{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2022-03-16","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1936-10-29","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412343\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. 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":" m\nItaly* Portugal Cleared ^yf^harges of Aiding Rebels\nOnly Four Changes in Lineup\nof Montreal Maroons\n\u2014Page Seven\nVOLUME 35\nFIVE CENT8 A COPY\niLUMBIA, CANADA-THURSDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER 29,1938\nNUMBER 166\n$500,000 FOR\nIN \"SWEEP\"\nCOMMITTEE\nVOTE FINDS\nNOT GUILTY\nSUGGEST BIRTH\nCONTROL MIGHT\nINCREASE BIRTHS\nWitness in Ontario's\nCase Points to\nEurope\nHINTS AT RIVALRY\nBETWEEN RACES\n'Fear\" of the English\nThat French Trying\nExceed in Births\nBy GUY E. RHOADES\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer)\nEASTVIEW, Ont, Oct 28 (CP).\n\u2014The question of racial friction In\nCanada was brought today Into\nthe trial of Dorothea Palmer,\ncharged with advertising birth\ncontrol Information and contraceptives In Eastview. The case\nwas adjourned till Monday.\nThe court listened to evidence of\na sociologist that birth control\nmight lead to an increase rather\nthan a decrease In the Canadian\npopulation and to reasons for an\nassertion Anglo-Saxon Canadians\nfeared Canadians of French racial\norigin sought \"deliberately\" to out-\nbreed other sections of the population.\n(Continued on Page Tan)\n37,009 TO STRIKE\nPacific Coast Shipping\nto Be Tied Up\nBAN FRANCI8C0, Oct. 28 (AP)\n\u2014Shipowners watching tha approach of the zero hour for a projected maritime atrlke tonight notified the union Individually that\nfurther negotiation! would be\n\"useless.\"\nThe employers aent letters to\nthe various unions detailing what\nthey aald took place In \"final\"\npeaoa meetings during the day.\nