacqueline Cochran of\nNew York, and that job will be\ntackled tomorrow morning. Mech-\nanlca were working furiously to repair damage! to the plane of Ken\nWaller, the propellor of which was\nbent after a landing today.\nAi result ot a ballot for starting\nplaces, that famous pair, the flying\nMollisons, will lead the take-off\nCol. Roicoe Turner and Clyde Pang-\nborn, United Statei aces, will follow. Lait to gl will be the young\nAustralian, C. J. Melrose.\nFinal check-up ihowed nine English entries; two from Australia;\ntwo from New Zealand; one fro t\nIreland; one from Britlih New\nGuinea; three from the United\nStates; two fnm Holland and one\nfrom Denmark.\nJap:\nan Would Enter\nLeague if U.S. Did\nCALGARY, Oct. 18 (CP)-Japan\nwill not reenter the league of nations unless the United States Joins,\nHon. Yotaro Sugimura, newly appointed Japanese ambassador to\nItaly, said in an interview here tonight. Mr. Sugimura paised through\non his way to Ottawa and New\nYork and will sail from the United\nStates port.\n\"As it now exiits, the league is\nmerely an alliance of European\npowers, ineffective when its influence reachei outside iti own area.\nThere is no doubt it would be a very\nimportant factor in promotion of\nworld peace it America became\ninterested in its operation,\" the diplomat said.\nTo preserve peace the world now\nneeds a \"heart trust\" rather than a\n\"brain trust,\" he added.\n[ If i ai taty te My\n\"DEWAR'S\"\n\u00abIt U to ioy\" Scotch'\nload i. awoM M nick moral\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed bv the Liauot\n* Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nCreston Badminton\nPlayers Organize\nCRESTON. Oct 18\u2014There wai a\nlarge and representative turnout of\nthe 1933-34 badminton playen for\nthe annual meeting on Monday night\nwhich was in charge of the retiring president, J. P. Macdonald.\nThe financial statement, submitted\nby the secretery-treasurer, A. W.\nMillen, showed a balance on the\nright side of the ledger. The secretary's review of last season ihowed that the club had played home\nand home games with Canyon and\nBoswell and that one trip had been\nmade to Yahk. The club was alio\nrepresented in the tournament! at\nboth Cranbrook and Creiton. Officers for this year were elected as\nfollows:\nPreiident, R. Lynn; vlce-preildent.\nMn. F. R. Levirs; secretary-treasurer, A. W. Mlllen; executive, J. P.\nMacdonald, Miss Jean Henderson.\nMiss Marjorle Hamilton, Mill Hazel\nHobden; tournament committee, Miss\nM. Smith, C. H. Hare, O. Sostad.\nFor the present season there will\nbe a tournament the first Monday\nin each month, with the club having the pavi\/.ion again for Mondays\nand Wednesdays.. All former members are asked to register before\nNovember 1, after which dale new\ntalent will be accepted to fill any\nvacancies.\nAt the East Kootenay tournament\nlast winter the local club competed\nin men's and ladies' mixed doubles, along with the doubles for\nmen as well as the ladies. Mn.\nChandler and Miss Jean Henderson\nbringing home the silver cup emblematic of the championihip in\nthe comolation round of the ladies'\ndoubles.\nTHE WEATHER\nMln. Max.\nVictoria \u2014  48 68\nNanalmo  87 80\nVincounvir    -   88 84\nAtlln  .  _  36 42\nKamloopi _  32 60\nPrlnoi Oaorga   43 63\nPrince Rupert  46 60\nBtevan  Point   43 62\nSpokane  - ,.._  42 60\nPortland  48 64\nBeattle   _  44 80\nSan Franciico   66 66\nPentlcton \u201e  38 \u2014\nOrand Forti  36 66\nNelaon      38 \"\u00bb\nVernon  38 \u2014\nOalgary       30 66\nEdmonton   36 63\nQu'Appelle   _ \u201e  36 46\nWinnipeg    _ 38 44\nMooie Jaw  36 64\nDawson       .,  38 38\nPrlnoe Albert  33 84\nNelaon and vicinity\u2014Partly cloudy\nstationary or higher temperature.\nGrants Letters\nLetten of adminiitration were\ngranted by Judge W. A. Nilbet in\ncounty court to Mn. Fedocla W.\nLazareff, wife of Sam A. Lazareff,\nin the matter of the estate of John\nOzeroff, who died tnteritate In 1822.\nThe eifate amounted to $1500. Mn.\nLazareff will receive $500 of lt and\nthe remainder will be divided equally between two 10m and a daughter.\nH. C. Irving acted for Mra. Lazareff.\nResembKng Big Park\nDiamond Is Being Manicured;\nBan Is Said to Not Include Outdoor Sports\nAnglican Children to\nCelebrate on Sunday\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 18-Children'i\nday, set apart by authority of the\ngeneral lynod of the Church of\nEngland in Canada, will be celebrated In Trail Sunday afternoon\nby a ipeciel lervlce at St. Andrew'i\nchurch, preceded by a procesllon of\nwitnesses.\n$3000 FINE FOR THEFT OF\nVOTERS' LIST\nTO SEND PRODUCTS\nWOODSTOCK, Ont., Oct. 16 (CP)\n\u2014Oxford county farmen wlll aoswii\nan appeal for pro'vlalom for families in drought-stricken sections of\nSaskatchewan with a carload ot\nproduce and preserves. The Woodstock Mlnsterlal association decldea\nto tike over the responsibility ot\nrnlsln*\" the necessary supplies to\nfill the requirements.\nr\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 18 (CPl \u2014 A\nwarning that theft of voten' Hsu\nposted in public place! to be checked following thli waek'i enumeration Is punishable by a fine of 63000\nor two years Imprisonment wai li-\n\u25a0ued today following removal of \u25a0\nlist from the corner of Robson and\nOranvllle itreeta. police aw seeking\nthe culprit.\nROYAL PAIR DUE HOME\nEARLY NEXT WEEK\nThe Recreation ground! li looking\nmore and more like the Athletics1\nball park all the time. Bleachera are\niprouting up all over the ground!\nlike mushrooms, and made from\nnew lumber as they are, they give\nthe ground! a Very dreued-up appearance. One eet of bleacher! is\nalmost completed and it extends\nfrom a few feet back of the home\nplate to the north fence. It it set on\na slight angle so that spectators\nnearest the fence will have no trouble through excited fani leaning\nforward.\nAccording to the lateit information, the ban which hai been placed\non public function! and activities,\nwill not affect outdoor aporta and\nthe visit of the American league\nbaseball Stan here Monday, October 22, will take place as echeduled.\nThe Infield of the diamond has\nbeen manicured but more work remains to be done on it. Sunday it\nwill be sprayed and dragged again\nand that ihould put it in excellent\ncondition.\nThe array of stars that will vlilt\nNelion will include \"Al\" Schacht, a\ncomedian of wide tame. He ii a\ncoach and a living example that the\nemtio is mightier than the scowl\n\"Heinle\" Manush, the Senator outfielder who wai only clouting a\nmean .400 for about half the preient\nseason will be one of the brightest\nlighti. \"Heinle\" is one of the perennial choicei for moit valuable player\nln the American league. \"Pinky\"\nHiggins, considered by Connie Mack\nto De one of the greateit infielderi\nof the major leagues, will also be\nhere.\nFor Nelson, as a battery, will be\n\"Rube\" Walberg and \"Luke\" Seweil,\nthe former ii with the Boiton Red\nSox and the latter ii a Senator, but\nnot from the capitol. Rube will\npitch and Luke will catch.\nEXPEDITION REACHES\nHUDSON HOPE\nZINKIE MINED IN\nDISTRICT CAMPS\nDies From Diphtheria; Buried\nat  Nelson  Cemetery\nEdward Zlnkie, victim of diphtheria, wu laid to rest in the city\ncemetery Thuraday following lerv-\nicei in Davii funeral home. Adjutant Harold Chapman of the Salvation Army officiated and a number of old timeri were in attendance.\nHymni lung were \"Nearer My\nGod to Thee\" and \"Abide With Me.\"\nPallbearera were Tony Mack, Napoleon MaUette, Paddy Merrlner\nand John Vivian.\nMr. Zinkle wai single and about\n48 yeara of age. He wai born in\nNewfoundland and hai resided In\nthe district abnt 20 yeara, being\nemployed ln the minei at Sandon,\nKaslo, Alnaworth and of late in\nYmlr where he waa taken ill.\nNEW HAUPTMANN\nEVIDENCE OFFERED\nNEW YORK, Oct. 18 (AP). -\nCouniel for Bruno Richard Hauptmann wai granted permission by an\nappellate division justice tonight to\nmove for the introduction of new\nevidence in hii fight againit hii\nclient'! extradition to Nel; Jersey,\nwhere he is charged with the ktd-\nnap-killing of the Lindbergh baby.\nJustice Martin told Fawcett the\nmotion would be taken itnder advisement but did not Indicate\nwhether new evidence would be admitted. The appeal hearing ii scheduled for tomorrow afternoon.\nThe ne \u2022 evidence, the attorney\ndisclosed, involves the statement!\nof two men that Hauptmann worked\nat a New York apartment build\/ig\nuntil 5 p.m. on the day the Lindbergh baby wai abducted\u2014a further effort of the prisoner to establish an alibi.\nDOUKHOBORSALE ,\nHEWS' TO GOVT\nRIGINA, oct. 18 (CP)\u2014Members\nof the Saskatchewan government\nhad no additional knowledge todiy\nof the proposed sale of Doukhobor\nlands ln Saskatchewan other than\nthat In thi despatch trom Winnipeg\nwhich carries an announcement from\nPeter Verlgln, business and spiritual\nleader of the sect In thli province.\nEven Hon. It. J, H. Parker, mlnlater ot municipal affairs, whose\nconstituency, Pelly, contains a large\nproportion of the Doukhobor holdings, had been given no lmtlma-\ntlon of a pending Mil. He stated\nhe would Instlute some enquiries,\nbut admitted It waa \"ill newi\" to\nhtm.\nSTEP UP VOLTAGE\nSTREET LIGHTING\nLONDON, Oct. 18 (CP-Havas)-\nThe Duke of Kent and his fiance,\nPrincess Marina of Greece, are expected here early next week from\n3elgi*ade, where today they attended the funeral of King Alexander\nof Yugoslavia. They will be married\nat Westminster abbey November 28.\nIt wai announced today that the\nprincess, with her parents, Prince\nnnd Princess Nicolas of Greece,\nwill be guests of the King and\nQueen at Buckingham palace from\nNovember 21 until the marriage\nday.\nMcGeer Seeks Nomination\nVERNON, Oct. lg (CP)\u2014O. O. MO-\nOeer, M.L.A.. definitely announced\nhe ''will seek the candlda'urt? as\nLiberal standard bearer In Bu.rird\nconstituency in the next Dominion\nelection, In i statement mide during\na vlilt here. Asked if he had any intentions of becoming a Vancouver\nmayoralty candidate, Mr. Meoeer\nsaid he wai not particularly Intereited ln municipal politic!.\nThe Italian navy has made teiU\nof a new ateel cylinder device with\ntable attachment, for reicue of men\ntrapped ln sunken submarines.\nHUDSON HOPE, B.C., Oct. 18\n(CP) .\u2014Charlei I. Bedaux and hli\nexpedition which failed In an attempt to make an 1100 mile crossing of the Rocky motitatns ln northern British Columbia arrived here\nlate today.\nThe party arrived after nearly\nfour months In the mountainous\narea and brought a atory ot hero*\nIsm and difficulties. They will rest\nhere until Saturday morning and\nthen wlll proceed to Taylor, B.C\nand Pouce Coupe, B.C., when they\nwlll entrain for Edmonton.\nStreet lights are now giving oft\na greater illumination in Nelson.\nDuring I Is past few days the voltage has been stepped up by a relocation of transformers and by\ndividing the load it is hoped to ,* \/e\nan even higher voltage for street\nlighting.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct 18,-Mn. D.\nFletcher waa guest of honor at a\ncharming informal afternoon tea,\nMiss Margaret Drapaka entertaining at the home of her mother.\nGamta provided entertainment,\ndainty refreshments later being\nserved by the hoiten who wai assisted by Mrs. Jennie Campbell and\nMiss \"Robbie\" Martin. The invited\nguests were Mrs. E. Fletcher, Mn.\n1. Nocente, Mra. J. Desantos, Mrs.\nM. Monteith, Mra. J. Marks, Mra. D.\nSetso, Mn. M. Campbell, Mlsi C.\nRon. Mils Annie Mugnani, Mrs. L.\nHankley, Mn. G. Reel, Mn. J.\nCampbell and Miss Martin.\naae\nMr. and Mn. W. H. Saunders,\nwho   were   visiting   at  Passmore,\nhave returned to Trail.\nI   a I\nJunior auxiliary to East Trail\nminion m\u00abt tt\/s week at the mis\nsion hall, Mn. Hamilton Currie pre*\nsiding.\naaa\nMiu Ethel Heywood of Craw*\nford hai been the guest of Trail\nfriends for a few dayi.\n.    .    i\nMn. H. R. Laurlente, who hai\nbeen vacationing at Spokane, hai\nreturned to Trail!\nMixture\n(By  Llibeth)\nHeather mixtures are Jutt the\nthing for fall, fitting, nmihow,\nright Into the autumn picture.\nBlack and white wool flecked\nwith red li choien for hir ault by\nEvelyn Venable, who plays In\n\"Mn. Wiggi of the Cabbage\nPatch.\"\nA red leather belt and red bone\nbutton! accent the red fleckt, and\nwith thii tult Evelyn wean a\nnavy blue hat, navy oxfordt and\ngloves, but her envelope big\nplcki up the red note.\nNo Fraud Evidence\nis Stirrett Claim\nSeveral   \"Mistakes,\"  Counsel\nin Teck-Hughes Case\nSuggests\nTORONTO, Oct. 17 (CP)-Evi-\ndence submitted during a three-day\nInquiry into charges involving announcement of a dividend reduction on the capital stock of Teck-\nHughes Gold Mines hai tailed to\ndisc-lose any offence under the Ontario Securitiei and Frauds Prevention act, Commisiloner Counsel 1T.\nStirrett suggeited to Commissioner\nJ. M. Godfrey today.\nIn summing up evidence given by\nTeck-Hughes directors, itock brokers, newspaper men and official! of\nthe Toronto stock exchange, Stirrett\nsubmitted that in hii opinion no offence had been committed, but contended there had been \"mistakes\"\nconcerning the imparting of information which he thought had \"very\ngreat significance\" on the price of\nthe mining stock during a period\nwhen unconfirmed rumors were circulating regarding possible reduction of the company's quarterly\ndividend.\nTHE ST. LAWRENCE\nWATERWAY OPPOSED\nBY THOMAS HEPBURN\nBig Celebration Is\nOpen at Melbourne\nMELBOURNE, Australia. Oct 18\n(CP-AP)\u2014The Duke of Gloucester\ntouched an electric button tonight\nand illuminated the city with a glow\nvisible for 100 miles, signalling the\nitart of the centennary celebration\nof the white man'i coming in thli\nland.\nThe third ion of the King arrived\ntoday to officiate at the ceremonlei,\nentering the city ln a itate coach\nthrough five miles of decorated\nstreets lined with cheering crowds.\nOverhead 70 airplanes iwooped and\nzoomed in greeting.\nPays $18,555 Taxes\nVERNON, B.C.. Oct. 18 (CP)-The\nColdstream ranch has paid over a\ncheck for $18,595 to the Coldstream\nmunicipality finally settling lta arrears of taxes for the years 1832\nand 1833. The result will be a reduction of 10 mills in the current\nmunicipal tax levy.\nMlis Agnes Shernak of Grand\nForks haa been spending a few\ndays in Trail.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiu Elsie Attaway is the guest\not Mr. and Mra. Reginald German\nof Nelion thii week.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMra. E. J. Bowkett and daughter,\nwho viiited for several dayi with\nTrail relatives, have returned to\ntheir home at South Slocan.\n\u2022 t  i\nMrs. Charlei Fransen is a patient in the Traii-Tadanac hoipital.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Marjorie Castle has returned\nhome from a three-month vacation\nat coast cities.\n\u2022 . t\nMrs. George Caitle of Fruitvale\nis a patient in the Trail-Tadanac\nhoipital.\n*   *   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. A. H. Hopkins of\nTadanac have as their .Tueet their\ndaughter, Mn. Arthur Mackie of\nKimberley, who ia accompanied by\nShirley Mackie.\nDOUKHOBORS DENY UND\nTO BE SOLD\nTORONTO, Oct. 18 (CP)-Oppo-\nsitlon to immediate construction of\nthe St. Lawrence waterway waa\nvoiced today by Premier Mitchell\nHepburn, who characterized the\nwaterway as \"totally uneconomical\nunder present conditions.\"\nThe seaway cannot be justified\nthe ground that Ontario and\nQuebec need power. Both provinces\nare now generating far more power\nthan they can absorb,\" the premier\nsaid.\nKILLED WHILE RIDING\nST. CATHARINES. Ont, Oct. 18\n(CP)\u2014Donald L. McLeod, assistant\ngeneral manager of the Ontario\nPaper company, wai fatally injured\ntoday when he fell from a horse he\nwas riding. Mr. McLeod was a past\nchairman of the technical section,\nCanadian Pulp nnd Paper association and this year was representative\non the administrative committee.\nSurviving are his widow and two\nsons.\nGOOD PROGRESS\nON POWER LINE\nHoles Are Dug to the City\nLimits and Start Made\non Line Work\nGood progress wai made during\nthe past few days on the oty'a new\npower line between the Bonnington plant and the Nelion lub-ita-\ntion. Pole holes have been dug from\nthe plant to the end of Wasson\nstreet on the edge of the city limits, and seven and a halt miles of\npoles have been raised. A small\ncrew on the power plant haa made\na itart on the installing of insulators and hardware, and stringing\not wire will start soon, Cloae to 150\npoles have gone up io far and all\nnecessary hardware ii now on hand.\nAbout 15 men were kept on the\njob during the pait few dayi, 10\ndigging holes and five on line work.\nSlashing and burning li alao in\nprogress where the line swings from\nthe old site above Pickering, from\nthe lower to the upper Granite road\nSOLUTION OF SAFE\nROBBERY LACKING\nwhat city police thought wu a\ntrue trail to the solution of the Imperial Oil company aafe robbery\nMonday, petered out Thuraday, but\nthiy vigorously lnvtstlgated new\nduel.\nMonday night or Tueeday morning the company's Mte ln the office! on the C. P. R. flata wu cut\ninto by meani of hacks mwi and\na aum ot 153 ln ll and 81 bull\ntaken.\nBAND PLANS FOR\nCOMING SEASON\nPreparation! for the reorganisation\nof the Canadian Legion Bugle band\nfor tbe coming seaaon. li to be\nmada at a meeting aoon. Thunday\nnight a number of band memben\nturned In their Instruments and\ndiscussed plans for an active season.\nJudge Thompson\nNamed Chancellor\nAnnouncement Made at Executive of Synod Meeting\nHeld in Nelson\nThe appointment of Judge G. H.\nThompeon as chancellor of the diocese, was announced by Bishop Walter Adams at the semi-annual meeting of the executive committee ot\nthe diocese of Koootenay held in\nNelson during Wednesday and\nThursday. The usual routine business wai completed at the sessions.\nArrangements for a synod of the\ndiocese were made at the meeting\nand it will be called by the biihop\nfor June 6 and 7, 1835, at either\nPenticton or Kelowna. -\nSEARCH PARTY  BACK\nOTTAWA. Oct. 18 (CP). \u2014 After\nfinding no trace of Rev. Pather\nHonore Pigeon, missing missionary,\na March party of 13, Including\nRoyal Canadian Mounted police and\nPather Ajthur Thtbert, hu returned to Chesterfield Inlet. The party\nhad been out since Oct. 10, searching along the shore of Hudson Bay\nwhen Father Pigeon wai caught\nln  a  blizzard.\nWord of the return of the party\nwas received today by the radio\nbranch of the department of marine.\nTHAT DEPRESSED\nFEELING IS\nLARGELY LIVER\nWake Up Your Liver Bile...\nWithout Calomel, And Feel\nLike a Million Dollars.\nNothing can put your tyttem oat of kilter\nnor* quickly than your llvtr. All it htt to do ii\n\u25a0top pouring iU daily two pounda ot liquid bila\ninto your bowela\u2014and life certainly geta pay.\nThat sluggish Bow of bila alowa up digatUoa\nand tliinitiation aod makea you \"feel punk\".\nYour ttomach acta up\u2014taa, Moating, aourneaa,\npain. Your breath ia bad and tht taatt in your\nmouth ia natty. Your head eohee. Skin it\nblotchy. Al), ol courte, beoauM your tytttm ii\nfull of poitona.\nMere bowel movers like talte, op, mineral\nwater, roughage, leiative oandy or obewiog\nnim are not good enough, to correct thla ooadi-\nion entirely. You're livery and you muat warn\nup your liver bile to be happy again.\nAvoid calomel {mercury). The thing .OT_j*e\n\u00ab a boi of Carter'! Little Uver Pills. Tbey\nnever uptet you because they're purely veg*.\nUble, gentle and nfe; but how they do changt\nyour view on I if el\nDon't watte your money on tubetitutet. Bt\ndefiniie. Aik for Carter'\u00ab by nttoe\u2014and get\nthem! Look for the ntme, Carter'a*- oa tbe rtl\nWbaL   Wo. at all druggitU. M\nThe Weakening Agony of\nPiles (Haemorrhoids) Ended\nThousands Bless Thlt Famout Htrbal Ointment\nVBBIOW, taak., Oct. Is tCPI-\nDoukhobor officials denied tonlstiti\nthat there waa anr truth m ike\nstatement of their leader, Peter Vcrj.\n(In, at Winnipeg Wednesday, tht.-.\nthe Christian Community of Universal Brotherhood waa about to aall\n11 lta Saskstchewsn holdings Thr-i\naid they could not underst-trd\ntheir chief's making tuch a \u2022'\u25a0.;*\u25a0\u2022\nment.\nPiles or hemorrhoids cause ot.\noruciating pain aad often serious\nloss of blood. The famoua Zam-Buk\nointment ia wonderfully soothing to\nht twollen veini and itching parti.\nIsmBuk derives its healing aad\nnil diy astringent influence from\nlerhal extract! of special value in\n.hia weakening aad agoniting com-\n-laint. Zam-Buk aaa t wonderful\n.eeord of luecess.\nan.\nTH* MST OF PROOF\nIt.  L. Garber. ef 2515 Ohio\nA.\\siue, Southgate. California, a nurse,\nTitc** at follows:\u2014\"My husband suf-\nw%4 ->om Piles for years, but a year\n1. ttu-y reached an acute tttte and\n\u2022i rould neither sleep nor attend his\n.*rr.:. He had medical advice, tried\n*\". etrll ot baths, hot packs, enemas\n>*-\u25a0_ .*l:*.tments which cost him hun-\ni.-t-Lt of dollars without obtaining any\n\u25a0 t'-.ct. Finally a friend gave him a\nlist ot Ztun-Buk: tfter application for\nme day ha obtained t mod rilght'i\nnat.   Hi contlnutd the trtstineiit ni\nby the time ht hid finished a tecond\nbox ht wat compltttly relieved of thli\nMoniilna ailment and ablt to return!\nhis work.\"\nMrt. r. Birrett, Pioneer, Alberta,\nwritea*\u2014\"We htve uied Zam-Buk erer\nllnet I wtt a yount Ctrl and I halt\nntvtr known lt fail. My huiband, who\nhit betn troubled with Itching plllt\nfer ytari, Myi tht toothing relief\nZam-Buk brought wu wonderful.\"\nTkt unptrilleled niecett of Zan- (\nBuk lies in iti original and valuable\nformula. Ztm-Buk it compounded\nfrom certain herbal extracts of an *\nextraordinarily healing, toothing\nand antiseptic nature. Zam-Buk\ntoon itopt all pain and itching. It\ngeta at the root of tnck troubles tt\necaema, talt rheum, bad legs, ulcere,\nscalp disease, poisoned aoret, etc.,\nand it alio a flno ever-ready Inlaid for injuries. Zam-Buk Ointment\nSOc. box, Zam-Buk Medicinal Soaf\n25c. cake.\n -*\u2014\n\u25a0THI NIUON DAILY NIW*. NIUON. \u25a0.C\u2014WgDNggDAY MORNINO. OCT. 17. IM4-\nFascism Broken in Sweden\nDeclares League President\nJust for a few people with leitunl -writ T> f   Ttt       ti tt T^\nUedonun^medUm-     iViolent Past or His Family Forebodes\nUnhappy Life for Jugoslavia's Boy King\nC. Sandler Sees Better\nTimes Coming for\nHis Country\nBJ   riEBBE   VAN   PAASSEN\nCentral Preu Canadian Writer\nQUOTA, Oct. IB\u2014Carl Sandler,\npretident of tht oouncll of thl\nLeague*, ot N'ttona, foreign mlnltter\nand Uader of the right-wing toclal-\nlata ln Sweden, wu ln a happy\nmood when I otlltd on him. Hi\nwu reading telegrami from home\nand theie teltgrtma ihowed that bit\nparty had been victorious at tbt\npom.\n\"Wbat doea It mean, the victory\nof your party?\" I asked. \"What doea\nlt mean?\" he t\u00abclslmed, \"It meant\nwe have smashed fascism In Sweden I\" be replied. \"For tbat wu tbe\nissued. I tm overjoyed.\" he went on.\n\"But that la not the only reaaon\nI am hippy today- I am alio glad\nthat I had tbe honor to welcome\ntbe great aovltt union Into tbt\nLeague of Natlont. That la an event\nof world Importance, ror tbt prestige and tnflutnc* of the league\nitand to benefit enormoutly by the\nentry of a itate of iuoh Importance!\"\n11. Sandler, who directed tbe debates of tbe league aaaembly thla\nyear with fine tact ind Infinite\nauthority, gained everybody'! sympathy at Geneva, Including tht\nprut, wbleh la not so euy. lit la a\nyoung man yet, of pleaunt mien\nand frank optn countenance.\n\"We were ln power before tbt\nelections,\" uld Mr. Sandler In reply\nto a queetlon what the Soelallata In\nSweden Intended to do now they\nhave an abtolut* majority. \"We\nWere ln power but we gained 34 Matt\nIn addition. Tbe Farmen party who\nsupports ut bu alao gained if suta.\nTbla thowa tbat the people of Sweden bave absolute confidence In ut.\"\n\"Then in not mtny governments\nwhich bold tbt confldenoe of the\npeople In then dayt of economlo\n-crisis,\" I uld, \"and aee their power\nconfirmed by > free normal election.\nWbat did your government do to\nmeet the depreulon which I dare\nuy hu not spared Sweden?\"\n\"Our' flnt concern.\" replied Mr.\nSandier, \"were the workers and the\nftrmen and not tbe millionaire!, ts\nyou may imagine. We decided to\ntight tht depreulon and waste no\ntune   ln   futile   palaver   and   tllly\n-\"DODD'S\"'\nKIDNEY\n\/PILLS -\nM- KIDN^\n'DER  fRO-A     ,1\n..\u25a0!!U._*HCumaTI-......*.'-.\nDo you know Mr. Bennett, the\ndelegate from Canada?\" I uked.\n\"Just slightly,\" said Mr. Sandler.\n\"Please   tell   him   about   your\nachievements in Sweden!\"\nYou tell him\", he countered.\n\"Or else let tbe Canadian people\ntell hta!\"\nmm\nscomlau. we ut aside two and t\nhalf million crowna ter public\nworks. We divided tbe work oyer a\nperiod of five yean, a flvt-year plan\ntbut and we diminished tbt numbtr of unemployed by 60 per eent\nIn the tint alx monthi of tba plan't\nopentlon.\"\n\"Of cowrie,\" went on Mr. Sandler,\n\"the farmtrt immediately benefit\nfrom tbla lncreaaed power of consumption of tbe working masses\nWe regulated tbt price of agricultural product! to the utlttactlon of\ntbe farmen themaelvei and tbt\nworktn fully undtretood thlt move\nand approved It. We gained confidence u wt went along tnd now\nwe have been rewarded with a re*\nnewed expression of suppert\nthroughout tbe country. Ws ban\nnow a total of 8QP nets. We bavt\n78 per oent ot tbe unemployed bad**\nat work. Moeover we feel,\" be wept\non, \"that we bave done valuable\nwork tor tht maintenance ot democratic Institutions by bringing\nabout this union between farmen\nand worken. The farmen tupport\nui whole-heartedly.\"\n\"Still you have \u2022 Nazi party in\nSweden, haven't you?\" I asked.\nWe have and tbey are very loudmouthed groups. They claimed they\nhad the support of the majority of\ntbe people and they called us\nusurpers threatening to put us out\nby force. We answered them not by\na counter-show of force but by introducing proportional representation which would Indicate exactly\nhow much influence they had.\"\n\"You teem to be consistent democrats up in Sweden,\" I said. \"What\nhappened?\"\n\"The Nazis did not capture a\nsingle seat ln the recent elections.\nThat is what happened!\"\n\"Where the elections for the Riksdag\" (the federal parliament?) I\ntStt\n'\u2022tto,\" uld Mr. Sandler, \"for the\nprovincial councils. But the provincial councils in Sweden designate\nthe members for the riksdag and\nthe senate.\"\n\"Your country seems to be the\nonly one where socialism is in the\nascendancy,\" I said.\n\"Not at all,\" he laughed. \"I will\nintroduce you to Mr. Borjberg, the\nminister of public instruction and\nfine arts ln Denmark, who is his\ncountry's delegate to the league\nand who is here in Geneva. He will\ntell you that in Denmark socialism\ngrows by leaps and bounds. And not\nonly in Denmark, ln Norway it is\ntho same and ln Finland and even\nin Iceland.\"\n\"But tell me, Mr. Sandler, do you\nthink you have definitely conquered the crisis in Sweden?\"\n\"We have it under control for\nthe next five years, that's certain!\"\n\"More than we ctn say.\" I uid.\n\"More than Germany can say. And\ntfter that?\" I uked.\n\"After thtt t new five-yetr pltn,\not courte.\"\n\"What does the present pltn consist of?\"\n\"Roads, schools, schools and\nschools and railways and hydroelectric plants and new post-offices,\ngovernment buildings. There is\nenough to do. We don't intend to\nrest until eteyy man hat a decent\nhome, etch child the maximum of\neducation, each citizen three full\nsquire metis a dty tnd t rich\ncultural lite for til of ut tnd not\nPUT TEETH INTO\nRULES GOVERNING\nFRUIT TRUCKERS\nCRESTON, Oct IS-After taking\nibout three weeks to become thoroughly familiar with the total situation, followed by t conference at\nthe end of the week at Kelownt with\nthe members of the B.C. Tree Fruit\nboard, W. G. Llttlejohn, the valley\nrepresentative of the board, hts received tdvice ot new regulations\nconcerning truckers thtt the botrd\nhas passed and which have been approved  by  the  Natural  Products\nMarketing Act boerd at Otttwt. The\ntwo outstanding regulations trt:\n\"The ctrritge of a regulated product to mtrket by motor vehicle\nIs prohibited except when tuch\nmotor vehicle Is being operated\ntoley ts t common cirrier.\n\"Any common cirrier operating\nt motor vehicle must apply for \u25a0\npermit from i representative of\nthe loctl botrd tt Kelownt, Salmon Arm, Creston or Robson, for\neech shipment, betore loading,\nwhich permit will be luued to\nhim upon such representative being satisfied that the requirements\nof the local board are being complied with.\"\nA \"common cirrier\" hu been defined as one who it in the transfer\nbuslneu transporting goods for other people; the cirrier not being Interested ln the commdities he transports, as interpreted to the News representative this will entirely eliminate the trucker wbo brings ln\ngrain, teed, etc., to exchange for\nfruit.\nThe strong point to the second\nclause is thtt the trucker must get\na permit for eich load taken out,\ntnd such permit must be obtained\nbefore tny fruit is bought. This new\nregulation Is to be still more strictly enforced by the local representative who will tell the ptrty applying for t permit where he :tn\nsecure his supplies, and ln whtt\nquantities and varieties.\nWhile these new features to the\nregulations may appear arbitary the\ntrucker can only blame himself\nfor the drastic steps that have been\nttken. Just how the law hu been\nevaded is disclosed In \u25a0 letter to the\nbotrd from Calgary telling of 1\ntrucker aelllng fruit ln that City\nwhose load was supposed to consist of Winter Banana. Macs, tnd\nWealthys. Instead of Wealthys the\nload tctually contained Delicious,\nwhich were being offered for sale\nbefore their ule nad been author-\nized by the B. C. Tree Fruit botrd.\nThis lotd hid pissed the necessary\ninspection at this end, and it is figured thlt the driver, tfter getting\nhis clearance, had unloaded the\nWealthys tnd filled the boxes up\nwith the Delicious.\nLocal experience with many of\nthe truckers hts shown them to\nhive too little regard tor the truth\nin information advanced the representative and equally competent\nin supplying false invoices ind generally refusing to comply with the\nCHRISTMAS SAILINGS\n!To the OLD COUNTRY\nTAKE \u00abdv\u00abntagc alt reduced Urn to make\nthat  long-promised trip. Splendid \u00abcom-\nmodttiom are available in all classes.\nFROM SAINT JOHN AND HALIFAX\n*DMt I. Duchua of York (or Glasgow, Belfast or\nLiverpool\n\u2022Dte. IS. Duchess  ol  Richmond for Havrt ond\nSouthampton.\n'*)**. 14. Duchess oi Atholl fer Glasgow, Belfast\nLlTirpool.\n'*>\u2022*. U Montrose for Glasgow, Belfast, Liverpool.\n\" Sails Ina Halifax day following\nFot furtbet toforration apply tout locsl igem cr writ* direct to\nM.      IOWB ^^^\naty Ticket Agent     \u2022     NeUon, B. C.\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nregulations, hence the decision to\nput some teeth in the regulations and\nlo strictly enforce them.\nOn Wednesday the loctl representative was in communication with\nthe board it Kelowna by long distance telephone regarding a definite\ndecision on the meaning of the foregoing regulations, tnd the following wire has been received:\nW. G. UTTLEJOHN, Creston:\nSolely as common cirrier means\ncirrier who hit no interest ln product other than his earnings for carrying same. This means grower ctnnot truck his own product to mtrket, nor ctn buyer cirry his pur-\nchases.\nB. C. TREE FRUIT BOARD\nThe same day the local representative, with agreement wilh Mr.\nBrown, field representative of the\nB.C. Tree Prult boird, his sgreed\nthat permits shall be issued to certain Individuals who ire in the\nvalley that dty, who ctn satisfy\nthe board officials ot the bona fides\nof their dealings. After this no per*\nmlts ctn be issued under the regu*\nlations is ibove.\nNATURAL QA8 PRODUCTION\nIN  JULY\nThe production of natural gu in\nCinada during July amounted to\n951,466 thousind cubic feet is compared with 1,142,526 thousind cubic\nfeet in June md 966,528 ln July\n1933. During the seven months ending July, 13.971,932 thousand cubic\nfeet were produced; in the corresponding period of 1933 the output totalled 14.286,840.\nKorageorgevitch Line\nof King Always Meet\nBloody Ends\nTht gloomy futurt with wbleh\nPettr II, tht boy king ef Yugoslavia It faced, It dnmttleally\npictured by \u2022 world traveller tnd\ntuthorlty on Balkan affalra In t\nsptcltl dlspatoh written for Ctn-\nPress Ctntdltn tnd Tht Nelton\nDaily Ntwt.\n\u25a0y JOHN 0. CAHILL\n(Ctntrtl Press Ctntdltn Writer)\nNEW YORK, Oct 17.\u2014On t hot\nJuly night t llttlt more thin 117\nyeirs tgo. \u25a0 bind of cut-throats\nskulked through the musty corridors ot Ctstle Brtnkovitch it Se-\nmendrli on the Danube.\nTbey entered t viulted itone\nchtmber tnd crept close to tht bed\nwhere Ity i huge tnd fearsome\nbltck-betrded figure. The leader\nof the invading party raised \u2022 sharp\nscimitar, its shining blade embliz-\noned with mystic symbols in the\nCyrillic ilphtbet, tnd brought it\ndown on the\/deck of the sleeping\nmin.\nThe shtggy held of Kin George\nPetrovltci, 'Bleck George.\" the first\nindependent ruler of Serbit, thumped to the floor, tnd t momtnt liter\ntriumphant horsemen sped across\nhill md vtlley to Belgride, ctrrying their bloody prize with them.\nWAS PEASANT BORN\nThtt wts the end of Kin George,\nmd the beginning ot the endless\nseries of bsrbirous assaasinations\nwhich have splattered with blood\nthe throne to which 11-yetr-old\nPetar II, direct descendant of the\nilliterate peasant's son who freed\nSerbia trom Turkish domination\nnow iscends.\nKin George founded hit dyntsty\nin t bath of Turkish gore md lost\nhis throne in mother. Since his\nappearance on the scene at the beginning of the nineteenth century,\nuie erown his Jockeyed bick ind\nforth between his descendants, all\ncelled Ktrigeorgevitch (ton of\n\"Bltck George\"), md thoee of Ml-\nlosh Obrenovltch, t former underling who succeeded him when tbe\noriginil boss of the country surrendered power rather thm distrm hit\nnttion.\nSince thit night when Kara\nGeorge \\a*t his head In the pretty\nDinubian town whole other chid\nclaim to fame is that itt vlneytrds\nwere the first to produce {he world-\ntimed Tokiy wine, not one ol hit\ndescendants hts died t ntturtl\ndetth while t reigning monarch.\nFew ot the Obrenovitches, tor that\nmitter, hive esctped the violent\ndetth which Serbia apparently has\nset iside for its rulers.\nSEIZED THRONE AT 17\nThe little King Petar's own fither,\nmd with him the Karageorges, won\nthe throne by the most brutal md\nfrightful slaughter in recent history.\nAlexmder, murdered at Marseilles,\nbecame heir to the throne when his\nfither, Pettr 1, wts choten it king\nfollowing the murder of King Alexmder Obrenovltch md hit consort,\nQueen Draga.\nObrenovltch, a brilliant ruler md\ni shrewd political strategist, as*\ncended the throne under i ngency\nit the sge ot 13, upon the ibdica-\ntion of his father, King Milan.\nAlexander wu supposed to attain\nhil majority at 18, but one yetr\nshort ot this tge, he staged t dramatic coup d'etat, dissolving his\ncabinet and dismissing his court,\nand set himself up u ibsolute mon-\nirch.\nHil iction won immeditte popular support, md for seven yein he\nOYER 500 CLAMS\nFILED THIS YEAR\nAt  Present  Rate 200  More\nProperties Will Be Recorded Before End of Year\n\u2014 in       PAttl SIVIN\nrltr mtnt, tdjoining Rutty mlnertl\ncltlm to tht north.\nRusty, located by O. A. Higlund.\nAbout thret mileei ibove the Perrler mine tdjoining the Wtr Eaglt\nminenl claim to tbe eut.\nWtr Eagle, located by O. A. Higlund. About three miles ibove the\nPerrler mine tdjoining Rusty mlnertl claim on the west.\nThl put htunts tht futurt ef Pettr II.\nreigned htppily md wisely. But\nin 1900 he took u his wife Drigi\nMishln, i widow md i former lady-\nin-waiting to Queen Nitalie, hit\nmother, tnd the country turned\nagainst him when rumon spread\nhe planned to name one ot her unpopular brothers heir apparent.\nPlota and conspiracies stewed md\nsimmered igiinst him, but he resisted them successfully tor three\nyeirs. The curie of the Serbitn\nthrone wis upon him, however, md\nin June of 1903 t group of trmy\nofficers, heided by Queen Drsga'a\nbrother-ln-ltw, entered the roytl\nptlace.\nMURDERED IN BEDROOM\nAlexmder and Dngi were tlone\nin their bedchimber. They htd returned from t state ball only t\nshort while befon, md when the\nassassins broke Into the damask-\nwalled room, tie king wu ttlll in\nuniform md Draga wu partly undressed.\nWith demoniac fury, the officers\nslew them with stbrei, md, flinging their deid bodies tcross the\nbed, hacked md mutilated them\nuntil blood covered thl chamber\nfrom wtll to wtll. Then Alexander's corpse was hurled from the\nthird-floor window to the garden\nbelow, when it wu further mistreated md left unrecogniztble In\nits blood tor hours. A gtrdener,\nrisking his own life to pty i last\ntribute to his roytl muter, covered\nit with t burlap licking. The body\nof the queen, with t sheer yellow\nstocking still on one of her legs,\nwts almost dismembered md left\nto the none to tender mercies of\nthose who ctrried lt to in unhil-\nlowed grave.\nLest horrible but u effective wu\nthe efftcement of Michiel Obrenovltch, ttiusinited in 1868 by factions who opposed his regime. Thus\nfour, including the lite King Alexmder, of the rulers of Serbia htve\nben murdered on the throne. One\nwu overthrown by rovolution. Another wu forced to abdicate by vote\nof parliament.\nNor ire tstuilnitlons the only\nstains upon the escutcheon of the\nancient nation now known is Yugoslavia. The late King Alexander's\nown elder brother, who ihould hive\nsucceeded to the throne, is imprisoned at the royal palace tt Nish, a\nveritable \"mm ln the Iron misk,\"\ndeprived of his throne by hii own\nungovernable temper which caused\nhis father to htve him incarcerated\nu \u25a0 madman.\nPRINCE A MURDERER\nThit Prince George Ktrigeorge-\nvitch, uncle of the preient King\nPtjt\u00abr. in i fit of terrible nge, administered \u25a0 blow to i servant\nwhich tent the fellow tumbling\ndown a flight of stairs, inflicting\ninjuries which later caused his\ndetth. A slmiltr incident \u25a0 few\nyetrt liter, which fortumtely did\nnot ruult fatally, resulted in his\nincarcemtion.\nThut there can be no more Joy ln\nthe life of little Petar. What lies\niheid of him is preparation for\ngoverning the most conglomerate\n\u2022nd unruly of the world's countries.\nAs he grows older md becomes better acquainted with the history of\nhis country tnd ot his fimlly, it is\ninevitable thit forebodings of i\ndreidful fste will hiunt him.\nClilmi recorded it the provinciil\nmine recorder'! office it Nelson\ntotal well over 500 now for the present yetr md tt tht pruent rate\nthere will be it leut 200 more filed\nbefon the end of the yeir.\nClaims wen filed trom t great\nmany districts, t Itrge number being In the vicinity of the Bayonne\nmine.\nRecent recordings ere is follows:\nSumet, locited by A. Lakes, T.\nStevens, agent. On tne east slope of\nthe touth fork of Cultus creek netr\nthe headwaters.\nSunrise, locited by Tom Stevens\non the eut slope of the south fork\not Cultus creek near the headwaters.\n\u2014Keno, located by N. M. Coleman,\nJ. W. Mulholland, agent. On the\nsouth slope ot the west fork ot Summit creek md adjoining the Echo\ngroup of crown granted mineral\nclaims on the east ind ibout one\nmile east of the Bayonne group.\nKtno No. 2. located by R. Qua,\nagent J. W. Mulholland. Adjoining\nthe Keno mineral claim on the east\nand situated on the soutb slope of\nSummit creek. About IVi mllu east\nof the Bayonne crown granted mineral claim.\nAllm No. 2, located by H. Erickson. About tVi miles up Hall creek\nadjoining Allm No. 1 to the north.\nSkookum Boy, located by H. Erickson. About ZVt miles up Hall creek\nadjoining the G.B.C. mineral cltlm\nto the wett, i relocttion ot Skookum\nmineral claim.\nGold Coinage, locited by C. A.\nTapaniia, igent H. Erickson. About\n3Vi miles up Hill creek idjolnlng\nthe Rainbow Hill to tht north, t\nrelocation of the Gold Coin mineral\nclaim.\nGold Cointge No. 1, located by L.\nMadoin, agent H. Erickson. About\n3V4 miles up Hall creek tnd tdjoining Gold Cointge to the north.\nDoe Doe, locited by Ernest H.\nWillbourn. Two ind \u2022 half miles up\nLockhart cnek. Adjoins the Good\nLuck mineral cltlm which lies to\nthe touth.\nKeno No. 3, located by G. Benwell,\nagent J. W. Mulholltnd. On the south\nslope of the west fork ot Summit\ncreek on John Bull mlnertl claim,\ntdjoining the Keno mineral claim\nOn the north and about l',4 mllu\nKEEPS\/\nieetk\nCLEAN\neut of the Bayonne group.\nIL if\nsouth tloi\n\u00bbyt     .   _.\nKeno No. 4, loctted by G. M. Ben-\n ill-\nwell, igent J. W. Mulholltnd. On the\not the wut fork of Summit ereek end idjolnlng the Keno\nNo, 2, on the north of the Keno No.\n3, on the eut md ibout 1V4 miles\neast of the Bayonne group.\nPiper No. 3. loctted by R. Qui.\nJ. w. Mulholltnd, tgent. On the\nnorth slope of Arkansaw mountain\nibout two miles eut of Arkansaw\nlike and about 2Vt miles north of\nthe Bayonne group md adjoins the\nPiper mineral clilm on the south,\nHi\nPiper No. 4, locited by N. McCole-\niin, tgent J. W. Mulholland. On\nthe north Hope of Arkansaw moun-\nHunters Prepare\naf Hosmer\nGALLOWAY, B.C., Oct. W.-Fred\nHutchinson who has been invading\nthe jungles of the \"Big\" Sand creek\nenu in compmy with V. A. Caldwell, big game hunter of this district nturned to Hosmer to spend\nt few diys ln prepintion for an __  \t\nadvance on the \"grizzlies\" in the posts on upper Sand creek.\nfoothills of upper Smd creek waters.\nJack McDonald spent the weekend ln Fernie on business md plet-\nsure.\nMr. md Mn. Eric Cirlson tnd\ndaughter Marguerite md Chirles\nCsrlsorf Sr., left for Perry Siding,\nWest Kooteniy tfter spending the\nseuon hen.\nA. Hutchinson ot Hosmer hu t\nforce of men  getting out fence-\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nHUDSON'S BAY\nBEST PROCURABLE\nScotch whisky\nThis fine liquor is thc pride of the\nCompany's list and of a quality that\nhas won first place with connoisseurs\neverywhere.\nBUNDED AND BOTIIED ffl SCOTIAM)\n$400\nIn 26<o.\nSize\nHudion a Bay Demerara Rum alio hat long\nbeen t favorite\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia\nCANADIAN  RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\n6:00 Gentlemen Jim\n6:15 Tribute to \u2022 Song\n6:30 Up to the Minute News\n7:00 Melodic Strings\n7:30 Dance Orch., WXYZ, Detroit\n7:45 News and Weather Forecut\n8:00 Woodwind Duo, Winnipeg\n8:15 The Fusbys\n8:30 Newt (B.C. Net)\n8:30 Sarah Btchun, plinilt, Moose\nJtw (ex. B.C.)\n8:45 Cherie, Rod md Dick\n9:00 Nelton McMurdo, violinist\n0:15 Gltdys Letroy, contralto\n0:30 Woodhouse md Hiwklnt\n9:45 Rhtpsodlcs in Rhythm\n10:00 Pidberg Trio, Peggy Cook\nN.B.C.KPO  NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO KJR\n590      620      M0      680      920      970\n6:00 Let's Listen to Htrris\n6:30 Phil Biker, Mirtht Mean\n7:00 First Nlghter\n7:30 One Man's Family\n8:00 Amos 'n' Andy\n8:15 Gene tnd Glenn\n8:30 Program\n9:00 Concert; voctllsts; orch.\n9:15 Night Editor (KPO)\n9:15 Orchestra\n9:30 Hollywood on the Air\n10:00 News Fleshes\n10:15 Red Dtvis\n10:30 Tom Coskley's Orch.\n10:59 Press-Ridlo News\n11:00 Fio-Rito's Orch. (KGO to Net)\n11:00 Tom Gerun's Oreh. (KPO)\n11:30 McElroy's Or. (KGW to Net)\n11:30 Orgin Concert (KPO)\nC.B.S.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI    KFRC    KOIN    KSL    KOL\n570      610      M0       1130    1270\n6:00 Mtrch of Time\n6:30 Hollywood Hotel\n7:30 Kate Smith's Swanw. Music\n7:30 Frldty Frolic TD.L.)\n8:00 Myft md Mtrge\n8:15 Humin Side of the Ntwt\n8:30 Court of Humtn Relltlons\n8:30 Htrold Grtyton's Onh. (D.L.)\n9:00 Jicques Rentrd's Oreh.\n9:00 Rio Grande Cnek Police Bmd\n(D.L.)\n9:15 Hobblu (D.L.)\n9:30 Hil Grayson's Onh. (DX.)\n9:30 Leon Belasco's Oreh.\n10:00 Ben Pollack's Oreh. (D.L.)\n10:15 Joe Sutlivm, pianist (D.L.)\n10:30 Vincent Lopez1 Orch. (D.L.)\n11:00 Dick Jergens' Orch. (D.L.)\n11:30 Organ Recital (D.L.)\n600 k CJORtl\t\nVancouver\n6:00-:15 Real Life Drama\n6:45 News Varieties\n7:00 Club Gladstone\n7:15 Don Flynn, plmc\n7:30 Dr. Lyle Telford\n8:00 News\n8:15 Trio\n8:30 Professor Mirzar\n8:45 Prairie Drifters\nOther Periods: Records\n500 m\n600 w\nKGO\n379.5 m\n7600 w\n710 k      \t\nOakland        \u25a0\t\n6:00 Five Cards\n6:30 Rlcardo and His Violin\n6:45 Air Adventures\n7:00 Barbtra Merkley, hirplst\n7:15 Chester Rowell\n7:30 Comedy Stirs\n7:45 Mickey Gillette's Music\n6:15 College Due\n8:30 Orchestra Pit Echles\n9:00 Crime Clues. E.T.\n9:30 Pick md Pit. I.T.\n10:00 Reflectlont, orch.\n10:30 Press-Rtdio Newt\n10:35 Orch.\n11:00 Ted Fio-Rito's Orch.\nTRAIL JAMBOREE\nMEET POSTPONED\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 18,-Uck of interest by citizens in preparing the\nmnual Hallowe'en jamboree for\nchildren to be staged on October 31\nnecessitated postponing a meeting\ncelled Wednesday night untiy Tueidiy, October 23. Tnll will illow\nonly ont week to preptre the program.\nIt it hoped thtt enough citizens\nwill turn out it the next meeting\nso thtt in organized Hallowe'en affair may be given the kiddles to\nhelp prevent them from gallivanting ibout the city.\nINCREA8ED   EXPORT  OF  ZINC\nThe export of zinc tpelter in\nAugust wu 201.085 cwt, valued it\n$577,831 cornpired with 141,671 cwt.,\nit 6524,331 1 yeir ago. The on export has ilso increased to such\ncountries is Germtny, Frmce md\nJtptn. The vtlue was 667,562 compared with $10,873 i yeir tgo.\nttin tbout 1$ miles eut ot Arkan\nsiw like md ibout IVi miles north\nof the Bayonne group of mineral\nclaims.\nWild Cat, locited by W. Rozin, on\nTold mountain tdjoining Flying\nDutchmin crown granted mineral\nclaim on the north.\nWild Clt No. 1, locited by W.\nAppleyate, agent W. Rozm. On Toad\nmountain idjolnlng the Wild Clt\nmineral claim on the eaat.\nWild Cet No. 2, locited by A. D.\nRobertaon. On Told mounttln adjoining Wild Cat mineral cltlm on\nthe west.\nWild Cat No. 3, located by Joe\nGallo. On Toad mountain adjoining\nWild Ctt mineral claim on the north\ncut.\nDundee, locited by O. A. Haglund.\nAbout three miles ibove the Per-\nGREAT\nBEAUTY\nAID >\nrTTTTfllltiHH\n\"Copyright, WrlgUy'i 1934\"\nCrow's Nest COAL\nUnsurpossed for Steam Heat\nWt Carry:\nMICHEL SCREENED LUMP\nMICHEL SCREENED NUT\nMICHEL STOVE AND MINE RUN\n.All Calcium Chloride Treated to Eliminate Dust.\nSPECIAL PRICES ON QUANTITIES\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nPHONE 33\nKJR\n30Q.1 m\n5000 w\nfalter\nHiuy\n\u202270 k   \t\nSuttle >m\t\n6:00 News Reporter\n6:15 Fish Flashes\n6:30 Hollywood on Parade\n6:45 Air Adventures\n7:15 Romince of Rhythm\n7:45 Rhythm Encores\n8:00 Melody Palette\n8:15 Carefree  Capers\n8:30 Musical Auction\n8:45 Mountilneers\n8:00 Reflections of Romince\n9:15 Moments of Melody\n9:30 Purple Riy\n9:45 Fireside Finttiies\n10:00 Orville Knlpp't Oreh.\nl0:25-:55 Northern Light*\n1060 k KNX OtA m\nHollywood 60,000 w\n7:00 Wttantbe tnd Archie\n7:16 Lewrence King, songs\n7:60 The In-Uws, play\n7:45, King Cowboy\n8:rt Homer Ctnfleld, songs\n6:15 Electrictl Transcriptions\n8:30 Pluto, E.T.\n8:45 Song ot Songs\n9:00 News\n9:15 Amigon\n9:30 Musical Heidlinei, E.T.\n9:45 Stadium Boxing\n10:45 Pete Pontnlli'i Oreh.\nYOUR CAR CAN BE COMPLETELY SAFE FROM FREEZING\n. ..\/m as UttVL GS-.-.. ,-^H^\nEVEREADY PRESTONE is proven, reliable protection againit freezing in any\nweather, it ii hartnleia to cooling system\nand finish, odorless and non-inflammable.\nV,0    one     ^\u00b0t\n^      CALLON\n0F      ,\nWATER   ,>\u00bb&;\nBtctute it doet not boll away, ont filling\nlutt til winter. And yon cm get thit economical, complete protection for as little as\n$3,95, depending on the make of car yon drive.\nSlid t* good tettiri .rit-rtheit. m4\nEVEREADY\nPRESTONE\nANTIFREEZE\nCtlgtry\nCANADIAN NATIONAL CARBON CO. LIMITED\nTORONTO\nMontreal\nWinnipeg\n .111   (llllllll\nPAGE glQHT-\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 19. 19S4\nJWamt latly JJeroa\nEstablished April 22, 1901\n\"Interior of Britith Columbia's Family Newspaper''\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublithed  tvery  morning  except  Sundiy  by\ntht NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n116  Biker  Street  Ntlton,  Brltlth  Columbit.\nPhont 144. Private Exchmgt Connecting ill Deptrtments\nMtmber of tht Audit Buretu of Clrculitlons md\nThe Ctntdlu Preu Letted Wlrt Ntwt Service.\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1934.\nNERVOUS U.S. DOLLARS\nEvery few weeks there is a mild inflation scare in\nthe United States. Apparently the condition which\nmakes this possible can continue indefinitely.\nThe latest inflation rumor, which rested on nothing\nmore substantial than a senator's grunt during a quiz\nby reporters as the senator emerged from a talk with\nPresident Roosevelt, has achieved the distinction of\nbeing explicitly laid to rest by the President\nThe rumors themselves are hardly worthy of serious\nattention. But they are symptoms of a feeling of uncertainty which is rather widespread in American business and financial circles.\nThis uncertainty arises from doubt as to the outcome of the Roosevelt policies, as reflected in the gold\nvalue of the U.S. dollar a year or two from now. There\nis a large inflationist bloc in Congress which, when faced\nby the cabinet's demand for retrenchment and economy,\nmay get out of hand and insist on a further softening\nof the U.S. dollar.\nThe United States, like many other countries today,\nhas a managed currency. The object of a managed currency is to maintain a constant or stable relation between\nthe value of money and the value of commodities. The\njob of managing the currency consists in preventing the\nvalue of the monetary unit from being raided by political\npressure on the one hand, and from being torpedoed by\nfinancial gangsters on the other.\nThis job is made unnecessarily complex by clinging\nto gold. The managed dollar is neither completely wed\nto the commodity index nor completely divorced from\ngold. The Roosevelt monetary policy is a compromise\npolicy. Its success, its ultimate attainment of stability,\ndepends largely on the skill and wisdom by the President,\nhis advisers and the Congress.\nIf \"inflation\" means sudden, irresponsible and wide\nchanges in currency value, the Roosevelt administration\ncan point to its past record as assurance that there is no\nlikelihood of inflation. But if it means a constant, if\ngradual, effort to raise commodity prices by pushing\ndown the gold value of the dollar, then there is some likelihood that it may continue for some time, since this object is regarded as essential to restoration of economic\nbalance. But until a definite choice is made between a\ncommodity dollar and the gold dollar, uncertainty and\nlack of confidence are bound to be a serious impediment\nto the process of recovery.\nA NEW DOMINION?\nWill a new Dominion be formed in Africa? There is\nserious talk of forming a new Dominion of Southern and\nNorthern Rhodesia along with British East Africa, Tanganyika and Kenya. The white population in all these\nterritories is English. They do not relish linking up\nwith the South African Union, with its bi-lingual problems. The whole attitude of South Africa in recent years\nhas been along the lines of isolation from the Empire,\nalthough the movement for actual separation has not\ngained headway. Premier Hertzog, whp was once elected on this platform, has rather changed his attitude.\nThe white population of the Rhodesias, as well as\nthe other new states, is essentially British. They have\nlittle in common or in sympathy- with South. Africa with\nits large Boer population. So Southern Rhodesia, instead of looking south is turning northward, for its\nfuture. The number of whites is still comparatively\nsmall and the time may not yet be ripe for an amalgamation of these crijwn colonies into a new Dominion, but\nultimately the Empire will doubtless be rounded out with\na self-governing Dominion in the very heart of Africa.\nThe dreams of Cecil Rhodes are more and more being\nfulfilled.\nIN LINE OF DUTY\nThe news that 187 doctors, nurses, and laboratory\nworkers ln Los Angeles were stricken with infantile\nparalysis, during their fight against an sutbreak of\nthis disease, is a grim reminder of the fact that these\npeople very often undergo risks which the layman does\nnot dream of, in their of fort to save the lives of others.\nIn some epidemics the doctor and nurse can be protected by serums or vaccines. In others, however, there\nis no certain protection. Doctor and nurse must take\ntheir chances with everybody else \u2014and, of course, by\ngoing into sickrooms daily, and undermining their resistance through overwork, they simply increase the\ndagger to themselves.\nIt is a thing worth remembering. It is too easy to\noverlook the quiet unassuming heroism that members of\nthe medical and nursing professions are constantly displaying, day after day, in the performance of their\nduties.\nSCIENCE SIMPLIFIED\nComets Are Harmless\nMANY STILL FEAR HEAVENLY VISITORS\nBy RICHARD BAYLIg\nCentrtl  Prtss  Canadian   Science\nWrlttr\nIn indent tnd medieval timet\npeople looked with teir upon the\napproach of a comet, supertitiously\nthinking that lt heralded the beginning of a pestilence or war. Even in modern timet there tre mmy\nwho believe, ind frighten othen\nwith their beliefs, tbit i comet ti\nflaming mass hurtling through\nspace and which, it it struck the\netrth would bring ibout the end of\neverything. ,\nThese beliefs in not true. Thl\ntempentun of t comet u it approaches the earth is not high, the\neffect of flames being merely the\nglow of the gases, probably similar\nto the glow produced in vacuum\ntubes by electrical excitement Even\na collision with the held of the\ncomet probibly would not be noticed appreciably on earth, except\nthrough i hetvy rtln of meteors.\nSo the next time a comet appears\nin the heavens do not listen to calamity howlers who might tell you\nthit thc end is near.\nPLANETS' FAMILIES\nComets have a habit of attaching themselyes to the planets, the\nlirger outer ones, Jupiter having\n\"captured\" a considerable family.\nIn passing near a planet the comet\nis usually suff \"icntly attracted to\nappreciably c' # *ee its orbit md also its speed, which is variable according to its distance from the tun.\nHalley's comet, for example, travels\non i parabolic orbit away out in\nspace beyond the planet Neptune.\nIn the accompanying diagram the\napproximate orbit of Halley's comet\nis shown. Its speed as lt approaches\nthe sun lncreues md it remains\noutside of the orbit of Neptune for\nneirly half of its entire period.\nMeteor swarms through which\nthe earth passes are in some cues\nbelieved to be the remains of bro*\nken-up comets.\nIS RUSSIA PREY OF PERVERTED\nIDEALISM?\nAuthor Find! Much to Commend ln Russlsns; Htve Brotd Culture\nind Are Loyil Friendi\nBy Wllllim Henry Chtmbtrltln\nThe Christian Science Monitor\nI htve * cordiil irtipithy to the\n\"Me tnd Russia\" type of book. For\nan outsider to come to i country\nwhich hu lived through whit is\nperhaps tbe   biggest   churning-up\nWHAT  DO YOU  THINK?\nAU letten to the editor mutt be signed with the ntme of tht\nwriter   A nom de plume mty be uied Ior publlcttion it desired\nHow it ont to reconcile theie tp\ntW'5SSfta^tS\u00ablHe'd Like to Have\nBolshevik-Revolution md the Soviet regime wh'ch grew out of it\noffer the world an example ot historical tragedy of the deepest md\nDrocesi in history md then to set truest type, i tragedy of cruelty md\n*. ..         _\u25a0- t..       -n-nn , mmm.m..)mm    imtttmt.n   nnt   Imm    Win-\ndown .his reactions under some\nsuch Utle u \"I Saw Russia\" hu alwiys seemed to me to reveal i lick\not sense of r oportion thtt borders\non impertinence.\nAt the same Ume, no one with\n-*' > \u2014 -l \u2014 ,tA\noppression Inflicted not from wan\ntonness md selfishness but from a\nkind of perverted, fanalical idealism\u2014nlwiys the surest source of\nutter ruthletsness. And btck A thia\ntragedy  lie    several    conceptions\nMr. Whimster Swing\nPick on Road Work\nrtt   U1C   M*_u>=   \u2014....   ... ,  _\nsensitiveness md imagination could which are implicit in the Common*\nhave lived for mon than i decide ist philosophy md which seem to\nin the Soviet Union without feeling me to be fundamental ftllicies.\ndiagram show* orbit o( a comet\n\u25a0round tun md how t comet la\n'captured*' by the attractive tone\nof 1 planet\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nControl Key Metals\nto Abolish War\naome reaction, mon probibly sev\nen! reictions, to the dramttic\nevents which hive played themselves out on thii huge station. If\nUie \"Me and Russia\" type of reporter seems out of place, I im\nSft^S, W rVr^Pwho! itic-goii; puraued by brutal meth-\nIkYoTZ-ifbeing., U they hap- ,Abn a wiy of fading   out   of\ntight\nSuch major atrocities u tne liquidation of the kulaks u \u25a0 cltu, the\nThe first, the oldest md the most\nobvious of these fallacies it the belief that the end justifies the means.\nActuaUy the overwhelming weight\nof historical evidence would seem\nto be to the effect that the means\ndetermine the end and that an ideal-\nlooks on human beings,\npen to be Rut-'ins, u on anaesthetized guinea-pigs or pawns on a\nchessboard md sees in the \"liquidation\" or wiping out of great numben of them nothing but a perhaps\nunpleasant phase of an \"interesting\nexperiment.\"\nNow that new work is taking me\naway from Russia, in ill probability, for a nu ber of years, I think It\nmty not be without interest tnd\nvtlue to set down my personal feelings ibout the events end developments of which, for mmy years, I\nhiye endeivond to be i fair md\nobjective reporter.\nFirst of ill, I must sty thlt there\ntn certain aspects of Russia which\nhave nothing to do either with Tsar-\nism or with Bolshevism, whic! hive\nfor me the gnoteit chirm md it-\ntraction. Few people ire more gifted in mmy fields of art and culture.\" '\nRussian literature it little over a\ncentury old; yet then in not mmy\nauthort of any nationility wl.o cm\nbe compered with Turgenielf in\nrich, mellow, ill-embracing human\nTolstoy   in   epic\nstate-organized famine md the persecution ot the intelligentsia hive\nharmful results that go fir beyond their immediate victims. They\nbrutalize the society that is taught\nor forced to look on them with indifference or even with applause.\nMon than once I have felt that\nthere could he tome very pointed\napplications, ln present-day Russia,\nof the following passage from the\nintroduction to Aleksel Tolstoy's\nnovel of the times of Ivan the Terrible, \"Prince Serebranny\":\n\"I throw down my pen in indignation not so much at the thought\nthat Ivan the Terrible could exist,\nu at the thought that a society\ncould exist whleh would look on\nhim without indignation.\"\nA second sentimental fallacy of\nCommunism is its virtual ignoring\not the problem- involved in the\nconcentration of enormous power\nin the hands of the few men who\nmust Inevitably guide the political\nand economic life of the country\nThe Editor Nelson Dally Newi:\nSit*\u2014In your piper issue of Oct.\n12 I retd \u2022 report of a meeting\nof the Nelton boird of trade.\nThe subject under discussion wu\nthe condition of roads in this district. Mr. Putnim. M.P.P. It reported to hive uid thit, all road\nwork would have to be done by relief, as no other funds ire available.\nMr. Whlmster renll\u00bbd. \"WiU the' you\nman on nllef work?\". He further,\ndeclared that 90 per cent of the men\nthe sun rile.\nNow Mr. Editor, I consider thit\nstatement an unkind and uncalled\nfor reflection on the chanctert of\naome of our best cltizeni. I would\nlike, for jutt one dty to htve Mr.\nWhimster on my enw. If he wen\nto swing t pick md shovel with the\nsame speed md regularity u the\nrest of the men, he would be convinced long before quitting time,\nthst these men do work, md thtt\ntheir money is better earned than\nthat of mtny of our kingt of finance. He apparently fails to note,\nthat lt is a much slower prqpea to.\nbuild a rotd tbm lt is to skim over\nit in a high powered car. Thinking\nI remain,\nSincerely youn,\nWILLIAM MUIRHEAD\non relief did  nothing  but witch' R. R. No. 1, Nelson, B.C.\nMEAT OR EGGS NECESSARY FOR THOSE\nWHO WORK\nBY JAMES W. BARTON, M.D.\nSSSth of to-w, wUh Doitoenky during \"perlodd the dictatorship\nin fierce drimaUc intensity, with of the proletaria .\nGogol in shsrp and salty humor. Obsessed with the idei that  cap-\nEauillvstriking hive been the italism,\" the private ownership of\nachievements of Russia music, and. means of production, was the root\nof   many   branches   of   Russian | of aU humm ills, Lenin never serais\nscience, if one sometimes is tempted to think thit thi methods of\nRussie's rulers, put md present,\nplace it among the backward Asiatic countries, one alwiys returns to\nthe thought thit itt thinkers, tr-\nOFFENSIVE AND DEFENSIVE\nHONOR VALUES\nEnough Inquiries hive been received to show the general interest\nfelt ln the subject of honor vtlucs,\noffensive end defensive: No single\ntable of values ever cm properly\nserve both purposes. Attempting\nthit impossible feat is like tryinj,\nto sit safely upon two widely separated stools, resulting ln hitting gn-\nly the floor.\nEfficiency requires two tables of\nhonor vilues. Defensive honor vil-\nues against trump calls ire termed\n\"quick tricks\", is they must usually\nbe won on either the first or second\nrounds of those suits, before the declanr or dummy can trump the third\nround of the suit. An average deal\ndistributes just 7'A quick tricks\nto the 4 players. Count u quick\ntricks only the following honors\nin each of the 4 suits; A-K, 2; A-Q,\n\\*k; Ace, 1; K-O, 1; guirded K, Vt-\nDo not count A-K-Q u probibly\nworth more thin 2 quick tricks. The\nA-J-10 hu i quick trick value of only 1 trick, regardless of what my\npliyer argues.\nAn average deil distributes just\ntwice is many probable honor tricks\nu quick tricks, or IS honor tricks\namong the 4 players. These, however, retain their values only in the\ncase of declirer md dummy. The\ndefensive honor tricks reduce in\nvilue in the hinds of senior tnd\njunior, to about .Vt quick tricks,\nallowing about half the hands dealt\nto be worth 3-odd md the remaining about 4-odd.\nThe average playing values of\nhonors held in suits not bid adversely ire is follows; Ace, Vk\nprobable tricks; K, 1; Q, tt; J, Vt\nand 10, Vt trick. These values hold\nprovided the Ace, K or Q are followed by at least 2 smaller cards.\nThe J or 10 should be followed by\nat lent 3 smaller cards, to probibly retain the vilues given. To\nfind the probable vilues ot 2 or\nmon honors of the same suit, add\ntogether their individual Values already given. Thus K-J-3 iverages\nto hive i playing vilue of IVi\ntricks, when held either by declirer\nor dummy.\nThe nil vilue of the Ace Is only\n1 trick, but hilf the time it is held\nthe side wins 1 trick more thm it\ncould if opponents held the Ace.\nSuppose dummy holds the K of t\nsuit. If the declirer his the Ace\nboth Ace md K will win tricks. If\ndeclirer lacks the Ace, hilf the\ntime dummy's K will win a trick\nmd hilf the time that K will be\nkilled by the opposing Ace. This \",\ntrick value of the Ace is termed its\n\"promoting value\". The average\nplaying value of my honor is the\nsum of its normil vilue plus its\npromoting value. Every honor\nheld by the declering side, unless\nits suit is bid adversely, has some\npromoting value. The subject of\nhonor vilues is very important,\nalthough understood by few players or writers.\nControl ot minerals vital for wtr*\ntime use might be a wty to prevent\nworldwide conflicts in the future,\nsuggests Dr. Word V. Evtns, protestor of physical chemistry of Northwestern Univenlty, in t paper just\nprepared for the American Chemical Society.\nDuring the World War, says Dr.\nEvans, Germany, turned to nickel\ntor miking  high-speed tool  steel     _.__,\t\nwith which to turn out shells. With u\u201eion   among ttie   peatmtt   md\nto have foreseen the abuses which\nmight result when til power, politicals md economic, would be ln\nthe hands of the itate.\nThere  ere  certainly  few  peu-\nints in the Soviet Union todty who\nWhen it wu found thit overindulgence ln melt in those who live\ni \"soft\" life might cause trouble\nwith the kidneys md bloodvessels,\nthat' many got the impression that meat\n' was harmful and began to cut down\non the imount they were eating or\ndid without meat entirely.\nNow, while meat is plentiful In\nour own country It is not so plentiful in others, md research workers\nare finding thit in those countries\nwhere the melt supply hu become\nsmall, the working men md the\nworking women are gradually losing their strength, md thus their\nability to work.\nIt is the proteids in meat that\nmild and repair the body cells,\nused or broken down by work, and\nmeat furnishes the best possible\nform of proteid food.\nMilk furnishes a splendid form ot\nproteid because it also Is really an\nanimal proteid but the percentage\not proteid it only about 3 or 4 per\ncent whereu good beef hu 18 to\n10 per cent\nnaturally in a baby or \u25a0 little\nchild milk furnishes ill the proteid\nnecessary which together with its\nfats, minerals md vitamins make!\nmilk an ideal food.\nHowever, u the youngster begins\nto grow md begins to pity\u2014ill\nsmtll animals pliy\u2014milk does not\nfurnish enough proteid food to supply thc needs mide necesury by\nthis growth md pliy.\nA youngster thit is \"tilled up on\nmilk\" miy increase ln size ma increase greatly in weight, but there\nis not likely to be the muscular\nstrength that should be present.\nFurther, if the youngster is soft and\nheavy from the milk only, then he\nor she will not hive much desire\nfor pliy. And it il pliy md the desire to plsy thtt builds i youngster\nphysically, mentally md sociilly.\nNow milk must always be used\nas it is Nature's best food for children. Every authority on children\nagrees that their diet should be\nbuilt around a pint to \u25a0 quirt of\nmilk daily. But u they grow there\nshould be ilso an lncreue ln the\nmeet or eggs to furnish the extra\nproteid needed.\nAnd adults thlt do physical work\nor engage in sports should certainly\nnot cut down on their meat or egg\nIntake.\nt stt md natural scientists have won' would not characterize the state u\nit i hi* Plice in European culture., \u25a0 hirder taskmuter thin the for-\n__       \u00b0         n ____.        .J,...lmrl\nThe jpre-war Rust'an educated\nclass, I am convinced, Is in many\nways the most appealing in the\nworld, perhips, becauie it was\nyounger, fresher, warmer in its appreciation of the cultural heritage\nwhich other countries take tor\ngranted.\nmer landlord; and the possibility\nthat t dictatorial itated would exploit workers md peasants alike,\nnot for the purpose of private enrichment, but u a result of blundering management, of grandiose\nambition for quick Industrial and\nmilitary expansion is certainly viv-\nAUNT HET\ninsufficient nickel ore ln Central\nEurope, Germany bought nickel\nfrom Norway. Norway, in turn, purchued nickel fromi Canada to that\nEngland faced the situation of hiving her soldiers killed by products\nfrom within her territorial domain.\n\"Since the boundaries of nations\nin established originally from it\nagricultural viewpoint with no re\nference to mineral weilth,\" declared Dr. Evms, \"it might be possible\nnow, by properly controlling the\nmaterials upon which modem war-\nfire depends, to prevent wtr entirely. If substances like rtn minerals were controlled there might\nbe an assurance of peace.\"\nTwo things would be necessary\nfor such a plan to work, however,\nsuggests the Chicago scientist: Fint\nthe world must reilly desire international peace. Second, a survey\nmust be mide ot mlnertl wealth u\ntechnical progress chmges the\nmakeup of the economic pittern of\nthe world.\nThe key minerilt to be controlled it the present time, which ire\nnot abundantly suppliea to ill nations, are chromium, vinedium,\nmanganese and nickel, says Dr.\nEvens.\n\u25a0mn,\nAmong the muses of the Sovie' idly illustrated by Russii'i experi-\n-nion, tmong the peasants ud *^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^M\nworkers and neople of all occupations whom I have met in my trips\nthroughout the country there ire\nilso Qualities of hosoitality, frankness, natural wit, friendliness to a\nforeign visitor thit leave a favorable Impression. Indeed, it some\nence. ^^^^^^^^^^^\nIncidentally, it seems decidedly\nimprobable that the Soviet state, tfter arrogating to Itself the most\nabsolute power over the lives of\nits citizens, will some day \"wither\n\u25a0wty,\" u Lenin foresaw. Perhaps\nLenin in his study could imagine an\ntimes happens 'that the   simplest abstract conception,    \"the    state,\n30 YEARS AGO\n(From Nelson Dtlly Ntwi of Oct\n19, 1904)\nShown t newspaper clipping to\nthe effect he had abandoned further attempts to win the America's\ncup, Sir Thomas Lipton declared he\nhad not given up md would challenge again for thc yacht racing\ntrophy.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. A. MacDonald, K.C, hu left\nfor Greenwood to attend the assizes.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nBorn, OcL 18, to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Thompson, Houston street, n\nson.\nInventor Reports\nAnother Death Ray\nNikoli Teslo, veterm Americm\nelectrical engineer; is the latest\nname to be linked with research\non the ever popular ind mysterious\n\"desth ray\". Mr. Tetlt is widely\nrecognized u the inventor of fundamental devices in the early diys of\nthe application of electricity to motors and power transmission. The\nire high-frequency current still\nbears his name. He holds scores ut\npatents.\nAs a pruent to the public on\nthe occasion ot his ncent 78th birthday the \"lone wolf\" Inventor announced thit hia secretive investigations these days are being directed to the perfection of a \"death\nbeam\". So powerful will it be, says\nMr. Teslt, thlt 10,000 enemy airplanes swarming towtrd the shores\nof t nation could be annihilated it\na distance of 250 miles.\nTo scientists death rays and death\nbeems in a topic for cautious silence. Watchful waiting until i real\ndemonstration betore a reputable\nscientist society is mide, is a scientist's best act in dealing with queries\nabout death rays.\nIf Mr. Tuli goes through with\nhis innounced plans of revealing\nthe details ot his experimental op-\nperatus before recognized scientific\nsocieties he will be the first death-\nray inventor wbo ever went that\nfar. The weakest part ibout all\ndeath-ray schemes is that reputable\nscientists seldom see i demonstration and hive yet to see a successful one over long distances.\nProf. R. W. Wood, physicist of\nthe Johns Hopkins Univenlty, once\ndecltred on the occulon of the\nfimous British death ray of Harry\nGrinnel Matthews thit he would be\nwilling to stand within sixty-five\nfeet of the death-ray apparatus and\nIn Its \"beam\" confident in his life.\nScientists in genenl hive placed\nlittle faith ln death-ray apparatus,\nand the scarcity of results after the\nmultitude of hopeful preliminary announcements lends support to their\nptst views.\nUNITING WORK AND SLEEP\nconversitione1 **\"\"\"tners   than are\nmore sophist!*-   id   md   educated\nneonle in othT ciuntries.\nALL KINDS TO MAKEA\nWORLD\nCertain aspects of Soviet life\nwhich aro dlstateful to some foreigners *\u2022\"\"\u2022 nther attractive to me.\nI enjoy t't -bsence of a showy md\ngaudy n'.'. t life md the sartorial\nfreedom which is perhips the only\nkind of liberty thit does indubitably\nexist in the Soviet Union.\nFor some ot the achievements of\nthe Soviet reifime I have the sin-\ncerest respect. One cannot visit a\nworkers' rest home or a workers'\nclub provided with library, reading-\nroom, games, reading circles, etc,\nmd locited in former slum districts,\nwithout realizing that a vest amount\nof useful social tnd educational\nwork has been md is beinr done.\nIndustrialization in itself wu a\nnatural md reasonable goal for a\ncountry with the population and\nnatural resources of the Soviet Union; md the Soviet leaders have\nlisplayed tireless drive and energy\nin setting un a network of steel md\nchemical plants, tractor md mtch-\nine-building factories md electrical\npower stations. The industrial progress of the country is imnressl e\nm some ways, although ont* should\nbear in mind the tact, overlooked\nby some admirers of the Soviets,\nthat pre-war Russia was develoolnt\nitt railroads md its industries very\nraDidly.    .\nThere Is no reason to doubt thit\nthe Soviet leiders tnd the majority\nof the Communist Pirty members\nbelieve sincerely in their ciuse md\nare working herd for whit they\nconceive to be the well-being of\nthe country.\nTHEN THE MAILED FIST\nAnd yet tlon? with these constructive sides of the Soviet regime,\nthere ere the herd, undeniable, un\nThe materialistic conception of\nhistory is mother Communist dogma with which I am in vigorous\ndisagreement. This effort to explain all human activity in terms\nof the play of economic tones\nseems narrow, inadequate md unconvincing.\nIt becomes positively ridiculous\nwhen there is sn effort to explain a\nJolly overture by Glinki is \"Russian\ntrade capitalism expanding\" or a\nmelancholy song by Tschaikovsky\nu \"the Russian landed aristocracy\nin decay.\"\nMore serious thm these efforts at\nartistic misinterpretation is the\ntendency to look it individuals\nmerely u members of thii or thlt\nclus. This impersonal approach is\nan euy road to pitiless hardness.\nFinally, tbe underlying conception\nof \"the dictatorship of the proletariat\" seems to me an absurd bit\not Inverted snobbishness. Most\nreasonable people would agree thit\nlabor with hmd or brain Is a title\nto respect. But the flet thit \u25a0 man\nhas worked in a factory, instead of\non a firm or in an office should\nnot single him out either for special\nftvor or for special discrimination.\nThe Soviet Union, by systematically\ndiscriminating against \"nonprole-\ntarims,\" i.e., nonfactory workers In\neducational opportunity md in assigning posts of responsibility is\nhandicapping Itself just as much as\nwould a state which deliberately\nemployed my other kind of chss\ndiscrimination.\nIt I might venture to offer one\nwish for the future of a country for\nwhose people of all classes I feel\nnothing but friendship, while I disagree so strongly with mmy of its\npresent-day theories of government\nit is that just i little leaven ot doubt\nmd skepticism might somehow filter in to the pure dough of Communist dogma. If the Communists\n20 YEARS AGO\n(From Nelson Dilly News of Oct\n19,1914)\nMr. Justice W. A. MacDonald of\nVancouver, formerly of Nelson, will\npreside at the fill assizes at Fernie, and also probably in Nelson.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nWhat is regarded tmong official*:\nof the B. C. Telephone company as\nan epoch-marking event in telephone history of the province, took\nplace yesterdiy when for the flnt\ntime Nelson wu in direct communl-\ncitton with Vincouver. George H.\nHalse, genenl   manager   of   the\ncompany, ctme here to be the tint\nto speak f rol, this end.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nCivic employees in to be uked\nto donate a put of their salaries as\ni nucleus of a public relief fund.\nThe public will ilso be uked to\nsupport the fund It wu pointed\nout thtt during the coming winter\nit would be ibsolutely necessery to\nprovide relief work for the unemployed.\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(From Nelson Dally Newi of Oct\n19,1924)\nJohn Pierre, on behalf of \u25a0 group\nof launch owners, asked ctty council for 200 teet ot foreshore it the\nfoot ot Willow street when lt lt\nproposed to build t launch club float\nand boat-houses, with \u2022 clubhouse\nat thejreter end of the float. About\n15->launch owners were laid to be\ninterested.\n*   *   *\nChief of City Police Thtmss H.\nLonig s Led parents were nf* cooperating in enforcing the curfew law\ntnd children wen still hiving to\nbe sent home liter 7:49 pjn. by the\npolice.\npletsant facts of the ngime of od- could only have believed that there\nious terrorism tnd espionage main- *\u2014\u2022 *** \u2014 \u2022**>. mi . mh.nm. that\ntalned by the Gay-Pay-Oo, of the\ndecimation of the intelligentsia in\nweird sabotage trials and of the\npeasantry in wholesale dep-i-tatlon\nmd in t regime of \"militar**- feudal\nexploitation\" thlt niched its logical md terrible culmination in tne\ngreat fr line cf. 1932-33.\nwu one per cent of a chmce that\nthey might be wrong, thit their\nmtrxian doctrine wu not infallible\ntruth, but \u2022 working hypothesis, ti\nbe verified by trill and error, they\nwould perhips not hsve been self-\nrighteous enough to perpetrate\nsome of the worst horrors of recent\nyeirs.\n\"Amy's girls Is supposed to be\neducated, but she didn't know wbat\nI was talkln' about wben I uked\nher lf she could fill a bobbin.\"\nOfficen lying in wait for milk\nthieves on a farm it Three Forks,\nMont, found thit the firmer came\nout in hia nlghtahlrt and milked his\nown cows ln his sleep. Well, that'i\nt nice way of getting your firm\nwork done.\u2014Border Cities Star.\nKidnap Case Data\nFill 103 Volumes\nAn electrical Instrument has been\ndeilgnea that measures the freshness\nof fish.\nThirteen feet tix inches of shelf\nroom in the Department of Justice\noffice it 370 Lexington ivenue is\nfilled with bound volumes of reports on the Lindbergh cue. H. H.\nClegg, inspector ln charge of the\nDivision of Investigation In Wuhlngton, in New York in connection\nwith the Hauptmann break ln the\ncue, cited thu u tn example ot\nhow extensive the investigation hu\nbeen, md how thorough. The Encyclopedia Britanlca lacks half an\nInch of taking up four feet of shelf\nspace in The Sun's library.\nThe thirteen feet six inches is\nonly the New York file, too, Mr.\nClegg ssld Every time m operative mide in investigation, however distopolntlng the result, he\ntyped a full report on onion ikln\npiper, the thinest available, md\nthe accumulation of theie reports\nfills the volumes. 103 ln number.\nFor instance, Mr. Clegg said, there\nare records on every Falkner who\nlived in or ibout this city since 1875,\nso fir u the department could discover them. This is because the man\nwho deposited some gold notes from\nthe ransom it the Federal Reserve\nBmk on the last diy befon the gold\nbin went into effect used the nime\nJ. J. Ftulkner. This lead hu apparently blown up entirely, but the\nfile of Faulknen remeins. There\nere police records, lf my, of their\nautomobile registrations, samples\nof their handwriting data on their\nways of living. All Faulkner photographs which could be found have\nbeen sent to Washington.\nRecently, Mr. Clegg said, a Faulk*\nner jumped off the Chrysler building. Operatives wen on the scene\nas soon ss possible end rushed his\nrecord, picture md handwriting\nsamples to Washington.\nHe mentioned only the Faulk*\nner angle, a relatively obscure one,\nas m indication of the currycomb-\ning the cue hu had.\u2014New York\nSun.\nGreet\nYour\nFriends\nWith\nCHRISTMAS\nCARDS\nCome in and see our line of exclusive cards \u2014 \u2022\ncard for any particular kind of taste.\u2014Etchings\n\"now Scenes, Water Colors.\nPriced from $1.75 Up to $3.50 for Two\nDosen Cards Printed With Your Name\nand   Address\nPHONE   144\n(Eommmial Printing lept.\nEVEN THE WAVE8 TAKE A\nHAND\nHigh waves, dishing on the California coast, have been threatening\nthe sesside cottages ot msny motion\npicture stars. This looks like a sincere desir to eid in the universal\ndemand for a cleanup.\u2014Brantford\nExpoiitor.\nWHAT?\nAbout that furnace of yours, does it\nneed repairing befqre 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 \u2014~~-^-^\u2014\n\t\nIl^\nJUMPERS AT LAUREL\nTrack ond Field - Fishing - Motor Boating - Boxing - Wrestling - Swimming - Football\nSteeplech*ie vary th* program of races at Laurel, Md.\nASENAL MEET\nTHE HOTSPURS\nBoth Full Strength;\nManchester Takes\non Derby\nCQNDON, OcL 18 (CP cablel-\n\u2022ture attractions ot Saturday's\nIter card on the old country will\n\u2022In be staged at Highbury, where\nt champion Arsenal outfit enteral the struggling Tottenham Hot-\nurs.\nMeantime Manchester City, tied\nth Arsenal for league leadership,\n**t on Derby County.\nenal and Spurs are both at\n\u2022trength for Saturday's match.\n)rmick and Whatley have reed sufficiently from last week's\nto ensure the Spurs being at\ni speed, and Arsenal is hoping to\njld the same eleven that gave\nmehester City such a sound trlm-\niuf a week ago.\nMl reserved seats have been sold\nd the crowd may approach the\npnd record of 70,000 set last week.\nSunderland, tied t 1th Stoke City\nd Everton only a point behind the\niders, is away at Blackburn Ro-\nra, and weakened by calls for the\nOtland-Ii eland international fix-\nIt at Belfast which have taken\nlUecher and Connor. Edgar and\ntorley will consequently make\nllr first appearance of the season.\nINALTOURNAMENT\nFGOLF SATURDAY\n'Big League'\nBOWLING\n'rophies Won During Past\nSeason Will  Be\nPresented\nPRAIL, B.C., Oct. 18-Saturday\nII be the final official day at the\nlil-Rossland Golf and Country\nib.\nL mixed two-ball foursome will\nplayed on the course and tro- 4*our hand,\nlas won during the season will be\ntented at the club house.\nEntries and draws for the compe-\non will be made at fhe club house\nturday afternoon.\nMIL RUGBY BOYS\nPRACTICING HARD\nTake Yflui\u00bb\nTims when\n&ZIN<S UPTriE\nPins and\n\u00a3>6rBRMlNE\nWHE\u00bbW YOO\nWANT To\nStart YooR\nBALL\nBaseball - Softball - Tennis - Lacrosse - Rowing - Golf - Lawn Bowling - Rugby, Etc.\nPACE NINI *\nTHI NELSON DAILY NIWI. NELSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 19. 1934 -\n\u2022PAGE NINE [ Virginia Van Wl*, American golf champ, plays In Curtis eup match**\nLester Patrick Believes Canada's\nPro Hockey Is \"Backbone of Qame\"\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiii\nCRANBROOK   LADY\nIS HOLE-IN-ONE\nPLAYER\nBy AL DEMAREE\nDon't use any unnecessary motions\nbefore your approach to the foul\nline. A medium backswing is more\nconducive to control than a high,\nforced, exaggerated backswing\nwhich lends to throw the body forward and off your stride.\nMany of the best bowlers advise\nletting the weight of the ball aa it\nis carried back prior .to being delivered, determine the height of\nthe backswing. Any backswing,\nthey claim, that rises much higher\nthan the shoulders, is a forced back-\nswing and therefore, unnatural.\nUse as many steps as you wish\n(never more than four, however)\nbut do not run. Walk faat and be\ncareful not to start your delivery\nwith a Jump. Take your time while\nsizing up the pins and determine\nbeforehand where you want to\nstart your ball, as you cannot change\nthe course of it after it has left\nPopularity in U. S.\nGrowing Year\nby Year\nFUTURE SAFE IN\nCANADIAN CITIES\nToronto and Montreal\nWill Stay in\nThere\nAnswer to yesterday'B question-\nBradbury Robinson of St. Louis\nthrew a forward pass of 87 yards\nagainst Kansas in 1908.\nToday's question\u2014What football\nplayer scored the most touchdowns\nin 1933? Answer tomorrow.\nilor   Ruggers   Endeavor\nCorrect Fumbling of\nthe Ball\nto\n[RAIL, B.C., Oct. 18\u2014Following a\ntasteful beating last Sunday at\ni hands of the Nelson squad, Trail\nlior ruggers have been utilizing\n\u00ab vacant lot at the corner of Far-\n11 street and Cedar avenue for\nictlce of passing, dropkicklng and\nting acquainted with the feel ot\nI ball generally.\nrumbling in Sunday's game pre-\nnted completion of almost every\n\u25a0jr.  \t\nRANBROOK BIRD\nPLAYERS PREPARE\nCRANBROOK, Oct. 18-The anal meeting of the Cranbrook\nxed Badminton club waa held\nesday with M. A. Beale, president,\nthe chair. The club emerged\nim a successful year with a small\nnk balance.\nin his address to the members Mr.\n\u2022le, who is also president of the\ninbrook Tennis club, stressed the\nt that badminton had advantage\ner games played ln the open,\nere was no upkeep tor grounds\nclubhouses to be considered,\nmes and tournaments could be\nlyed at the time set regardless of\n\u2022ther conditions. Practically the\nly consideration for the executive\ni the paying of the monthly nail\nrial.\nTor the first time ln Its history\n! club had a full quota of mem-\nrs signed for the coming season\nthe annual meeting. It was deled that fees, as weU as the time\nd place of playing, remain the\nBe as last year.\nn the election ot officers which\nlowed Major Prust was named\nnorary president. Mr. Beale was\nanlmously chosen as president\nth the following executive: P. N.\n\u25a0sell, Mrs. Fergie, Mrs. McKowan,\nas M. Baxter and L. Whlteford.\n% executive will choose Its own\nretary and will deal with mat-\n1 of membership, tournament\nnmittees and so forth at an early\nting.\nAl Demaree has prepared an il*\nlustrated leaflet called \"Bowling\nDelivery\" which he will gladly send\nto any reader requesting it. Address\nAl Demaree in care of this paper\nand be sure to enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope.\nNOT AGAINST\nBARNSTORMING\nNEW YORK, Act. 18 (AP)-While\nhot giving three cheers for the extracurricular activities of the big league\nbaseball players, John A. Heydler,\npresident of the National league, is\ninclined to doubt that club owners\nin the older of the two major circuits will place a ban on post-season\nbarnstorming. -*\nSuch action has been advocated\nby President Harridge of the American league, who proposes to bring\nit up at the annual winter meeting\nof both leagues in New York in\nDecember. Harridge cited the head\ninjury suffered by Jimmie Foxx of\nPhiladelphia Athletics in an exhibition game in Winnipeg.\nHeydler said the National league\nis not likely to discuss barnstorming\nat its annual meeting. \"Unless a\nproposal Jor such a ban is forthcoming from the American league\nat the annual joint meeting, I am\nInclined to believe our league will\nnot touch the matter.\"\nBOSTWISK'S MATE\nWINSCHALLENGE\nNEWMARKET, England, Oct. 18\n'API\u2014A. C. (Brother) Bostwlck's\nMate, a disappointment in previous\nstarts in England this year, today\nwon the challenge stakes, atsix furlongs sprint, by a head from Mrs.\nJ. V. Ranks high-weighed Solenoid.\nIt was his first victory of the present trip.\nMate carried only 124 pounds, 10\nless than Solenoid. Lady Ludlow's\nGreenore. with 131 pounds up, was\nthird. Five others also ran.\nThe American campaigner paid\noff at 10 to 1. Solenoid was 11 to 4\nto win the Greenore 15 to 8.\nJi\/one 7iner\never madt\nNEW YORK, OcL 18.*-The game\nof professional hockey is getting\nbigger and bigger\nwith every pass*\nIng year in unit*\ned SUtes; the day\nof fabulous gate\nreceipt* and more\nUnited SUtes cities ln the big\nleauges Is just\naround the cor*\nner; Canada's re*\npresentation o f\nToronto and Montreal will never\nbe frozen out by\nthe growth of\nhockey finance as\nOttawa was.\nAuthority for th*\nLester Patrick lUtMnenl is Lesser Patrick, gray-\nthatched master-mind of New York\nRangers, one of the big money teams\nof all time, and probably the keenest observer of the game that\nhockey has ever known.\nTo be frank, I was Just a little\nworried over Canada's prospects\nin the blgtlme. Both Maroons and\nCanadlens in Montreal lost money\nlast year; Toronto made money but\nhas an amazingly powerful drawing card in Its Leafs of recent years;\nOttawa was definitely frozen out\n\u2014it Is almost safe to say for all-\ntime. If, as is generally admitted,\nbockey is just beginning to Uke\nhold in the United SUtes, will Tor\nonto and Montreal be able to sUy In\nthe same league with such poten\ntial money-makers as teams in New\nYork, Boston, Chicago, Detroit and\nCibly  Philadelphia,  with  their\narenas and amazing financial\nresources?\nI popped the question to Lester\naa we sat in his office in Madison\nSquare Garden the other day. He\nhad begun his old sermon about\n\"hockey in the United Sutes has\nonly been scratched on the surface,\"\nwhen I rudely interrupted him.\nHOCKEY COME8 NATURAL\n\"I've heard that before, Lester,\nbut if hockey has only been scratched on the surface here, doesn't it\nseem conceivable that Montreal\nand Toronto will be frozen out just\nas OtUwa has been?\"\n\"No.\" Lester's jaw snapped quickly and he stuck out his lower Up\nin a fine \/.splay ot facial emphasis.\n\"Toronto and Montreal will always\nbe in the big time. In the first place,\nUnited SUtes franchise holders\nwill never want to lose the international angle to the race. It's too\nvaluable at the box office. Then\nyou've got to figure this: There's a\ndifference between gate receipts\nand profits. I think it costs us more\nto operate a club in the SUtes than\nIt does in Toronto and Montreal,\nand besides, the cost of building a\nstrong team is greater, too. Those\nCanadian cities are in the heart of\nhockey production. Good players\ndevelop in the same rinks where\npro. teams play.\"\nALWAY8 SUPPORT\nSTRONG TEAM\n'Toronto, on the record of its attendance, its handsome rink and iU\nstrong team is definitely a big time\ncity as long as hockey flourishes.\nThe French-Canadian team L. Montreal has a big enough following to\nassure it support in any kind of\ncompany. The English-speaking element in Montreal bas shown that\nit will support a strong team handsomely. As long as they have a con-\nUnding team, Maroons have nothing lo worry about\"\n\"But I tell you that hockey in the\nSUtes has merely been scratched on\nth* surface.\" I mentioned a faint recollection of having heard that remark before, but Lester didn't stop.\nHe Just glared. I looked at those\nbroad shoulders, cocked my good\near and listened.\n8UNDAY HOCKEY IN\nNEW YORK\n\"Look at what has bten done In\nNew York In less than ten years.\nI'm not sure of the figures, but I\nthink we outdrew boxing by a good\nmargin last season. Take amateur\nhockty on Sunday afternoons here.\nThree years ago. if wc had a thousand people in the Garden we considered ourselves lucky. Last season we averaged 8,000 people for\nSunday afternoon hockey in the\nGarden. And you must remember\nthis: The great rhajority of people\nhere have never \\seen a hockey\ngame. We are getting1 more new fans\nevery season.\n\"Other American cities are ahowlng the same development. Take\nCleveland and Buffalo. They're big\nleague cities. Pittsburgh will probably be back In the league soon, aid\nPhiladelphia Is still a possibility. I\ntell you the game is just beginning\nhere.\n\"But you needn't worry about\nToronto and Montreal. They're the\nbackbone of the game.\"\nCanada wlll never hav* to tak* a back\nttat In professional hockty In th* big\ncltln In th* Unlttd Statei, according to\nLester Patrick, himself a Canadian. Patrick has probably dont mort to put\nhockty across In tha Unlttd SUtei than\nany othtr tingle Individual. To him\nhookey It now tht major winter tport\nIn th* big cities across tht border and\nla replacing other sports at t drawing\ncard.\nANOTHER HOLDOUT\nMONTREAL, OcL 18 (CP)-Dave\nKerr, Montreal Maroon goalie latt\nseason, is a holdout and is at his\nhome In Toronto, the club was informed today. It appeared he would\nnot go lo the Winnipeg training\ncamp next week.\nWork on Grounds\nEnds Rugby Play\nJuniors Unable to Stage Sundsy Came\nThe Nelson junior rugby team received a setback in ite program,\nwhen work sUrted on the construction of bleachers at the Recreation\ngrounds, that will prevent further\npractises until Tuesday. Sunday's\ngame will also have to be cancelled.\nThe local boys, after their first\nvictory at Trail last Sunday, were\nI-it getting into the swing of steady\npractises and were having full turnouts. r\nBanff Puck-Chaser\nOff to England\nErnie Lescock,  Former Portland Pro, to Try for\nWembley Team\nBANFF, A1U\u201e Oct. It (CP)-London born, but a hockey product of\nBanff. Rocky mounUin resort. Ernie\nLeacock is packing his bags for the\nlong journey to Engla d's canlUl\nwhere he will try out with the Wembley international hockey team.\nAlthough London born, he was\nCanadian raised, coming here as a\nyoungster, and learned his hockey\nfirst as a member of Banff achool\nand amateur teams, later to graduate to the professional ranks. Last\nseason he played with the Portland\nBuckaroos but his first experience\nIn the pro ranks was with Victoria,\nwhere he sUyed two years, then to\nTacoma and back to the prairies\nwith the Saskatoon squad in the\nWestern Canada league.\nErnie, the guest at many social\nevents prior to his departure, plans\nto leave for London early next week.\nHoffman Likes Hamas\nfor Baer\nBAKERSFIELD, Cal.. Oct. 18 (AP)\n\u2014Ancil Hoffman, manager of Max\nBaer, said today that Steve Hamas\nIs the only heavyweight title contender who could draw a crowd\nagainst his fighter.\n\"Hamas is the logical opponent\nfor Baer's next fight,\" said Hoffman.\n64 Amateurs Try Out\nfor Pro Hockey Teams\nTORONTO, Oct 18 (CP)-Sixty\nfour amateur hockey players are\nconsidered good enough to be given\ntrials with professional clubs this\nfall, writes J. P. Fitzgerland in his\nsports column in the Toronto Tele*\ngram today. Most ot these have al*\nready come under the notice of\nscouts and what not and not a few\nof them will be peddled out for\nseasoning among the minor professional clubs. Very few will be able\nto make the long leap from amateur\nrating to N.H.L. speed.\nRUGBY UNION\nLONDON, Oct. 18 (CP cable)\nRugby union matches today resulted\nas follows:\nCornwall 17, Police Union 11.\nSwansea 3, Neath 8.\nCounty championship:\nGloucestershire  29,  North   Mid*\nlands 6.\nTHREE HOLDOUTS\nCHICAGO, Oct. 18 (AP)\u2014 Doc\nRomnes, Paul Thompson of Calgary\nand 'Taffy\" Abel, three of the outstanding stars on the Chicago Black-\nhawk hockey team last season, are\nholdouts.\nBusiness Manager Bill Tobin of\nthe Blackhawks said every man on\nthe squad was given a raise and\nthat the club could not offer more\nwithout violating the $82,800 club\nsalary limit imposed by the league.\nNone of the three has appeared\nfor workouts here.\nTudor Is Favorite\nLONDON, Oct. 18 (CP cable)-\nBetting on the Cambridgeshire, famoua autumn handicap to be run\nOctober 31, was considerably clarified tonight when Leon Volterra's\nFrench-bred Mary Tudor waa et-\nUblished clean-cut favorite at odds\nof 9 to 1. The race Is over the mile\nand I furlong course.\nNEW HIGHWAY 0PEN\nNCW WESTMINSTER. B C, Oct. 18\n(OP)\u2014Tbt Columbia street diversion\nhere, latest link tn tbe ptclfle highway system, waa formally opened to\ntraffic at noon today. Tjie diversion\nwas buUt at a cost of $137,000.\nHon. A. wells Gray mlnltter ot\nlands snd municipal affairs, cut tht\ntllken ribbon acrou the highway.\nRon. r. U MacPherson, minute:\not public works, ilso attended.\n21 EXPECTED TO START IN AIR\nRACE TO AUSTRALIA TOMORROW\nMTLDENHALL, England, Oct 18\n(CP cablel\u2014Wlth late preparations\nvirtually completed, the lineup of\nteams, for the England-to-Australia\nrace follows:\nSquadron-leader MacGregor and\nHenry Waller, New Zealand.\nD. L. Asjet and G. J. Geysen-\ndorfer, Holland.\nLlrnt. M. Hansen, Copenhagen.\nSauadron-Ltader D. E. Stodart\nand K. G. Stodart, London.\nFlying-Officer C. G. Daviet and\nLt.-Comm. Hill, London.\nC. J. Melrose, Glenelg, South Australia.\nCathcart Jones and K. W. Waller,\nLondon.\nCol. J. C. ri'imaurice and E. W.\nBonar, Dublin.'\nH. L. Brook. Harrogate. England.\nJohn H. Wright. Utlca, N.Y.\nG. W. A. Scott and Campbell\nBlack. London.\nR. Parer and G. Z. Hemsworth,\nNew Guinea.\nJ. Woods and D. C. Bennett, Adelaide, Australia.\nK. D. Farmentler and J. J. Moll,\nHolland.\nJacqueline Cochran and Wesley\nSmith, New York.\nFlight Lt. G. Shaw, Yorkahir*.\nCapt. T. Neville Stack and S. L.\nTurner, Portsmouth.\nJ. D. Hewett and C. E. Kay, Auckland. N.2.\nFlying-Officer H. D. Gilman, Sussex.\nJ. A. and Mrs. Mollison, London.\nTIE FOR LEAD IN\nLACROSSE LEAGUE\nTeams of Temple and Kennedy\nWill Playoff Wednesday\nfor School League\nTRATL. B.C., OcL 18\u2014 Holding\nRichardson's team to a 2-0 shutout.\nRalph Temple's lacrosse team Wednesday stepped into a tie for first\nplace with Kennedy's cohorts. The\nplayoff game will be tuged next\nWednesday.\nPhil Bar-chard and Pat Haley\nbulged the net for the winners.\nOn Friday an exhibition game between high school boyt of Hannah\nbench and the rest will be sUged.\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nTAKES BOWLING\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 18\u2014Kootenay\nHotel won from the Trail Meat\nMarket in three straight games in\nthe Trail ten-pin bowling league at\nthe Memorial hall Wednesday night.\nA. Baggio of the Hotel, bowled high\nsingle of 211 and P. Bernarva of the\nsame team made high aggregate\nwith 597 pins.\nTeams and scores were:\nKootenay Hotel:\nW. Molisky  181   182   128   491\nE. Nadln  142   181   168   471\nN. Nonis  190   164   154  508\nA. Baggio  _ 177   192   211   580\nP. Bernarva - 204   194   199   597\nToUls _  894 893 360 2647\nTrail Meat Market:\nT. Di Pasquale    169 117 152 438\nV. Matuai  149 149 149 447\nS. Matovitch   162 182 186 530\nS. Venturin -  147 170 155 472\nT. Muzrin 124 144 111 379\nSpot  \u201e    48 ,48 46 138\nTotals 797   808   797 2404\nCRANBROOK, Oct. 18-An-\nother \"hole In one\" hu been\nmade on the Crinbrook golf\ncourse, thlt time lt being a lady\nplayer that had the luck. Mrs.\nFergle, while going around the\ncourse with Mrs. Manning and\nMri. Lancaster of Newgate on\nWednesday afternoon, dropped\na long drive neatly into the cup\nin the fourth green. Mrs. Fergie\nla a coming player who will be\nadding golf cups to her long\nlist of tennis and badminton\ntrophies.\nIll II1II14ISII lllllll llll 1 111 III 11\nROYALS TAKE BIG\nLEAD IN BOWLING\nHave 12 Points; Montreal Is\nNext With Four; Walters\nand Edwards High\nTh* Royals won thrtt ttralght\ngames on the Qellnta tlleys Thurtdiy night and boosted thetr total to\n13 point*, k comfortable letd on\nth* second place Montreal bowlers\nwho hav* four point*. Th* Imperlsl\nCommerce boya bav* two point*. B.\nWalters and Don Edwirds dlvidtd\nhonon tor high single, tacb account-\nins for JM Plna and blgb aggregate\nwtnt to Walton wttb 873 pint.\nTht Royils mide all polnti by\ntheir three gam* victory, and th*\nMontreal crew, who ware higher ln\ntwo games tban tbt imperial-Commerce bowlers gtt two polnu, tht\nlatter crtw getting ont point.\nTeamt ind tooret were:\nMONTREAL\nlit   2nd   3rd   Tot\nD. U   Reed   Ill   103   IDS    347\nC.F.M. Guernsey   141   141   163     445\nA. Wllllami   118   118     $8   839\nBud Greenwood   130   103   183     386\nB. Wilteri   333   148   303    673\nTottl     733   810 748 3080\nIMPERIAL-COMMERCE\nDon Edwirdi      110   333 137 489\nLeo  Whltelock    133   140 135 411\nJS.W. Clowe. ..     131     83    119 333\nA. S. Keeler  ... 117     96     43 358\nJ.   Whitfield   .... 139   167 150 456\nToUl    _  630 708 886 1814\nBOYAL\nD.   Buttle     141 187 185 618\nJ. Lennle _ 130 153 151 433\nA. Willich   136   113   160 398\nR. Bourque   148     89 163 398\nA. Ptul   173 199 150 631\nTbUl   135   739   799   3363\nAGA KHAN'S COLT\nWINSTHE MIDDLE\nNEWMARKET, England, Oct 18\n(CP cable)\u2014Odds-on favorite, the\nAga Khan's good two-year-old colt\nBahram easily won the Middle Park\nsUkes today trom a small but select\nband, thereby establishing himself\na leading contender for the derby\nand other classics next season.\nBanram, aUrting at odds ot 2 to 7\nagainst, finished the six furlongs\nof the great two-year-old race two\nlengths in front of A. B. Basset's\nGodolphln, in turn three lengths\nahead of Sir Charles McLeod's Consequential. Six ran.\nRudolphin sUrted at 20 to 1 and\nConsequential at 1 Ito 2.\nThe winner is a bay colt by Bland-\nford out of Friar's daughter, and a\nhalf-brother of Windsor Lad, the\nfine colt that won the derby and St.\nLeger this year.\nMillar Wins Again\nLIVERPOOL, England, Oct. 18\n(AP)\u2014Freddie Miller of Cincinnati.\nrecognised by the National Boxing\nassociation as the featherweight\nchampion, tonight defeated Jimmy\nWalsh of Chester, ln a 12-round bout.\nMiller continuously rocked Walsh\nof Chester, ln a 12-round bout.\nMiller continuously rocked Walsh\nwith lefts to tin head and raised a\nwelt over the British boxer's eye\nin the ninth.\nThe weighU were 130 pounds,\nfour over the class limit, so that Miller's title was not at stake.\nST. JOHNSTONE\nEXPECTS WIN\nTake on \"Easy\" Club\nof Albion; Rangers\nCrippled\nGLASGOW, Oct 18 (CP cable)-\nIt would seem that SL Johnstone\nwill be leaders of the Scottish Soccer league, over the mighty Rangen, for another week anyway, for\non Saturday the weakened Rangen\ntravel to the grounds of the fighting Clyde eleven, while SL Johnstone has an easy home engagement with Albion Rovers, the ent-\nwhile second division club.\nRangers will be minus thre* ot\ntheir best sUlwarts for the match\nwith Clyde.\nDawson, Simpson and Smith art\nall playing on the International side\nat Belfast. Rangen are running a\npoint behind SL Johnstone.\nThere will be a merry battle when\nHearta clash with Hamilton Academicals. The two elevens are\nbracketed ln third place only a\ngame behind the leaders.\nThird Lanark expect no trouble\nholding their lead ln the second\ndivision, slim though it Is. The erstwhile tint division club tokes on\nArbroath.\nANTICIPATION IS\nHIGH AT TRAIL\nFans Looking Forward to the\nCame With Nelson; New\nMaterial on Team\nTRAIL, B.C.. Oct. lS-Trall rugby\nfans are anticipating with enthusiasm the flnt game of the aenlor\nWest Kootenay Rugby league to be\nplayed in Trail Sunday, for on the\nTrail lineup there will be many\nnew faces and also there seems to\nbe an air of mystery about the Nelson roster. Tine game will commence\nat 3:30 p.m. sharp.\nBrick Balfour, Jimmy Burrows\nand Nick Cat, Zuk, well-known for\ntheir activities in the past, will be\nln the line along with Dave Shaw,\nDesbrlsay, formerly of New Westminster, Bert Richardson, Percy\nHalliwell, Verne Davidson, Ken\nMiles, Cecil Holmes, formerly of\nthe Calgary Altomahs, Harry Stir-\nzacher, last year with Nelaon, and\nJoe McDoneu, Purcello and Woodi\nof Rossland.\nIn the back field there will be\nthe renowned speedster Bunny\nSommen, Jimmy Morris, Jack Salter, formerly of Toronto, and Walmsley ot Rossland. Lyle Jestly, coach,\nin all probability appear on the\nfield in rugby garb. The boys have\nbeen practising faithfully in the\nrink and have confidence in at\nleast providing keen competition\nfor the Nelson visiton.\nTrail Plans Rep\nBasketball Team\nTRAIL, B.C, OcL 18. - \"Dad\"\nHartley was appointed represenU-\ntive of the Tn\\' Basketball association to attend the West Kootenay\nBasketball association meeting in\nNelson on Saturday, at the Memorial hall Wednesday night.\nA. B. Thompson was elected vice-\npresident of the Trail association\nfollowing the accepUnce of Mn.\nCoris' resignation.\nCoaches of the four senior men's\nleague teams wete appointed a committee to select their best players\nwho would choose a coach. The\ncoach wriild then select a representative team from the chosen playera.\nThe committee comprises Phil Williams, Buffalos; Laurie Nicholson,\nElks; Ted Halvenon, Colombos, and\nTommy Routledge, Adanacs. It is\nhoped to have a represenUtive team\nwork out in the near future.\nIt was agreed to allow senior\nhockey playen. who Lave played\nbasketball, to work out with the\nsenior men.\nRAREO\n, Pronounced by\nConnoisseurs to be a\nliqueur of the finest\nquality.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the.\n\u2022Government of British Columbia.\n \u2014\n\t\nPAGE TEN-\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. OCTOIER 1\u00bb. 1M4-\n5ICu$siFiED Section \u25a0 where Buyer eseiier Meei\n.mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmsmmmmessstmmmjzx^^\nl^immiiEitiiiiiMiiiiiiiHiiiiiMiissiMj^^\nSOMEONE\nTO LOVE\nNrliaii Ballji Sfcma\nMember of lh* Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Aaaoclatlon\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrlvatr Exehang* connecting to\nall Deptrtmentt\nINSTALMENT SEVENTEEN\n\"Of course I can't ling! I wish I\ncould,\" June told Grady.\n\"Can't you even carry a tune? I\ncan have plenty of aongs written to\nsuit you voice, the publicity man\nurged.\n'But I haven't any volcel I tang\nin church, of course \u2014 everybody\ndoes in a small town. Aside from\nthat, all I ever sang were some old\nsongs my mother used to sing for\nDad. I'd sing them when no one was\naround, just to please him\u2014and old\nChloe\u2014she was Mother's Virginia\nnigger\u2014she'd stand in the hall and\nboo hoo\u2014you know how darkles\nare.\"\n\"What were the aongs\u2014give us an\nidea.\" ,.      , ,\n\"Don't be silly! Just sentimental\nold things that people in New York\nwould laugh about....\"\n\"You never can tell. Come on-\njust one. Miss Varick,\" urged Linder. He was beginning to get Gradv s\n\u25a0&t*- .   \\ .       ..   .\n* June flushed. She had to go back\nto her office. People were waiting.\n\"All right\u2014here is a sample. I think\nit's called 'Someone to Love Me.'\nShe had a throaty, low-pitched voice\nand invested the words with a ringing sincerity. ._,.'____.\n\"Fine!\" said Linder. \"And Isnt\n(hat exactly whst every girl wants!\nBut say, isn't that the 'Prisoners\nSong' that was so popular only a\nfew years ago?\"\n\"Didn't she tell you her mother\nsang it? It's out of the same nest,\nthough. It's of folk origin\u2014they\nfailed It 'Moonlight' down in Kentucky and Tennessee. These words\nare a little different, and exactly\nright, If we stop there. I've got an\nidea. Try something else, Miss Varick - just anything.\"\nJune sang \"My Old Kentucky\nHome.\" Grady nodded at Linder.\n\"You sec, ahe a got something. Now\nlook here, when we start broadcasting the orchestra, why don't we have\nher open with this one verse\u2014the\nwords are swell for a pretty girl to\nput over\u2014use it as a theme song to\nstart the program\u2014then, we'll have\ntwo or three snappy songs during\nthe evening....\" ,\n\"You must be crary! June cried.\n\"And will you please excuse me\u2014\nI'm swamped with work.\" Without\nwaiting for permission to go, she\nfled from thc room. Her cheeks\nwere burning.\nThey sent for her later to come to\na room where a young man sat\nstrumming a piano. He played an\naccompaniment to several songs,\nwhich June obligingly sang, thinking to terminate the farce by proving how impossible she was. But\nshe was overruled. They liked her.\nShe pleaded, even cried. Then she\nsaid she would quit her job\u2014she'd\nrather clerk in a department store\nthan make a fool of herself.\n\"A fool of yourself?\" Linder laughed. 'They'll eat it up\u2014with a beautiful girl like you.\"\n\"They can't see me over the\nradio.\" _, ___.       ,.\n\"Leave that to me,\" Grady said.\n\"I'll sec that the newa gets around.\nLinder made her a proposition\nthe next day. \"I'll give you a hundred dollars a week and your suite\nfree, if you'll sing.\" ,\nThis was the first time he had\nmentioned compensation. She expected to get about $25 a week.\n\"A hundred dollars a week, and\nmv suite! That's different. I'd sing\n'There was a frog, and thc frog was\nin a well. .. \" _\n\" *And the well was In the ground\n\u2014exactly. I thought you'd see It\nthat way. Now. we're going on thc\nair Saturday night. Miss Varick...'\nThree days in which lo rehearse,\ncarry on her duties, and shop. Thc\n(inly thing that could save her from\nutlcr collapse when she stood up to\nsing that silly song would be a\ndream of a dress. It took her spare\ntune for two days before she found\nit. and it cost $125.\nBut worth every cent, for already\nshe felt triumphant when she tried\nit on before a full length mirror in\nher apartment. It was made of supple satin, the exact shade of her\nhair, and clung gently to her exquisite figure. The skirt bore Inserts of pleated, creamy chiffon.\nThey would frou-frou beautifully,\nwhen she moved, especially when\nshe danced, she foresaw. Slippers\nof gold with rhinestone heels.\nThe club was croweded that Saturday night, and June did not have\ntoo much time in which to rush upstairs and dress. The program opened\nat 11:30. She was already half dead\nwith fright, she believed. But the\nexcitement brought a starry look lo\nher eyes.\nJust before Bhe went down a\ncorsage of orchids came up without\na card. Wondering who had sent\nthem, she pinned them on her shoulder. Just what she needed to complete her costume.\nLinder met her and walked wilh\nher to the orchestra platform. There\nwas a good crowd. \"Mr. Linder\u2014I\ncan't, honestly, I can't...\"\n\"Look here, don't you want someone to love you? You're not any\ndifferent from any other girl\u2014Just\nthink about that when you begin...\"\nJune thought of Bruce. She wanted\nhim to love her. That steadied her.\nAnd when she actually stood looking out upon the guests, waiting\nwhile the announcement was being\nmade, the thed her nervousness\ncompletely. She knew a lot of these\npeople\u2014could pick out tables here\nand ther-}\u2014friendly, nice folks. Some\nof them waved to her, applauded.\nShe forgot the unseen audience,\nforgot that the voice was going out\nover the ether into myriad homes.\nShe sang to the people there in the\nroom, to Bruce who waa then on a\nsteamer, coming back to her\u2014to tell\nher of his love, perhaps\t\n\"Someone to love you, Darlin'--\nhere he* is....\"\nShe stepped from the platform\ndirectly Into  the arms of  Philip\nSheridan, who danced her away to\nthe tune the orchestra struck up.\n\"Phil! It's miraculous...\"\n\"That's what I thought when  I\nheard you sing. Half the people in\nthe room were holding hands before\nyou got through.\"\n\"Oh,  listen\u2014I've been  ashamed!\nI didn't want to do it! But they're\npaying me for it\u2014can you believe\n\\~r\n\"Hardly.\" he teased. \"I think you\nought to pay them. Darlin' just lo\nlook at you is worth the price of\nadmission \u2014 I mean the cover\ncharge.\"\n\"When did you get back?\"\n\"Just ln time to dress. I read In\nthe papers of your blossoming, and\nwas bound to be here for the operatic debut.\"\n\"Don't tease me. I'm humiliated\nevery time I think of it. But when\nI think of the money. I'm glad.\"\n\"Aren't you a little bit nappy to\nsee me?\"\n\"I'm delighted. Didn't I lay lt wai\nmiraculous? That meant I was ver-\nra, verra pleased. Oh, I almost forgot to thank you for the grand\nroses. You must be clairvoyant to\nknow they are my favorites. . . .\nOh, I'll bet you sent me the orchids\ntonight! Tve been racking my brain\nto think who did it!\"\n\"You'll have to rack tome more.\nTm positively not guilty. I'd have\nsent you tiny little cream rosebuds\ntonight, or perhaps gardenias\u2014nol\norchids. You are much too fresh and\nsaintly.\"\n\"You mean Just a country girl\nfrom Missouri.\"\n\"Darlin' how long do you have to\nstay here?\" \u2022\n\"The rest of th* evening. There\nare a couple of other aongs.\n\"Then I'll stay, too. And after that,\nwe must go somewhere elae\u2014out\nof the spotlight. I want you to myself. You must tell m* all that's happened since I've been gone, and how\nyou landed in anything like this.\"\n\"All right. You can sit at my\ntable.\"\nSubscription Rates\nSlngl* copy   1  -05\nKy carrier, per week       2t\nBy carrier, p\u00abr year,    _. 13.00\nBy mail in Canada, tn subscribers living outtldt regular\ncarrier areas, per month, 00c;\nthree months, $1.80; six month*\n$3.00; on* year. $8.00.\nUnited \"tates and Great Britain, one month. 75c; six months,\nK00: ont year. $7.50.\nForeign countries, * '.her than\nU.S., same aa above plus any\nextra postage.\niiiiiiliiillllliiiillillinilllilllilllllill\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nRATES\nlie o lint\nMinimum Z llnet\n2 lints, onct  .\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0$ *2|\n1 Unit, one*     .M\n4 Unit, one*     M\n2 llnet, \u00ab timet    M\n5 lines. 6 timet  1-32\n4 lines, etlmei  1.78\n2 Unit, 1 month 2.88\n3 llnet, 1 month   4.29\n4 llnei, 1 month  5.72\nAll abovt lttt 10% for prompt\nptyment\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMHIt\nBruce wai home! The thought\nbeat like a refrain ln June's heart\nas she waited ln the car for him.\nwhile Jenks went to help him with\ncustoms and bring the luggage. It\nwas better bo\u2014reporters would be\nsure to witness the meeeting.\nBut her precaution did not exempt\nBruce. He had been spotted and was\nnow trying to get rid of the persistent young men bent on a new angle\nof the story for their papert.\n\"We have lt on good authority that\nshe wai in love with a Frenchman\u2014\nthat your mother tint, and then\nyourself, opposed the match....\"\nBruce's deep voice, annoyed and\nanxious, replied, \"Your authority ii\nall wrong. Nothing to it\"\n\"Wouldn't it be better to make a\nstatement, Mr. Bishop, Instad of\nleaving the matter td speculation and\nfurther investigation?\"\n\"The only statement I have to\nmake is that I went abroad on the\nstrength of aome private information. I felt that it was pretty much\not a wild goose chaae, but decided\nto follow if up, anyway. There was\nno use getting you fellows excited\nunless It developed. It proved to\nbe entirely without foundation. Now,\nI propose to concentrate anew on\nuncovering the mystery here. Every\nresource I possess will be devoted\nto finding my sister. It Is an unthlnk-\nabl\" possibility to me that she could\nvrnish Into thin air, seemingly, and\nnot even a clue to her disappearance\nrrmain. That is all.\"\nThe door swung open and he was\ninside, beside her. His strained, grave\nface lighted up, and he seized her-\nhungrily in hii arms, held her cloie\nfor a moment.\n\"It's wonderful to see you again\nI've missed you so much. Have you\nmissed me?\"\n\"Oh. so much!\"\n\"Where dn you want to go? Some\nwhere for breakfast?\"\n\"Let's go to my hotel\u2014have break\nfast In my rooms\u2014do you mind?\"\n\"No, dear\u2014of course not. To the\nGilmore, Jenks.\"\nAs the car moved off. June said,\n\"I heard what you aaid to the reporters, Bruce.\" Her hand gave his\n\u00ab sympathetic squeeze. \"I'm so sorry.\nYoii found out nothing?\"\n\"No, those damnable Italians\nwouldn't disclose a thing, even if\nthey knew. His place Is closed nnd\ngoing to ruin. They said he was ln\nAmerica. Of courie, if I wanted to\ngive the thing away I could go to\nthe Italian government, and they'd\nfind him fast enough. But I'll wait\na little longer.\"\n\"That reporter laid they'd found\nout something?\"\n\"Yes. but they think he's French.\"\n\"A fellow came to the club the\nother night\u2014pretended to be a guest,\nand tried to trap me into saying\nsomething. I don't know If he was a\nreporter or a detective.\"\n\"What club?\"\n\"Oh, I forgot to tell you, Bruce.\nI've been busy.. I've got a job.\" She\ntold him what she had been doing.\nWhen she came to the part about\nthe singing she felt Incredibly silly.\nShe knew, instinctively, he would\ndisaporove.\n\"I don't like It, June. It's too public. . . . It's\n\"Wait until we get upstairs and\nyou can tell me juat how you feel\nI To  Be  Continued)\nAdvertise*\u2122 who deiir* may\nhave replies addressed to a box\nat the Nelson Daily News and\nforwarded dally to their address. A charge of 10 cents is\nmade for thii service. In this\ncaie add four worda (Box \u2014\nDaily Newi) tq tht count for\nthe number of wordi.\nTRUTH IN ADVERTISING\nThe Nelson Daily News endeavors to print only truthful classified advertising and will appreciate having Its attention called\nto any advertising not conforming to the highest standard! of\nhonesty.\nOut-of-town subscriber! vho\nwilh to aniwer advertisements\nln which only the telephone\nnumber of the advertiser is\ngiven, may mail their repliei to\nthe Nelion Daily Newi, and they\nwll. bt communicated to tbe\nadvertiier.\nBirths\nHUSBIRO\u2014To Mr. ind Mrs. C.\nHuaberg, o( Blake. it the Kooteniy\nLake Oentral honptal, October 18,\n\u00bb  sun.        .         __\nSCHKWAROK\u2014To Mr. and Mre.\nJohn Schkwarok of Farrou, at. the\nKootenay Like Oenenl hoeplttl,\nOctol-tjer 17. t eon.     _\nBAILUE-*To Mr. ana Mrs. wlllltm R, BMllle. it the Trtll-Tudauac\nlwtpjul, October 14La diufhter.\nSMITH\u2014Tb Mr. tnd Mrt. O. B.\nSmith, tt Trall-Taatntc hospital,\nOctober 16. a daughter\t\nPersonal\nASTROLOOY-LIFE READ1KO AND\nforecast, month bv month for one\nyeir.   covering   fully   builneee   it-\nlairs, employment, lovt, courtship,\nmarriage, trtvel, speculation, health,\nlucky days. eto. Complete SL Character tnilytl*. JM; tend blrthda'e.\nM. Klemin. 90 Elton St., WUinipet.\nManitoba, <*I53'J)\nWE PAY UP TO 175 EACH FOB I\"-\ndlan Hetd pennies; ti tor Lincoln Heidi over 8 years old. All\ndates wanted. Send to cents for\ncomplete t). s. tnd Ctntdlan buy-\nIna catalog\". Premium coin Co..\nBox_848Cj_ MUwaukee, Wle.   (#188)\nAN OFFER TO EVERY- INVENTOR.\nJ,lit of wanted Invention! tnd ful)\notmitlon lent tree. The Bunny\nComptny. world Patent Attorneys.\n273 Bank Street, Otttwt, Canada.\n(4368)\nGENTLEMEN. SAVE 5(X?f. BUT YOUR\nSanitary requirements by mill.\nBtimp brings catalogue, sanl-\nTex company 709 Dunsmuir street.\nVancouver, ss. c. \u00ab368i\nEdema Itch PUei Ulcers. Try Oto Let'i\nChlnt Remedy at Hudson'a Bay Co\n(4377)\nSituations Wanted\nOIRL WANTS WOBK THONB  737B.\n (4822)\nFor Rent-Houses, Etc\nNEW BUNGALOW, li BOOMS. WHITE\nPlumbing, fireplace, furnace. heat*\ned. Oarage, C. W. Appleyard.\n(4381)\nSt*  ROOM   HOUSE\u2014REMODELLED,\n1212 Water Street. Apply Box 4488\nNelton Dilly News. _ (4468^\nBOOM FOR RENt7\"BOA\"SD^PTl6N-\nal. Private Home. Box 4388. Dally\nNews.      ' (4386)\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Ads bring\nquick results \u2014 try\none.\nFURNISHED     HOUSEKEEPING\nroomi for rant. Annablt Block.\n(4281)\nIf you want to buy a horse, cow, pig, etc, use a few\nlines   in  The   Nelson   Daily   News  Classified   Column\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nOr if you want to sell use the Column\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nPerhaps you are interested in buying or belling chickens,\nturkeys, ducks, etc. The quickest and easiest way for\nyou is by putting an AD in the Column\nPOULTRY WANTED or FOR SALE\nFor Service Phone lean Robertson at\n144\nOut of Town Readers\u2014Prompt Attention Given\nto Mail Orders\nNelson Daily News\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nLargest in the Interior\nUSED MORE READ MORE\nLost and Found        Mining Properties\nTo Finders\nIf you find \u2022 ett or t dog  t\npocketbook lewelry or fur or\nanything lite of value, teltpbone*\nTht Daily News A \"Pound\" Ad\nwlll bt Inserted without coet to\nvou Wt will collect from tht\nowner.  '\t\n'SIX i61 CROWN GRANTED CLAIM\n! 18 inchee ore in open cut, tt\nfeet ore ln tunnel. 400 stckt i\nIn sack! Aleo hive sevenl got\nclaims not crown granted. Btttt\nmiles truck road to bott lintfl]\nit Argents, four miles truck\nto rillwiy. Norman McLeod. '\ner. B. C.   \t\nMiscellaneous\nHO-MAYDI BREAD\nIMPROVER\nMakes bread of finer tex-\ni ture  and  flavor,  better\ncolor and quality, from\nthe same  quality  flour.\nGives larger loaf. Packet\n20c   sufficient    for    100\ni loaves.\n:5S3jJ C. & J. JONES, Limited,\nWinnipeg, Man. '\n14511)\nHoi\n<43'\nLive Stock Wanted\nTOUNO    pRESH    COW   OF   OCX\nmllklni strain, olveparticulars,t\nand price. Box 4489, D*lly\nLivestock for Sple\ntW BLA(\ni.. One Ml\nONE HORSE 1600 LBS., ON\nman a vears 1300 lbt.,   _\n9 and 7 yeart. 3800 lbs., lo tmal\nonee,  thev  ere  ell   broke.  O.\nGulee  c-n Forch Rranch, Erie, B\n<4K\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nOOOD CLEAN RAOS W ANTED- APPlv   Dally   Newi   Office. ,33881\nNursery Products\nLLOYD QEOROE RABPBER1\nCtnes. The largest grown 4c *e*\nCuthbert*. ac each. Red ind BU\ncurrants, 1 yetr, latjc each..\nRovnon, Nelson. (M\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nFor Sale\n3MALL LAUNCH, MAKE IDEAL\nfishing boat 180: No II Dome\nseparator tls; ont light delivery\nwigon witn bobs for same I4*i\nCharles Holt, Balfour, B  C. 144591\nPOR 8 ALE - BARRELS, KEOS\nsugir uclu. linen. McDonald Jam\nCo.. Ltd. (4388)\nLADIES   TWEED   BREECHES.   NEW.\nPit till person. 82.50. Th. 390R.\n14813)\nFarm Lands for Sale\n38 AC. 5 CULTIVATED, 15 TIMBER,\nample water for Irrigation. 30 fruit\ntrees, small fruits, six room house,\ngood outbuildings 81800. H. E.\nDill, Ward  Bt. (4491)\nFor Sale or Exchange\nNEW   BUNGALOW   PULLY\n.. Good location. Ph. 777La.\n5   RM.\nmo*'n' - ~ (MTT,\nFURN.    OR    UNPURN.    APTS     6Y\nwetk or month. Medical Arts Bldg\n14883)\nFUR.     ROOMS.     STEAM     HEATED\nihower. terms mod. Can. Legion.\n(4383)\nTWO    ROOM    FURNISHED\nfor rent, Stirling Hotel.\nHOUSE\nPhont\nRENT,\nSUITE\n(4388)\nCLOSE    IN.\n(4830)\nWARM QUIET ROOM, BOARD OP-\ntlonal. phont 381R. (4493)\nTERRACE  APTS   Beautiful  Modern\nFrlgldalre equipped suites.   (42841\n3  ROOM  SUITE  812.  PER MONTH\nUnion   Rooms. >4185J\nCOMMERCIAL  SALT\nPRODUCTION\nCommercial ult production in\nJune amounted to 15,888 tons compared with 18,608 a year ago and\n15,828 tons two years ago. Production in the first six months of 1934\nwas 90,195 tons compared with 82,-\n013 in 1933, 79,180 in 1932 and 76,-\n054 in 1931, ... ___J\nProperty for Sale\n14 BECTION IN SASKATCHEWAN\n7 ml. to school. Land cleared and\nfenced. House, barn. traneTles, and\nmachine drilled well. For further\nparticulars, apply Box 4534, Dally\nNews.      (45241\nRE~D. C. ROBERTSON RANCH, VAL-\nltcan, B. C. for sale \u00bb2000. 168\nacres. Terms 8400 down, balance\n1350 yearly at 6 per cent. Apply\nC Newcomen. Valllcan, B. C. (4519)\nINCREA8ED OUTPUT OF\nAUTOMOBILES\nProduction of automobiles in Canada during August included 4,933\nunits made for sale ln this country\nand 4,971 for export, a total of 9,-\n904. The output a year ago was 6,-\n079 units. The total for August included 7.325 passenger can and\n2,579 trucks.\nFor eight months ending August\n31 tho cumulative output of motor\ncars ln Canada numbered 103,102\nunits, an increase of 103 per cent\nover the 50,881 units made in the\ncorresponding period of a year ago\nand 101 per cent over the 51.208\nunits reported for the first eight\nmonths of 1932.\nFOR OOOD MOWER WILL TRADE\nheavy teim wagon, power drig\nsaw. Mrs. Shutty, Kaslo, B. C.\n14485)\nBusiness Opportunity\nEarn $5.00 to $35 Weekly\ngrowing mushrooms. Our famoua\n\"Jumbo\" spawn prepared under\nDominion patented process. We\nwlll buy your mushrooms. Send\n5c for complete proposition and\nillustrated booklet. North American Spawn company, 421 Somerset Bldg., Winnipeg.\n(4367)\nA MODERN 18 CABIN. CABIN\ncamp for tale. BuUt only three\nyears at a cost ot 813.000 Tbe\nowner wlll now sacrifice at $90(10\nto bt paid 84000 caah with tha\nbalance on arranged terms at 6%.\nCHAS. F HUNTER, 6 P A- E.\nMunicipal ind Commercial Audita\nP   O  Bn 1191. Nelion. B   O\n14388)\nAuayen\nE W  WIDDOWSON established 1900\n305 Josephine St.. Nelion  B O\n14269)\n(-RENVILLE H. (iltlMWOOD\n818 Baker St., Nelson. Box 726\nCustom and Control assays, chemical analysis. Representative at\nTrail for Shippers' Interest*. 14443)\nKOOTENAY LABORATORIES\nAssayers it Chemists\nBoa  1343 Trail.   B C\n(4291)\nChlropodiiti\nDr. Mildred Slmonda Foot Specialist\n405  Fernwell Bids   Bpoktne.  wash\n.4292)\nChiropractor!\nE.   M.   WARREN.   D.   C.   BOX   872\nGoon   results   Lady  attendant  bj\npolntment. Phone 115.       (43611\nappointment\" Phone ^16.\nElectrical\nJ.  F   COATES-Th*  Electrlo  store\nSupplies and installation!\nPhont 766. P. O. Box 116\n(4293)\nEngineer! and Surveyor!\nFlorist!\nJL 1\ntable or the \"dinner party, \"fhlt\ntheir aeison.\nNELSON   FLOWER SHOPPE,\nPhone 233 or _89R3.\n_\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES. Ft!\n342 cut flowen potted plai\nand floral dealgna. tl*\nIniurance and Real Eital\nROBERTSON REALTY CO.. li\nRea.    estate.    Insurance,    r*ni\n_Aberdeen Jilock, Baker _st.  M\nWE WRITE INSURANCE AGAfl\nall r.ski on Jewelry \u00bbnd ~f\nT. D. Rosling. 3 Roytl Bank \u25a0\n  (*J\nR   W    DAWSON,   Real   Estata\nsurance   Rentala   Next  Hlppar\nHardware, Btktr itrett.        Hi\nC.   D    BLACKWOOD    IniUrtnO*\ntvery detcrlptlon Real Eet\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0> _\n148\nH.   E.   DILL,   AUTO  AND  FIRS   .\n\u25a0urinct Real Estate. 508 Ward\n       \u25a0 (4*\nJ     E.    ANNABLE.    REAL    ESTA1\nrentals, Iniurance. Annablt bl<\n (4i\nLIFE, FIRE tt AUTOMOBILE IN81\nance, p, E  Poulln, Ph. 70. (4\u00bb\nCHAS F McHARDY INSURANO\nReal Eatate\u2014Phone 133,\nMachinist!\nA   H   OREEN CO., LTD\nSt. phone 264, Nelaon,\n516 WARD\nB.C.  (4306)\nA sure proposition for 1 tht right\nparty For further particulars apply Box 4287, Dally News.     (4267)\nCanaries\nCANARIES.     GUARANTEED     8ING-\ners. Apply 308 Carbonate, ph. 115.\n  (4500)\nThere's a new color for suits this\nfall\u2014milk chocolate.\nt.  S   PETER8\nMining   Engineer\nExamination operation and manage-\nment of mlnea and  mineral\nproperties   Rossland.  B O\n.4307)\nH. D   DAWSON-NELSON\nENGINEER  AND  SURVEYOR     \u00ab\n t (4808)\nBoyd   C.   Affleck,   Fruitvale,   B.   c\".\nLands. Mineral Clalma. Waterworks\netc. Surveys. Plana and Estimates\n(4309)\nHair Coods\nLadles'   wigs,  switches,   transformations, gentlemen's wigs and   ,ou-\npees.   Write   for   free   Illustrated\ncatalog. Hanson Co., Vancouver.\n(4265)\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nPor all clissea of Metal Work  La\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grind\nMotor Rewinding Acetylene Weld\nPhone 693.\n324 Vernon street\n (43\nMuiical Tuition\nVIOUN     AND     THEORY     PUP!\nMary Heddle, Phone 3UR3. (43\nSaih  Factory\nLAWSON3 SASH FACTORY   HA]\nwood mcrchnnt. 217 Baku atr\n (43\nSecond Hand Storei\nWOOD AND COAL HEATERS CHK\nMrs^ Radcltff e'i.  (j\nUSE   THE   CLASSIHLD    IDS.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\nHOSPITAL RATES IN 1933 LOWER\nHospital rates ln Canada in 1933\naveraged 1.4 per cent below thoso\no[ 1932 but 4.4 per cent above the\n1928 level. The decline in 1933 marked the continuation of the downward movement since 1928. The\ngreatest rate decrease has been in\npublic wards which in 1933 declined 1.7 per cent. Private room\nrates moved down 1.1 per cent and\nsemi-private 1.2. Operating room\ncharges showed the least movement.\nAn average of public ward charges\nthroughout the Dominion in 1933\nwas $199 as againit $2.03 in 1932.\nThe greatest decrease was In Manitoba where the rate receded from\n$1.77 to $1.51. Semi-private room\nrates dropped from $2.85 to $2.82.\nPrivate room rates average fell\nfrom $5.11 to $5.6 and operating\nroom charges from $8.23 to $8.14.\nIn Italy, more than 20,000,000 persons are insured against consumption and 5000 beds in special hospitals arc set aside for the cure\nof sucli cases.\nI'M JU&T GOiM'iN\nTHC KITCHEN!TO\nQ1T A ORINK CT\nAU. RIGHT-1 KMOW\nVOU -WON'T SNEAK\nOOT V\/HILE VOU\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Westover\n\\ usxr eeAN\navnpoL aoor to\n\u2022svx OOT HBBE AMD\nHOU>  THIS  eVTRA\nCHAift fob tilub\nTye a couple\" op\nHOUfcS \u2014   SOT  LOWE\nDOES   FUNM-\/\n,THINeS\n0\nTHE GUMPS\nLET BYGONES BE BYGONES\nOMMA\/-M-\nL.OOKATTHIS-\n\"THE LATEST  ,\nEDITION SA^THE\n\u2022JUttV IS REPORTED\nTO BEU TOI W\nOUR RrVVOR-\nDoyoOBELlEVE\nTHAT?\n[exo-d-\nrWHV WOT? WE'RE OM\n,   THERKjMTSIDE-\nl^OUKNOW.J'K\nAlAtOST a&rlNMW-i\nTOFSEUSORRVFOR\nILL\n_PP\nm\n. I'-'t\n: ti u\nw: .4\n________\n__________\u25a0\n_w_w__wm_w_m_m\n \u25a0\n\t\n\\\\lob\n\u2022THE NELION DAILY NEWS. NILSON. l.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. OCTOIER 11, 1M4-\nIICAGO PIT *\nIN A RALLY\n.y Downward Trend\nIs Checked in\nWheat\nDCAOO, OcL 18 (AP) .-Wheat\n\u2022d today and practically coned an early downward trend\nrices.\neoveriei wtrt In Unt with ac-\nof foreign mtrket, ttptclally\nneis at Buenoi Alrei. Attention\ngiven to tht tact that tbt new\nmtine whett crop ll at tht criti-\nItriod of growth,\nheat closed unchanged, to Vt\noff, May 11.00** To 11.00V4,\ntt to % up. Mty SOH to SOtt,\noati tt to Vi down.\nST KOOTENAY\nCOAL OUTPUT UP\nMarket and Mining News\n[ember Production 44,792\n'ons Against 33,562\nLast Year\n;Ti\nfORIA, Oct. 18  (CP).-Brit-\njlumbia coal mlnea produced\n1 toni in September as agalnit\ntons ln the same month a\nago, according to tht monthly\n'wnt   of   the   department   of\nEast Kootenay waa the only\n'  ahowlng an Increase, the\n- being 44,792 toni ln com-\nin with 33,528 toni in Septem-\n1833.\nlnd mines produced 48,742 toni\nbmpared with 50,204 torn; and\nli-Prlnceton district 23,209 tons\nUt 14,202 tons.\ntotal of 10W tons of coke wai\nueed at Michel.\nSELLING ENDS\nWHEAT GAINS\nWINNireo, Oet. IS tCPl\u2014The up.\nward trend of viluti In wond grain\nmarkets, usually oni of tbt chltf\nfactori ln price movamtnta On tht\nwlnnlptf grain exchange, Influenced\nlooal wheat futures only temporary\ntodiy. Liberal atlllng at thl clow\nwiped out fractional gains, price!\nending 1,4 to *t\\ Mnt lower.\nReflecting thi itrong tone of tbe\nChicigo and Liverpool marketa, val.\nuei here alio advances for 1 tlmt.\nbut at the close the October futurt\nwas neir bottom leveli, it 78 centi,\nDecember 78H md Miy 83-8314\ncents.\nI Incorporations\nTTOW*. Oct. IS (CPl-com-\nIneorporitloni during the week\nte:\nI Albino Oold Mines and Ex-\nUon Co., Ltd., NP.U 1500,000,\nsutsr.\nMtk Oold Mlnei, Ltd., N.P.L.\nn ihsrei so par vilue, Van-\ntr.\n\u25a0fa-provincial   registrations:\n\u25a0run Oold Mints, Ltd., N.P.L.,\nMO, Toronto ind vincouver.\nEastern Sate*\nOct.   IS   (CP)-Sal\u00ab\nor omri shares on tht Monl\nttock ucbinge today werti\nBraslllan;  390 Can Cam; 30O\nlOar: 385 Ind Al a*. 785 Ind Al\n(5 O P R; 945 Dom Bridge: 385\nrS It B 785 mckel: 785 Laka\nfoods. 687 Nat Brew; 3(9 N Steel\nISO Bteel Oorp.\njiOHTO, OCV is (CPI-Balea of\npr more shares on the Toronto\nI exchanie, Industrial aectlon,\nf wen; 315 Abltlbl: S40 Bracll-\n\u2022835 O Ind Al B: 989 CPR;\n[Cockshutt; 910 Ford A: 1883\nM; 180 Loblaw A: 400 Massey H:\nP walk: lilt Bnw Corp; 340\nO \u2022; 1700 imp Tob.\n[Vancouver Sales\nfcNCOUVER, Oct. 1\u00bb.- Mining\nMl sold on the Vincouver itock\nungt today:\n(ittd: Beaver S 3000; Bradian\nBralornt 200; B R Con 2100;\nX J700; Cariboo 100; Gold B\nMiridian 3500: Mak Slccar 1000;\nVltnc S 2800: Nat S 8700; Nicola\n1; 'Pioneer 100; Prem G 1800;\n0 2100; Ta;\/.or B 1000; Wayilde\nhi Btyvlew SOOO; B C Nickel\nlie Mill 1900; Bluebird SOOO;\n' R 200; Congrtu 1000; Dentonia\nIj Dictator 800; Falrvlew A 800;\npier Crk 2000; Golconda 700;\nnm 200; Hediey A 23300; Her-\nEt 32,000; Koot F 4500; Koot B\nMcGillivray Cr 1000; Mlnto\n; Noble Flvt 7J00; Norgold\nj Pavilion 8000; Pilot 3000: Por-\n1 3000; Reward 100; Rufus A\nk; Silvercreit 2000; Sumhint 200;\nMte 2850; Viking 500; Waterloo\nI;   Waverly  70M;   Whitewater\nMANITOBA WHEAT\nPOOL CONTINUES\nWINNIPBO, Oct. 18 (CP)\u2014Accepting financial reports showing\nnet payment! to poo) farmer! of\nWi oanta t buihtl on the ]o*~.s-34\npool, delegate! to tbe annua] convention of thl Manitoba wheat pool\ntoday voted to contlnutd tbt voluntary pool policy with prlvlle*-..** of\nncc-nting itreet pricei for 'their\ngrain.\nThe nport on pricei pild to firmer! who pooled their griln showed\nthit No. 1 northern whut, panada'a\nchief export trade, brought sett\ncentt a bushel on 1 Fort William\nbasis. A festure wu the lirger payment of 87 ctntt a bulbil for No. I\namber durum, a 10ft whtit uied\nchiefly in making macaroni, alao\non a Fort William baili.\nEggs and Cheese Up\nMONTREAL, Oct 18 (CP).-Ea\nand cheeie pricei advanced on tht\nMontreal produce exchange today.\nEggi, graded A-large, 38; A-me-\ndium, 38; A-pullets, 30; B. 23; C. 20.\nCheese, No. 1 Ontario whltei, Htt;\ncolored Ott.\nButter, No. 1 fresh, 1M4; lolldi,\n20tt; printi 21.\nPotatoes unchanged, new Quebecs,\n35; N.B. Mntns, 45.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Oot. 18 (API\u2014Cloalnx\nquotation!:\nBrazilian Traction 813; Canadian\nPacific ..13%; International Nickel\n12414; Brltlab Amtrloan ToUoco\n6V4; Courtaulda 44a 3d; Distiller*.\n9O1 8d; Dunlop Rubber 471 lOVjd;\nFord Ud. 41i 4V4d; Hudson Bay\n24s 9d; imperial Tobacco 131s Sd:\nMining Trust Ltd. 2s; Rand Mlnea\n(7tt: Rhodeilan Anglo Am 101 3d;\nHokina Corp {414; Crowni \u00a319%:\nSprings UM: Bast oeduld \u00a33%; Rio\nTlntos C14H; Vlckers Bs 6d.\nBonds\u2014Canadian 4 per cent loan\n1983-88 HOtt; Britlih 2Vi ptr out\nConioli tsitt: British Stt per Mnt\nwar loan tl0t%; BrltUh Funding\n4i 1980-90 1118.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Oct. is (CF)\u2014Clotlng\nfutures quotations:\nOpen    High Lo*    clon\nWheat:\nOct.   ......   71       79(4 77H     78\nDec    7814    7914 78tt     78H\nMay         83'i     B4!i 83U     S3tt\nOata:\nOct    41        42>,i 41        4114\nDie     40 H      41 tt 4014      4014\nMay       4114    4114 40*!,     41M\nBarley \u25a0\nOct    8114    MS SIM     S3\nDec     8214      S314 83         83tt\nMay        8414     88% 54        54%\nFlag:\nOot    \u2014       \u2014 \u2014      184\nDec  135       13814 13414    13614\nMiy     14014   Hltt 13914   14014\nRyi:\nOot     68         68 6714      8714\nDec    5814     5914 5814      SStt\nMay        83'i     8314 69         63H\nCuh whut: No. 1 hud SOtt: No.\n1 nor. 78*14; No. 3 nor. 76; No. s\nnor. 7314: No. 4 nor. 89; no. 6 8314:\nNo. S. S3; feed 57; No. 1 durum 93;\nNo.   1   A.   R.   W.   73: trick   7814;\n\u2022creenlngi 88 ptr ton.\nMontreal Stock Prices\nTelephone  _.,\nitllin     \t\nPower A  -\nPowir \u25a0 \t\nding   produou   i\nCar it Foundry ...\nCement \t\nCement  Pfd\t\nOen Electric \t\nGypium    -\t\nInd Al A \t\nInd AI B \t\n_ Steamers\nkahutt j-low\nn *\u25a0 *-\nUnion\nOlta\nklnlon   Bridge\nUnion Tuttle\nBteel Wires\nnilton  Bridge  ...\n\"Nickel .    ..\ntie-   Harm\nptreal  Power\nBtf***::\n*M  \t\npr Corporation\nbee Power\n133\n37*\n314\n*\\\n714\n\u2022Mtt\n180\n814\n7*\nljtt\nSO\nSV\"\n:\u00a3::::::::::::;:: if\n  m\n28\n14\nIBS\n9\nM*\nkrlnlgan         17'\ng_of Can  .\t\nh  Brew    1114\n.68\nBnw it Dlit \t\nCan Malting \t\ncan Vlcken \t\nCan  Wineries  ...... _ \t\nCoigravt Brtw      S\nDja-flllem Seagram     14\nira unglnetf _ -   3.\nimlnlon  Tir\n'den paper\nlome Oil     --\nJmptrlil OH     18T4\nImperlil Tob Cin    IS\nInt. JPfol ^^\nlit\n51'\n\u2022it\n*S'   Frontenao    .    3)\no~i Fronttnae  _    If\nCommirot\nDominion\nImperlil\nMontrei'\n. . _. 'ill    ...\u201e ...\nNova Scotia \t\nRoyal \t\nS\u00b0Ilf<?UlANEOiiJS\nDom  Stores\nFord   cm   A\nOoodyear       ..   ..\nLaura  Record\nbobhw Oronrlu\nWeit Can Flour .\nWilkir Bnw\n\u25a021*\n178\n184\nw\n310d\n. nv,\n131\n67\n1714\n714\nItlNGSofOLD\nould not bity this\nThere wu no safe plice for \u2022 King's treuurt\nin olden timet, so in puce or is war, hli\nnluibles accompanied him under 1 hetvy,\nthough not slwsys reliable, guard of soldiers.\nToday you euy hivt \u2022 prirue sift depository\nfor your individual ind exclusive Ult It t\ncost of ibout ou cent per diy. Tbt Safety\nDeposit Box il available to you U uy time\nduring banking hours. ^^B^^^^^^^^^^^^\nImperial Bank of Canada\nlead Office: Toronto\nNEUON    .    \u2022\nCepiul and Reterve 115.000,000\n.   W. R. GRUBBE, Maiunsr\nBrinchts it Revelstoke, Crinbrook, Fernie.\nDow Jones Averages\n30 industrials 95.34 up .05\n20 rails   36.28 up .21\n20 utilities     19.88 up .12\nAPPRENTICESHIP LAW IS A POSSIBLE\nMOVE 0FTHEB.C. ECONOIC COUNCIL\nVICTORIA, Oct. 18 (CP)-An apprenticeship scheme for youthi with\nthe possibility of an apprenticeship\nlaw In Britlih Columbia has been\nundtr consideration by tht economic council thli wetk ln t ilttlng\nof two dayi at which aeveral Important mattera were thoroughly\nreviewed.\nRepresentative! ot oil companies\nand members of the council discussed the question of an Increase\nin tht fuel oil tax and the effect\nof such an lncreue on the otl and\nother Industries. It was submitted\nby the oil men that an Increase\nmight bring about hlghtr pricei for\ngasoline and other products.\nProblemi of tbt logging Industry\nalao were under consideration. Much\ntime wu given to the lelective logging plan, particularly from the\npoint of view of fortit conttrvation.\nA land lettlement policy wu dil-\ncussed and further invtitlgatlon\nmtde Into the character of qutllty\nof landa available for ttttltment\nWhen the subject of lugar beets\nwu brought up, lt wu dlicloied\nthat the preient low price of raw\nsugar would make lt difficult for\nfarmers to aecure a reasonable return for their labon, Better pricei\nfor the raw product might prove a\nstimului to such an Induitry ln\nBritish  Columbia.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nA P Con  \t\nAmal  Oil  ..\nB  C  Packera\nU-iuer   Silver\nBradlan   Silver\nBradlan   ......\nBraiorne   oold\nBridge Rlvir\nB   R   X   OOld\nCariboo  Oold\nC *fe I Corp\nComt  Bnw\nCommonwealth\nGold   Belt   .\nHome OU \t\nInt Coal\nMtk  Slccar  ..\nMcLeod   OU   -\nMercury  OU\nMeridian\nModel Oil\nMorning star\nNat  sllvtr ...\nllcoli     \t\nikalta   Olla\nlonter Oold\nremler   ooid\nTamler  Bordir\nRtno Oold\t\nSally   Mlnea   ...\nSpooner Oil   ...\nTaylor   Brldgt\nVinilta  ....TT....\nwayalde   \t\nCUftBS\nAlexandria \t\nBayvlew    \t\n\"lueblrd   \t\nO Nickel  \t\nilg Mluourl _\nBrtw It DUt\nButte I X\nCan  Rand \t\nOalmont       .,\nCongrtta Oold\nCrowi Nut\nwss. \u00absr\nDentonia   \t\nHlghwood   Baroee\npactlta   \t\nDictator  -\nIS\nPilot     \t\nUtlca    _\t\nOlacler Cntk ...\nDunwell\t\nEiitcmt   ..........\nRlrvltw    \u2014\nFreehold     \t\nOeo Copptr \t\nSoicondi\nold Mountain\nGeo  Rlvir  \t\non.ndvlew   _\t\nOnngi\nOrull   Wlhkina\n\u00a7alda Oold    \nedley  Amal \t\nHercules  Con  ....\nHome Oold \t\nndlin Mlnu ...\niffSPF-\"\nKoot BSg\"\u2122\nLikevliw  \t\nfeanST \t\nMoOUllvray Ootl\nffito^ld   \t\nMorton Wolny\nSoble Flvt  \norgold \nivnion\nPtnd Orellli ...\nPorttr Idiho ..\nReward\t\nRoyallte.  , \u25a0\u25a0\ngufui  Argtnt*\nSilmon OOld ..'\nSllvircreit \t\nSnowflake -\t\nTaylor Wind  ..\nB\u00ab?\nVulcan \u25a0\nWaterloo   ..\nwaverley Tang\nWellington   .\nWhlttwittr \t\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAlexandria\nAlgoma  - -\u2014\nAmity _ - -\t\nAihliy Oold  ~_\t\nBankflild \t\nBarry  Holllngir  - \t\nBise   Metala    ...............\nBttr exploration \u2014,.,._..,.,\nBig Mlaaourl ....\nBobjo _.._...... _\nBridlan\t\nBralornt\t\nfrets   Tnthtwty   ..    \nrldga R Exploration \t\nBrownlei     \u2014\t\nBuf Can Oold \u2014\t\nBunker Hill  \u2014-\t\nCan Klrkland  ~\t\nCan   Malartlc    \u2014\u25a0\nCariboo Oold Quarts \t\nCutlt Tnthtwty  -\t\nCentral  Man  - -\nCentral pitrlelt \t\nChlbougamou\t\nClerlcy    .\t\nCoaat Oopper  \u2014.....\t\nCobalt Contact \t\nColumarlo    ..,.\u2014. -\nConarlum\nCona M & S  \t\nDome     J.\t\nDom Ixplor   -.\nEldorado      \t\nFalconbrldge    \t\nOod'i Ltkt  -\t\nOrtnda   .\t\nHardrock   .............-..._...\nHolllngtr    \u2014..-..~...\nHOWty \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nHudion Biy  _._....\t\nInt Nickel  \u2014 .\nKlrkland   Llkt -\nLake Maron .....  .-,\nLlttlt Long Lie ..........\nLtkt Shon   \u2014\nMcLeod Cockihutt \t\nMclntyn    \u201e.....\u2014.\u2014.\nMcVltut ortbimmt .....\nMcWitttn Oold\t\nMacawa       \u201e    , _\nMalroblc  \t\nMaplt Lttt   \t\nMining  Corp   \t\nMoffatt Hall  \u2014\t\nNlplaslng    \t\nNoranda   - \u2014\nparkhlll  \t\npaymaster ,. -\nPtnd Orelllt  \t\nPioneer oold ....,:.,_.....\npremlir   Oold    \u2014-\nRtno Oold  -\t\nSakooet    - \u2014-\ngan Antonio ...- \u2014.\u2014\n.0114\nMtt\nXII\n43\nJO\n.00\n.80\n3,1\ntl\n.41\n3.36\n13.78\n.03\n.39\n-03'\/,\n.0314\n.07\n.0514\nJO\nl.U\n.78\n.0814\n1.08\n.0914\n\u202203 tt\n2.90\n.0314\nti\n1.50\n138.00\n40.00\n.10\n3.18\nS.S1\n3.38\n.47\n.70\nS0.66\n1.24\nlies\n34.00\n.88\n\u20220414\n6.10\n68.26\n34\n44.50\n41\n48\n3.83  '\n.03\n.17\nIJO\n.03\n370\n37.30\n\u25a03214\n\u202230-S\n.47\n13.00\n131\nti\nM\n5.00\nSherrltt Oordon\nSlscoe\t\nSmelttr'i Oold ...\nSouth Tlblemont\nStadacona   \t\nSt Anthony  \t\nSudbury   Baaln\nSylvanltt \t\nTeck Hughtt\t\nTowigamat  \t\nTreadwell   _.\nVentuna   _\t\nWaltt Amulet ...\nWayalda    \u2014\nWhltt Eagle\nWright Hargrtivei\nOILS\nAcmt\nAJax\nA P Con  \t\nAaaoolated .........n.\t\nB A OU \t\nBalUc    ...............\nCalmont .\u2014..\nO and f Oorp \t\nChemical Beieirch\nDilhouilt ^U~M\nHorn*  Oil\nHomnttad O and O\nImptrlil OU  \t\nInternational   Fttt   \u2014\nLowery    \u2014\u2014 -.\nMerland     \u2014,.\t\nNordon    \u201e._.\u2014..\nOil   Selections   \t\nOlga  - _-._.\nRoyalltt    -.\u2014--\u25a0\nSarnia <\nWalnwrlght  \u2014\u2014\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bret A\t\nBeauharnola \u2014\nBell Telephone .........\u2014\nBraalllan     - ......\nBrew tt DUt ......\nCan Bnad  -\u2014\u2014...\nCan   dement\t\nCan Car and Foundry\nCan ind Alo A\t\ncan Dredgt\t\nCan Fat Railway \t\nCom Baktrlee\t\nDiatl Stagnate  \u2014\nDominion Stortt \t\nFord of Ctntdt A\t\nOoodyear   Tire    --\nHiram  Walker -,.\t\nImperial Tob  \u2014.....,\nLoblaw A \t\nMassey Harrla\t\nStandard Paving\t\nStttl of Cinada\t\nJl\n3JS\nM\nJS\ntt\nJl\nUI\n3.70\nSJ4\nJt\n.30\nJO\n.80\nJ714\n.1814\n8.95\n.20\nJS\n.09\n.13\n14.00\n.0814\nJS\n56\nIM\nJO\n.74\n41\n16.8714\n99J7V4\nJO\n30\n.0814\n\u20220311\n.11\n13.50\n.0414\n31\n....    7\n....    SH\n.... 131\n.... lltt\n.88\n.... 314\n.... 7H\n- 7tt\n.... IVi\n.... 33\n\u2022~ 18V4\n.... \u00bb\n.... I4H\n.... 14tt\n.... 321,\n.... 131\n.... 2814\n.... II\n:::: l2*1\n.93\n....   4014\nAllegheny\nAl Chemical\nAm Ctn\nAm For Pow    .\nAm Mi It Fdy\nAm SmiltJM Rt\nAm  Telephone\nAm Tohiocq \t\nAnacondi\nAtchison\nAuburn Mo\nBut tt Ohio\nBmdlx av\n\"Mth   Bttt!\nItntds\nJan Pic\nQerro dt --\nChu k Ohio\nChryilir    ..\ngom & South\non On N T\n~Trn   Prod\nWright pfd\nipont\nIto row\n'It\nird of Stn\n-nnt Nijjtont\nStn Blictrlo\nOm Foodt\nOtn Moton\nOoodrltB  \t\nOranby    .   \u201e   .\nort iforth Fid\nOrt Weit Sugar\nHowe Sound\nHudion Mo \t\nQuotations on Wall Street\nffilfflBr\nint Tel A Tel\nJewel Tea \t\nKenn Copper ..\nKTMgt 8 B ... lltt\nKroegger At Toll 3014\nMiok Trucker . 35\nMilwaukee pfd       3\nMont Ward      3914\nNash Motors   ....   16\nNi Dairy Prod     1814\nN Pow ii U       8\nN 1 central 33tt\npae ou & alto    141*,\nPick Moton      3j|\nPenn  R R\nPhllllpi PH\nPure oil \t\nRadio Com \u2022\nRem Rind  \t\nRook islind ..\nSi fewiy Storei\n8 Loulj & 8 F\nShell Union\nSouth Pituic\nStan OU ot Cll\nStewart   wirner\nStudebiktr    .\nTil Oulf Bui\nTlmkin Roller!\nUn  Carbide\n^^^^\nr*,:z. m\ni\n<*.\n\u20225n of Cal\nUnited   A|,\nUnlttd Bli   HH\nUn   paolflt   ... IM\nU S Rubbtr'\".77 law\nO S Stttl  ss*\nVan Sttel       17\nWeat   Electric   .. SSH\nWoolworth     6011\nwrljley   .. , 89V\nYellow Truck -    3V.\nLOSSES GENERAL\nON COAST UST\nPlonwr, Nicola, Vldette All\nOft; Silver 5lump\nFurther\nVANCOUVER. Oct 18 (CP). -\nSmall losses wert general ln a quiet\ntrading market on the Vancouver\nitock exchange today with the gold\nissuei the heaviest losers.\nFionttr wu otf 25 at 11.78, Nicola\nand Vidette each dropped 4 and\nB.R.X. wu 314 cents lower. Gold\nBelt and Minto uch lost J. The rest\nof the group lost tractions to a\ncent.\nFurther losses in the price of bar\n\u2022Uver brought tht silver iuuu still\nlowtr. Pqrter Idaho waa off a eent,\nNational Silver and Noble Five each\nlost H and Beavtr Silver eased 14\ncent\nRoyallte advanced (0 to 13.29 and\nCalgary & Edmonton firmed a cent.\nOther oil iuutt were quiet and unchanged.\nCOTTERELL HIS\nOWNOPERATOR\nReceives Congratulations at\nBanquet by Telegraph;\nSends Replies\nVANCOUVER, Oct 18.-With a\ntelegraph instrument on the banquet table befort him, C. A. Cotterell, recently appointed assistant\n?antral manager of the Canadian\naciflc railway on the Pacific coaat,\nreceived* mauagei ot congratulations from tht tiny station of St\nConstant Out., whtrt hi started his\nrailway etreer at a young operator\nnearly 40 years ago and also trom\nRevelstoke, Kamloopi, Northbend,\nNelion, Ptntlcton and other perti\nof Brltlth Columbia. Mr. Cotterell\ntook the messages himself and then\nshowed that executive dutlu havt\nnot dulled hii skill u in operator\nby sending out suitable repliei over\nthe wire.\nThis ceremony concluded a banquet given In his honor at Hotel\nVancouver lut night by nearly (00\nofficers and employees of the B.C.\ndistrict honoring him on his recent\nelevation trom general superintendent, the post he had held since 1926,\nto tbe position of assistant general\nmanager.\nSpeakers included J. E. McMullen, K.C, general solicitor\nlen, K.C, general solicitor; C. W.\nMcBain, Industrial agent, formerly\nof Wlnnloeg; Capt !.' A. Aikman,\ngeneral fperlntendent of Canadian\npacific steamships; and J. A. McKay, veteran conductor, Vancouver.\nT. K. Bernard, pruldent of the\nCP.R. Social and Athletic club wu\nchairman.\nExchange Ratts\nWW TORX, Oct. 18 (AF)-Bttrl.\nInt txehangt firm at 84.98 for 80-\nday bills, and at 4.94 for demand.\nOanadlsn dollar: Today 1 i-is ptr\notnt pnmlum, yeitirdiy 3 pn etnt\npnmlum, wttk igo 314 per cent\npremium; franc 8.64%; centi; lire\n8.64 centi; Uruaguay 81,60 oentt.\nVernon Moct Move\nVERNON, B.C., Oct. 18 (CP).-\nApproximately 70 per cent ol the.\nMcintosh Red crop estimated at\n1,842,000 boxu hu been shipped to\ndate according to the B.C. apple\ncartel. Of all varieties total movement hu been 1,881,000 boxes.\ni'\nDominion Live Stock\nWINNIPBO. Ott. II (CP)\u2014Lift-\nItock reoelpti: Cattle 1385; calvu\n385; hogs 685; Shup 498.\nSteers, 64.00. Steers, ovtr 1050 lbt!,\ngood and cholct, |4J0. Heifers, S3.50.\nFid calvei, |SJ0. Cows, 11.75. BuUs,\n61.50. Stocktrs tnd feeder steers,\n13.36. Stock towa and helfin, S1.50.\nVul calvu, good and cholct, S4J0.\nHoga: pallet baton 81-00 per hud\npremium. Bacon 87.35. Butchen 1100\nptr hud discount. Heavy S67{. Igtra\nhuvy S8.76. Lights ind feeder! |7.00\nSowi SS.70.\nLambs, 85.50. Shetp, 11 JO.\nCalgary Live Stock\nCALOASY,\"octTe (CP).-Re-\nceipti: Wednuday 598 catlte, 183\ncalvu, 535 hogi and 137 sheep and\nlambs. Today, up to noon, 70 cattle,\n173 hogs, 853 sheep and lambs.\nCattle prices were unchanged.\nHogs sold at yesterday's late advance of 35 cents, selects bringing\n17.75, bacons $7.25 and butchers\n38-75, off trucks.\nCattle: Oood butcher steers 13,\ncommon to medium steers. $1.75 to\n$2.50. Medium veal calvu $2.25. Medium to good stoeker steers $1.30\nto $2.25. Good stacker heifers $1.90\nto $2.25.\t\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Oct. 18 (CP)\u2014British and foreign exchange ln relation to the Canadian dollir u com-\nJlled by the Royal Bank of Cinida,\nlosed todiy u followi:\nAuitrtlli, pound  8.8642\nAustria,   schlUIng    1872\nBelgium,   belga    J808\nBulgaria,   lev   .'. -    .0133\nOklna, Hong Kong dollars 3831\nDenmark, krone \t\nFrance, fnno     \t\nOerminy,  relchimirk\nOreat  Brltiln,  pound\nHollind.   florin   \t\nItiala. rupee\t\nItaly,  flrt ,.\nJtpin.   rtn    \t\nJugotlavfa,  dinar       ...\nNew Zttland. pound\nNorway, krone   \t\nMind. .Jot\u2122\nm\n.1181)8\n.3880\nfl\n.0227\n8.8898\nmm\n       .1877\n...Mwaslt. leu       .Ol'i\nSouth Afrlu. pound    4JS80\n\u2022wtdin\/kront' XT_;\nSwltMrland, \/Mine    .3\t\nUnited   Stit4t,   dollir.   3   ptr  otnt\ndiscount.\nTECK HUGHES\nAT NEW LOW\nTORONTO, Oct 18 (CP).-Prac-\ntic-ally dormant through many tu-\niloni, tht big gold group came into\nnotice on the mining boerd of the\nToronto exchange today with a\ndemonstration ot wetkneis attended by considerable selling. Teck\nHughes hit a new low and closed at\n3.85, off 15 centi. Silver and bue\nmetali also finished on the down\nside.\nDome lost $2 to $40 and HoUlnger\n73 cents to 20.85. Other losses were\n65 tor Uke Shore, 35 for Wright\nHargrmvu and 5 tor Braiorne\nPioneer cloied unchanged.\n43 CARLOADS OF\nAPPIJBSH1PPED\nMovement Falls Off Slightly,\nNeir End of Pickiftg;\nThree Packing\nFELDSPAR PRODUCTION IN\nJUNE\nFeldipar production in June wu\n136 torn compared with $84 and\n47$ in the unit month of 1933 and\n1912. Production during the tint\n\u2022lx monthi of 1934 amounted to 5.-\n992 tons as against 2,522 in 1933 and\n4,222 in 1932.\nA total of 43 can ot applu have\nrolled to dtte this year trom the\nSicking sheds of the Associated\nirowers, stated W. M Vance, Nelson manager. Tuuday. The movement hai not been overly active during the f \/ t week, he itatu.\nMoit of the picking ii over and\ntht packing will be through about\nIhe end of next week. At pretent\nthere are two glrli and a boy packing at the Auociited ibeds.\nToronto Industrials\nAre Slightly Firmer\nTORONTO, Oct. 18 (CP).-Some-\nwhat erratic ln Its movement!\nthroughout the day. the industrial\nsection ot the Toronto exchange exhibited a slightly firmer note in the\nlist hour and c\/osed wtth 27 losses\nand 24 advancei.\nA soft Ntw York market put a\ndamper on operations here. Nickel\ndropped a fraction and Ford A\neased *% to 22?..\nSteel ot Canada was forced back\nmore than a point to 40V\u00ab. Page\nHersey dropped Vs while Dominion\nBridge gained IH at 34H-\nThe Interlisted sharei of the oil\nand distillery groups recorded no\nprice adjustment of Importance.\nBank Interest Rates\nArt Cut\nU. S. Dollar Is\nUnchanged\nLffi\nMONTRIAL,    Ott.    18    (dFI-Tht\nfnnc declined and the Unlttd StMl\npound ittrlls* advanced\ndollar held unchinged on Montnal\nfonlgn excbingu todiy.\nhTe pound gtlntd % ot a Cent\nat 4.84*4, the frane eued .01 o( a\netnt at 6.51 etnta whllt tbt American foliar wu firm at tto ptr\netnt discount.\nFOUR ISSUES AT\nNEW YEAR'S HIGH\nMontreal Exchange Swings\nUpward; Simpson's Is\nUp 15 3-4\nVANCOUVER, Oct 18 (CP). -\nVancouver'! bank Interest rate,\nboth on borrowings and credit\naccount, will be reduced by Vi of 1\nper cent on November 1, resulting\nin an estimated uvlng to the city\nof about $17,000 per year,\nTbe Bank of Montreal today notified the city of the impending cut,\nwhich will be general throughout\nthe Dominion, following announcement of the cut from 2*\/t to 2 per\ncent on bank ravings accounts.\nUnder the new ratei, the city hall\nwill pay 5 per cent on capital borrowings and 4% per cent on current loani.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Oct 11 (AP).-\nWhut, No. 1 ilor., 1.11% to I.U*\/,;\nNo. 1 red durum 1.14% to 1.15%;\nDec. 1.06%; May 1.05%.\nCorn, No, 3 yellow 76 to 77.\nOats, No. 3 whitt 54*% to 55%.\nFlax, No, 1, 1.83% to 1.88%.\nFlour unchanged. Shipments 30,-\n070. Bran 22.50 to 23.00.\nMONTREAL, Oct. 18 (CP).-With\ntour luuu mounting to ntw highi\nfor tht yur lecurltiei on tht Montreil stock exchtnge turged upward\nduring today's union.\nLake of tbe WobU jfd rose ilx\npolnti at 63. Simpson's pfd gained\n15% points at 83, a new year'i peak.\nPenmam common jumped 2 joints\nto 63 and the preferred 14 points to\n105 on the first sale since hit February.\nDominion Bridge, Bell Telephone\nand Canadian Car were all up a\nJoint St. Lawrence Paper pfd\nropped 1% points to 10, Viau Biscuit 4% points to 12% and Canadian\nConverten plunged 15 points to 30.\nDominion Textile lost 1% points at\n63 and Steel of Canada 1% at 40%.\nBraiillan and C.P.R. were off\n\u25a0mall amounts. Salu 9675 shares;\nbonds $40,350.\nEight-Cent Drop\nin Bar Gold\nMONTMAL, Oct. 18 (OP)\u2014Bat\ngold In London down eight cents an\nounce td S84.S7 In Oanadlan fundi;\n142i ld In British funds. The fixed\n$36 wuhlngton prlot- amounted to\n$34.38 ln Canadian.\nCanadian Dollar Up\nNEW YORK, Oct 18 (CP).-Ster-\nling and the Canad'-n dollar finished with small gains in today's\nforeign exchange markets.\nThe Dominion dollar closed at\n2 1-16 for a net gain of 1-18. The\npound's high was $4.95% and the\nclosing rite $404%, a net gain of\n% of a cent. The franc wm oft .01%\not a cent at 8,64% cents.\n-PAOI ELEVEN\nWAU STREET\nDRIFTS LOWER\nFlashes oi Strength\nFail Offset the\nTrend\nBy  niDBUCR  OABDXEB\nAuociited Freii  Mninelti  Wrlttr\nWtW YORK, Oct, 18 (AP)-Trading current! flowed ilugglihly la financial markets today, flaibee of\nstrength brightened itoekt a bit,\nbut tht main drift wu toward\n\u2022llihtls lower IitiIi,\nTurnover totalled 886,100 ahana.\nStock! Idled around tiw top of\ntnt reotnt narrow trading ana. wllaon * Co. A. spurted mon tban I\npolnti tnd Armour ot minolt pet-\nttrred luuu picked up gilni ot\n\u2022bout S polnti.\nu. a. stul, Montgomery Ward,\nSanta pe, Internttlontl Htrmtir\nind othir plvotil issues yltldid frac\ntlonal  losses.\nA further drop ot mora thin a\ncent In tht prlct of ipot iUtu\nprompted Mlllng ot Cerro di Paico,\nU, 8. Smelting md other non-ftr-\nroui mttil sharea, but lottoi wtrt\nmoderite.\nOlllett Safety Raaor common made\na net gain of nearly a point.\nBONDS QUIET\nNEW YORK, Oct 18 (AP).-The\nbond market wu somewhat diffident today and prices, generally,\nmilled about quietly ovtr a narrow\nrange.\nBoth Armour & Co. tVt* and 5s\nedged up to new highs for the year\nat 101*4 and 99, respectively.\nThe foreign section wai mixed.\nAnglo-Huronian's\nRevenue $834,725\nTORONTO, Oct. is (CD\u2014 Anglo-\nHuronlin limited reports metal recoveries of SS47.015 including pnmlum tor the year ending July 81.\n1934. Dividends received, net profit! on foreign exchinge, Intereit\nand sundry other earnings brlag tht\ngrou rtvtnut up to I8S4.735.\nExpenditure!, totalling 1830,839,\ninclude mine operating fxpenua md\ndevelopment, S931.092, general administration txpenaes len portion\ncharged to mint operation!, 890.488,\nand reitrvt for depreclitlon, 810.560,\nMINING NEWS\nThe mining districts adjacent to Nelson ire fast coming to the front. Property after property 1$ getting\ninto the shipping class. We feel sure that this area\nwill soon be the scene of the greatest mining\nactivity In 6. C. We know of five mills at present\nbeing planned or already under construction. The time\nto buy the sound mining stocks 1$ now. We recommend:\nYmir Coniolidattd, Sheep  Creek Cold  Mines,\nRelief Arlington) Ymlr Dundee, Ymir Yankee CM\nKootenay Belle ,\nFull Information on request. We have a few maps\nof the district south of Nelson.\nP. E. POULIN\nPRINTING\nFOR\n-MINES-\nAssay Forms\nTime Cards\nPayroll Forms\nInvoice Forms\nSynoptics\nSpecial Forms\nStock Certificates\nMining Prospectus\nRuled Forms\nLetterheads\nEnvelopes\nRequisitions\nn\u2014OFFICE\u2014\nLoose Leaf Forms\nSynoptics\nLedgers, (Any Size)\nLedger Sheets\nStatements\nBillheads\nShipping Tags\nLetterheads\nEnvelopes\nRuled Forms\nVoucher Checks\nPamphlets\nWt Can Give You Immediate Service . . . Ut Us Know\nYour Printing Requirements. . . We Will Submit Prlcu\nand Samples.\nTELEPHONE 144\n\u00a9It.? Mson Sailg Htmy*\nGtommrrrtal PrUttlng Ipparimwt\n \t\n\t\nPAGE TWELVE-\nSave as Much as\nYou Spend!\nNyal Toiletries, Homt Remedies\nand Sundries\nat TWO FOR the price of ONE!\nMANN RUTHERFORD CO.\nMMpB,BAKER.fir WARD STS. __^**m\n***^     Druggists and Stationers\nBox 1067\nCoats-\nAnother shipment of tweeds and dress\ncoats have been added to our stock\nof Fall Coats now giving us a selection\nequal to that at the opening of the\nseason\u2014Our coats are styled and tailored in the newest styles and cloths.\nDresses-\nA dress for every occasion\u2014sports\u2014\nstreet\u2014afternoon\u2014evening \u2014 dresses\nthat you will be proud and happy to\nwear.\nj^^&\nthe exclusive sro,?f\nPhone 151\nLook for the Neon Sign\nPHONES 10 and 11\n\"When You Think of Groceries\u2014Think of the Star\"\nCREAM OF CLOVER HONEY   Mb. tin 35\u00a3\nICING SUGAR 2-lb. pkt. 19c\nREGAL OR IODIZED SALT Carton 10*\nSULTANA SEEDLESS RAISINS: 2 Ibs. 25c\nCHASE & SANBORN COFFEE  1 -lb. tin 39<\nPUREX TOILET TISSUE 3 rolls 25c\nC. & B. CHICKEN OR VEGETABLE SOUP . 2 tins 19*\nK. 0. SARDINES 2 tins 25c\nNABOB SHRIMPS\u2014Tall tin   Each 19*\nROYAL CITY SPECIAL\n2 tin! Crcen Beans, 2 tint Yellow Corn, 2 large\ntint Tomatoei, 2 tins No. 5 Peat\u2014 <M AC\n$1.25 Value for  iPl.UJ\nBEST FOODS MAYONNAISE 8-oz. jar 19*\nTUNA FISH FRIAR-'\/n 10c\nPASTRY FLOUR\u2014Monarch 7-lb. sack 39*\nRICE KRISPIES Pkt. 10c\nCOWAN'S CHOCOLATE MAPLE BUDS .... Lb. ~5*i\nROMAN MEAL COOKIES Doz. 10c\nBRAIDS BLUE LABEL TEA    Lb. 45**\nFruits and Vegetables\nPOTATOES\nGrand Forks Netted Gems, excellent quality;\n100-lb. sack \t\n$1.49\nORANGES\u2014Sunkist, medium size ;.... 35*\nKOSIANSIC TURNIPS 9 Ibs. 25c\nBANANAS\u2014Firm frulf  2 Ibs. 19*\nFRESH SPINACH 3 Ibs. 25c\nFIELD TOMATOES   Basket 25*\nSWEET POTATOES - Lb. 10c\nLETTUCE\u2014Large size  3  2 for 25*\n*M- STAR GROCERY X\nFret Delivery to All Ptrti ef tht Cltv\nr\nFret Delivery to All Parti of tht City\nPHONE VOUR ORDERS\nFREIGHT PREPAID ON ALL ORDERS OVER $10.00\nMORE ABOUT\n(Contlnutd From Pag* Ont)\nhead th* golden crown that Alexander never wore.\nThe crown, tnd tht sword Alei-\nwider htd no tlmt to draw when\ntn assassin's ballet* struck Um\ndown it MarseUle, preceded hli\nbody ti K wu lowered Into the\ntomb near that of bli celebrated\nancestor, Kara Oeorte, wbo founded tbt dyntity. Kin George,\nhero of Serbia's flfht for Independence, alio died at an mm-\n\u2022In'i hind.\nQUEEN   BREAKS   DOWN\nTht calm which tb* widowed\nQueen Marie and young Petar maintained during their publlo appearances line* Alexander's death gave\nwty to tears and tobt that could\noe httrd outside tbe Topolo Mam-oleum aa Alexander wtt burled. Both\naeemed on tbt point ot collapse.\nPrlnot Paul, Petar's uncle and\nhead of the regency that wlll govern\nYugoslavia until Peter comet of agt.\ntried to comfort tht hoy ruler, atrok\nIng hie head, hut hla grief waa in\nconaolable.\nSo loud wu the sobbing of the\nbeieaved membera of he royal family, who wtrt th* only onei per.\nmttted to enter the crypt, that\nradio listeners throughout the coun*\ntry could hear them aa th* king's\nfinal rites were broadcatt,\nTHOUSANDS OF MOURNERS\nMailed thousands of mourners\nstood In line for boun, held bark\nby troopi, tnd church bells tolled\nthroughout the nttlon, mingling\nwith the road of heavy guns on\nland and aea, at SO mtn bore the\ngreat bronze sarcophagus up the\nhill through lanei of treet to Hi\nUut retting place.\nAll activity halted throughout\nTugoslavla for two minutes, whll*\nthe common people from which\nAlexander's llnet cam* ptld tribute to him.\nTrumpeters blew taps, the queen\nhe called -Mlgnon\" took leave ot\nhim and tht doors of th* Mausoleum  swung to.\nExtraordinary precautions wtrt\ntaken to guard tho notables ln the\nfuneral procesalon\u2014King Carol ot\nRoumania, King Boris of Bulgaria,\ntha Duke of Kent and hit fiancee.\nSmythe's\nU-Need-a Gargle\nAt a Preventive Agalntt\nGerm Dluaiet\nPHONE 1\nPreicrlptlom Our Specialty\nAUCTION\n904 MILL tU Cor. Cedar St.\n2   P.M.-SATURDAY,   Oct  20\nFavored with instructions from\nMr. E. Titiworth I wlU otter the\nfollowing:\u2014 A large variety ol\nCarpenter'! Tools, Garden Tools,\nLawn Mower, Circulator Heater,\nUtensils, Kitchen Table ' and\nChain, Moffatt 6-Hole Range,\nLinoleums, Cupboards, Sealers,\nDishes, Blinds, Tapestry Chester-\nfltld Suit*, Bruniwlck 8-Tubt\nConsole Radio, Wilnut Dining\nRoom 8ulte, Carpets, Rugs, Table\nand Floor Lamps, Zich Upright\nPiano, Muilc, Twin Bedi, Bedroom Furniture, Beatty Electric\nWasher, etc., etc.\nG. HORSTEAD,\nTtrmi: CASH Auctioneer.\nGood* on vltw morning ef ult.\nTHI NELSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C.-FR1DAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 11. 1H4\nPrtnceti Marina, Pretldtnt Albart\nLe Brun of Prince and many another.\nTroopi itandlng shoulder to\nshoulder In double llnet held btck\nspectator, and adulta won matted together on tb* left, with children\nonly permitted at tht right, to thtlr\nactivities might be better witched.\nMANV ARRESTS\nSecret service agents made many\narretti\u2014Yngoalavla had Jailed SSD*\nsuspects   to   prevent   trouble\u2014In\nthe  crowds,  and   spectators  wera\nnot allowed to carry umbrellas or\ncanes   despite   the   drizzling  rtln\nthtt fell before tbt inn broke ont.\nThe widowed  queen, her  mother\nthe Dowager Quean Marie of Roumania and young petar walked directly behind the coffin u lt wu\ntaken   to  Topolo,  Maria  of  Tugoslavla   patting   her  aon'a   cheek   u\nhe appeared on the verge of teart.\nSimply tttirtd aa any Bchooib-fy\nin a grey-green boy scout uniform\nwith t nd and bltck ctp, tht child\nruler wti tbe focus ot all eyes.\nMORE ABOUT\nDR. ). H. KING ARRIVES IN\nTHI ORIENT\n(Continued From Paat Ont)\ncourse as tbat ot lut January's\nflood\u2014which claimed more than\ntwo score llvei in thii area\u2014a great\nwall of water swept out of the fire-\ndenuded foothills and raged through\nthe towns of Montrose and La Cres-\ncenta and the city of Glendale,\nabout 15 miles north of Los Angeles.\nHOME8 WRECKED\nMore than 90 homea were damaged, several were wrecked and icores\nof persons scurried to higher ground\nas the 10-foot wall ot water sweeping down out of Pickens, Briggs\nand Eagle canyons, spread out over\nthe lowlands and raged down the\nmain streets for Montrose to La\nCrescents.\nEmergency crews were dispatched\nby relief organizations Into the La\nCrescenta valley, where the January\n1 tyiod claimed its heaviest toll of\nlives and property. An appeal for\naid alao wu dispatched to the federal government\nMany homei rebuilt since the New\nYear's day disaster again were damaged by the flood water.\nLong Beach, south of Los Angeles,\nalso wai hit heavily by the rainfall.\nMore than three Inchet of rain had\nfallen there since the storm itarted\nabout B p.m. Tuesday night, ihatter-\ning a 15-year-old precipitation record.\nHundreds of persons were made\nhomeless by the downpour in the\nbeach city, which twice wu viiited\nby earthquakes, once thii morning\nand once yeiterday. More than 150\nhomes were damaged by the rain.\nThe earthquakes caused no serious\ndamage.\nYouths Pay Fines\nFour Nelson Boys Pay $3.50\nEach; Pledge Themselves\nto Qood Behavior\nFour Nelson youths who were\nhailed Into court on a charge of\nwilfully damaging property at Nelson's Lakeside park, were fined\n$250 each, and were also sentenced\nto pay $1 each for the damages they\ncaused when they toppled some\nbenches at the park Sunday night.\nThey pleaded guilty.\nThe boys pledged themselvei to\nbehave in the future and especially\non Hallowe'en night.\nSweater Time\nCall and see our complete line of\nMEN'S, BOYS' and CHILDREN'S\nSWEATERS; styles in V-neck,\nTurtle neck and Jumbo knit.\nAmongst our large stock we have\nfound some broken lines in all\nstyles, which we are placing on\nsale Friday and Saturday at the following greatly reduced prices.\nBOYS' PULLOVERS 501, 1*H -** *>~>*t\nBOYS' JUMBOS   fl.50 and ?2.95\nMEN'S HEAVY WORK SWEATERS '.. -fl.00\nMEN'S V-NECK SWEATERS fl.95\nGodfreys1 Limited\n\"The Home of Greater Values\"\nFORMERLY CHAS. MORRIS LTD.\n318\nBaker St\nOpp. Standard Cafe\nPhon*\n270\nBadminton Sale\nJJl-3#> OFF      JJl-l^o OFF\nSTARTS TODAT\nNow yeu can get a first class racquet at sacrifice\nprices. We must turn this stock over. Your opportunity, our loss.\nRACQUETS FORMERLY $12 REDUCED TO . 98.00\nSLAZENCER,   CLEAVES,   BENTLEY,   DUNLOP\nRACQUETS FORMERLY $3.50 REDUCED TO f2.35\n*\u25a0.   ]:\nEvary racquet strung with pure ihetp gut (Bow Brand), tht\nbut gut known to tho gamt. Wt hav* a limited amount on\nhand to plMit do not dtlay, thty wlll not lut it thlt prlct.\nNelson Sport Shop\nC. M. SHARPE, Prop.\nCanadian Pratt Corrttpondtnt\nTOKYO, Oct 18 (CP)-Hon. Herbert Marler, Canadian minuter to\nJapan, and Mn. Merler, have returned to Tokyo after a lengthy\nfurlough In Canada, the minuter\nappealing somewhat better in health\nthan when he left Japan lix monthi\nago.\nDr. J. H. King, former Canadian\nminister ot pensions, and Mrt. King\narrived on the same boat as the\nMarlers. After a short tour of Japan\nthey will proceed via Shanghai and\nHongkong to India, where tbey will\nbe guesU of the viceroy, Lord WUUngdon, former governor-general of\nCanada.\nMORE ABOUT\nTWO ARRESTED\n(Contlnutd From Page On*)\nretted yetttrdiy by Italian police\nacting In clou cooperation with\nFrench tnd Yugoslav detectives.\nTbt irrtst wai kept t secret whllt\nKing   Alexander's   tuneral   certmon*\nie* wtrt ln  progress  tt Belgrade.\nPavellch, former  Yugoslav  deputy  and  leader  of   Croatla'i   Independence party, ttandi accused\not directing the murden at Marseille whtrt King Alexander and\nFrench    foreign    Mlnllter    LouU\nBarthou   fell   under   the   tire   of\nthe assassin, Vlad Gcorgleff.\nKvaternlk   allegedly    carried   out\nthe   executive   work,   leading   four\nplotters into Prance tnd giving them\ntheir   flntl   Instructions.\nWOMAN STILL MISSING\nBut Mario VJudroch, described ai\na \"stunning oentral European beau*\nty,\" wbo la btllavtd ot htve carried\nOeorglelt'a Instrument! of detth ln\na travelling bag, waa atlll at largt\nafter wtek't Intensive tetrch for\nhtr.\nWith thrtt mtmbtn ot tht ring\nundtr arrest In Prance tnd extradition of th* two leaden consider*\ned certain, tbt ttat entered tonight\nInto a ntw stage, th* international\ncomplications of which ttlll ctn\nonly  bt  guessed.\nIt waa not expected discovery\nof tht alleged killers ln Italy\nwould lead to chargee similar to\nthose already tald to bt contemplated against Hungary for tbat\ncountry's retponslblllty ln harboring a Croat terrorist organization\nat Janka puszta.\nNeither Pavellch nor Kvaternlk,\nmadt any ilnile country their\nheadquarters since their flight\nfrom Yngoalavla as political terrorists, both of them wanted for\nmurder at Belgrade.\nHighly significant waa tonight's\nnport that Pavellch had a working\nagreement with Ivan Mlhallolf, leadar of Macedonian Irredenllts and\nth* dread \"Imro\" terrorist organlza\ntlon, to bring about revolution ln\nYugoslavia and autonomy for both\nCroata and Macedonians.\nMlhallolf. upon whom tbt Inter*\nnational spotlight now Is pitying\nwith increasing intimity, disappear,\ned ln Istanbul nveral daya ago.\nPavellch tonlgbt denied vehement*\nly, aa did Kvaternlk, any connec*\ntlon with tht aasaaatnatlon.\nKvaternlk was Identified tonight\nby Italian polle* aa th* ton of a\nformer Colonel, born a Croat, In\ntht Austrian army. He li 38, Pave*\nlich SI, The latter waa alto charged\ntonight with th* bombing attempt\nof tht Zagreb, Croitttn Yugoalavla,\npolice headquarten but Deoember.\nPARIS, Oct. 18 (*->>.\u2014France tonight moved to extradite and try\nfor complicity ln th* Marseille murders two men arrested today it\nTurin, Italy, aa alleged chieftains of\ntht thrtt confessed Croat terror*\nlets held htn.\nMORE ABOUT\nBRIDGE\n(Contlnutd From Pagt On*)\npoint! when the oppoilte English\nteam missed a slam bid, the United\nStatei aggregation made a comeback and, when play was adjourned\nfor dinner after 210 hands, the British lead had been cut to 2040 polnta.\nThe hand which gave Mrs. Culbertson a game while the British\nwent down follows:\nAll vulnerable, west dealer:\nNorth\nS.-4\nH.-A Q 4\nD.\u20148 5\nC.-A J 7 6 5 4 3\nEast Wett\nS.\u2014K Q 10 8  6S.\u2014J  9  7  3  2\nH.-10 6 H.\u2014J 1 3\nD.\u2014K 10 7 2        D.\u2014A 0 4\nC\u201410 2 C.\u2014\u00bb 8\nSouth\nS--\u2014A S\nH.-K 9 8 5 2\nD.-Q J 6 3\nC.-K Q\nThe bidding in room one: West\n(Culbertson) pass; north (Lederer)\none club; east (Lightnerl one spade;\nsouth (Rose) three hearts; Culbertson,  three  spades;   Lederer,  four\nclubs;   Lightner,  pass;  Rose,  five\nclubs;  Culbertion,  pass;  Lederer,\naix clubi, all pass.\nLederer wu set one trick.\nThe bidding in room two: West\n(Ingram)  pass; north  (Moreheadi\none club; east (Hughes) pass; south\n(Mn. Culbertion)   one heart;  Ingram, pus; Morehead, t ;o clubs:\nHughes, pass; Mrs. Culbertson, two\nno trump; Ingram, paas; Morehead,\nthree hearts;  Hughe*,  pass;  nln.\nCulbertson, four hearts; all pais.\nMn. Culbertson made six tricki.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nReserve ITlday,  Nov.  16,  for Bt.\nPaul'i church choir concert.  (4627)\nYear In and year out. the standard Of quality\u2014(HOQIKTIE BROS.\nBREAD; Phon* 298. (4441)\nRUMMAGE SALE at market Saturday, Oct. tl) by United W.M.S. and\nMn. Curran'i circle ot St. Paul's.\n(4510)\nWATSON'S SHOE KALE ll the\nbiggest In the history of the business. Wonderful values are being\noffered. (432.1)\nRegular Meeting ot Nelson Women* Initltutt, todty. 3 p.m. speaker Mra. F. P. Burden. Tei aerved\nEverybody welcome. (4817)\nCHURCH OP  REDEEMER\nService Sundiy Oct. Slat, 1834.\n11 i.m. Morning Service.\n7:30 p.m. Evensong with Lantern\nLecture.   No.   celebration   of   Holy\nCommunion on thla day.\nMORE ABOUT\nMURDER CASE\n(Contlnutd From Pago Ont)\nformal   committal   nntII  Friday\nmornlni at 10 o'clock.\nCarl schwartzenhaoer of Qrand\nForki, baker by trade, will appear\nbefore  Magistrate  Doddi  on  Friday,  charted wltb  belnf  an  ac-\ncorppllce oi. Ijlrs, Sondquett.\nWhile the preliminary hearing waa\ngoing on, Greenwood went peacefully\nabout lta buatnw. People were talking mostly of mining and the proa-\npecta   of   tht   coming   winter   and\naprlng.   Outalde   of   lawyers,   police\noffloera   and   wltneasea,   tht   court\nroom  waa vacant\nWOULD BE AT VERNON\nIf Mrs. Sundquest la committed\nfor trial her case wlll oome up\nat aaalsta In Vernon which la ln\ntht county of Talt.\nCounsel for tht crown la Harold\nMclnnes, formerly of .Trail. Mra.\nSundquest haa acting for her, M. R.\nVan Boggen, Dutch consul at Vanoouver, and C. F. R, Flnoott ot\nOrand Forks. Constable J. H. Hooker\nof Grand Forks acted with Mr. Mc\nInnes.\nEvidence heard related mainly to\nthe now dead Miss Kuva receiving\na medical diagnosis of pregnancy\nIn Grand Forks; her disappearance\nfor a time; location of the girl later\nln Oreenwood at the home of Mrs.\nSundquest; an operation performed\nln an attempt to save her Uft at\nOrand Forks; her death; dying statements and evidence of medical instruments ln possession of the accused.\nIn all, 10 witnesses wert beard\nin the day's proceedings, which were\nmarked with several arguments between counsel as to admission of\ncertain evidence.\nCAUSE  OF DEATH\nDr. W. Truax of Grand Forks\ntestified that the cause of death\nln tht case of Veronica Kuva had\nbten septicemia and peritonitis oc\ncasloned by a miscarriage. He was\nunable to state whether th\u00ab cause\nhad bten accidental or deliberate\nIn answer to a question by Harold\nMclnnes, crown counsel, he declared that Infection in such cases\nwaa more likely lf Instruments were\nused. In cross-examination he reported on ah operation he had\nperformed thret daya befort the\nyoung girl had died.\nMrs. Anna Helen Kuva, mother\nof the girl who had passed away\nln Grand Forks hospital, declared\nthat knowing the condition of preg-\nnacy she hod called a doctor for an\nexamination early In -September.\nLater her daughter disappeared, and\non September 11 she had met her\nat the home of Mrs. Sundquest ln\nGreenwood. At this tlmt sht was\naccompanied by Constable J. H.\nHooker of Grand Forks and Constable H. C. Clark of Greenwood.\nThat was on September 16 and a\nfurther trip to the Sundquest home\nwaa made the following day.\nA starch of tbe home was made\nand certain articles had been\nfound. She also gave evidence relating to the dying declarations\nof her daughter, she having made\ntwo  statements.\nA.   B.  Fenwick,  Justice  of  the\npeace at Grand Forks attested of\nUklng two dying declarations from\nMiss Kuva on October 3 and 4.\nConstable Hooker corroborated tht\nevidence given by the girl's mother\nand tendered the declarations to\ngo Into the court records.  They\nwert  admitted   but  under  objections of the defence counsel.\nConstable   Clark  told  of   visiting\nthe   home   of   Mrs.   Sundquest   on\nthe evening of Sept. 16 and of conversing   with   the   lady   concerning\nMiss  Kuva. At that  time  ht  had\naeen Mlsa Kuva ln btd ln the Bund-\nQi'ent   home.   He   declared   ht   was\ntold   aht   wu   ln   bed   because   of\nnervousness.\nA visit to Greenwood of Mies\nKuva and Carl Schwartzenhauer of\nGrand Forks, waa related by Mrs.\nOipman of Grand Forks. That was\non Aug. 29. Sht had gone to\nGreenwood with Miss Kuva and\nMr. Schwartt-wnhauer, but at Greenwood the girl left them, and she\nand Schwartzenhauer went to the\nmoving   picture  show.\nThe girl returned later and met\nthem ln ehe picture show. She was\naccompanied by a tall thin man.\nA Mr. Everett swore that he had\nmet the girl on August 39 in the\nevening and had taken her to the\ntheater. He had met her near the\nhome  of  Mrs.  Sundquest.\nJoe Dadlels, road worker, declared\nhe had seen the three people mentioned above going to Greenwood\non that date. Evidence was given\nby two other witnesses to the effect\nthat they had aeen in the possession of the accused woman certain\nInstruments.\nEIGHT ATTEND\nSCOUT LECTURES\nTRAIL. B.C., Oct. 18\u2014Eight acout\nleaden attended the Gilwell courie\nlectures dven st the Central ichool\nthli week by Deputy Camp Chief\nA. A. Annandale, Bob Humphries\nand G. Williams assisting. The subject ot the lectures waa the patro'\nsystem, the topics being discussed\nwere \"Court of Honor,\" \"Patro'\nGames.\" \"Kings,\" \"Patrol Calls,\"\nand \"Patrol Formation.\" the next\nweek the, lecture will be on troop\nmanagement     '\nShopping\nfor a New\nOvercoat\nCome here first and you\nwill come here last. The\nnew fabrics tell a story\nof warmth \u2014 without\nweight. The models are\ndifferent from the same\nold, tame old thing. The\nprices are right \u2014 right\nnow!\n'20 ,. '55\nEMORY'\u00a7\nLimited\nNo One Ever Regretted\nBuying Quality I\nMORE ABPUT\nNelson Ban\n(Continued From Paga One)\nRitchie of Procter, Gladys Wlgg\nTommy Pennington and Lawrence\nGausdal of Nelson.\nThere have been four diphtheria\ncases in the recent outbreak, one\nfatal. They were Jvnei Blaney, Mrs.\nFranchella, Edward Zinkie of Ymir\nand Patricia Kellog of Nelion.\nEVERYTHING CLOSED\nThe ban on gatherings will be\nmore far reaching than the first one\ndeclared off last Friday. This time\nit takea in beer parlors and all\nsporti, and will include all schools,\nchurches, theaters, dance halls, and\nFor Accuracy and\nPromptness in\nPRESCRIPTIONS\nPHONE 25\nFLEURY'S\nPHARMACY\nSucceiiora to Poola Drug Co.\nMEDICAL-ARTS BLDG.\nF   U   L  -  V   U   E\ntTty-Scru\n Something Newt\nSomething you've needed 1\nNo more looae icrewi; no\nmore wobbly lenies. Let ns\nahow yon and lit yon.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrlit\nSuite 206        Medical-Arts Blk.\npool roomi.\nSporadic cases have been in\nIng for three weeks without u\nent relationship to each other\nthe infection is of quite a u\ntype. Doctors point out that n !\nproportion of the attacks have\nadulta and that there are 1 !\nnumber of children of seven ;\nof age and under unprotected i|\ndiphtheria.\nNo definite time limit can bt |\ntioned in the case of the pn\nban. The time limit will de\nupon further developments of m\nfurther announcement! will be o\nREX JARVIS\nElectrical Contractor tnt\nEngineer\nRepairs and 8uppllt)\nFor Service Phone *i\u00a5\n602 Josephine Strait\nHEALTH\nBULLETIN!\nFor nveral wnki ipora\ncam of Diphtheria have bi\nappearing in Nelion and vicln\nSeveral polnti ara to ba obn\ned. (1) The caiei hava occur\nIn varloui araaa with no app\n\u2022nt relationship to one inotl\n(2) The Infection It of quit\nsevere type and a large |\nportion of thoie attacked h\nbaan adults. (3) There la i la\nnumber of children seven yi\nof age and under unprottt\nagalnit Diphtheria. (4) Ona r\ncaie of Poliomyelitis, alio lh\n\u2022dult, h\u00abi made Iti appearam\nFor theae renom It li o\nildered advlubla to suspend\ntlraly all gathering! comprli\nschools, churches, theaters, p\nrooma, dances, beer parlon i\nsporti. An epidemic cannot\nconsidered to exlit but tha ilt\ntion it dangerous and It ia nee\nsiry to take precautions; wltl\nview if possible to stamping i\ntht Infection. No definite tl\nlimit can be mentioned. Thit'\u00bb\ndepend upon development!\nwhich further announcenH\nwlll bt madt from tlmt tt ttn\n(Slgntd) E. G. SIMMONI\nMedical Offictr tf Htd\nCITY DRUG SPECIALS\nFOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nColgttM Toothpaste, 2 for 26c\nColgatei Toothbrush, 2 for 51c\nGiant Kruichtn Salts . . Mo\nEno'i Fruit Salti .    . 69c\nPondi Cold and Van. Cream Ut\nVacuum  Bottles ... 39c\nSOc Novell, good raiding   25e\nPeppermint Patties, Fresh   29o\nPhillips Milk of Magnesia   49c  Colgate! Btrber't Bar, ca,ke   5g\nDO NOT BE MISLED\nOnly  Rtxall  Storei un conduct tha ORIGINAL ONE CENT\nSALE.   Thli li your Rexall Stort and tht OndCtnt Salt starti\nOctober 31st and continue! for four big dayi.\nCITT DRUG CO.\nNELSON'S DISPENSING CHEMISTS\nHAVE TOU GOT YOUR TICKETS?\nDON'T FAIL TO CET THEM TODAY fer the Entire\nFamily. They Will All Want te See the\nExhibition Baseball\nfeaturing the\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nALL-STARS\nAND THE PICK OF THE\nKOOTENAY LEAGUE\nPlug a Battery Composed of\nRUBE WALBERG and LUKE SEWELL\nBoth Stars of Recent World Series!\nRECREATION PARK\nMONDAY, OCT. 22nd., 2 P.M.\nTickets: Adults $1.10; Children 55c\nFrom Members of tht Gyro, Rotary tr Kinsmen Clubi\nDANCE\u2014EACLES HALL, MONDAY NICHT\nBe There\u2014Meet the Players!\nRUBE WALBERG,\nwht wlll pitch ftr tht\nKootenay ,' ll-Start\n__________\nmm\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1934_10_19","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0405688","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1934-10-19 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":"1934-10-19 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":""}]}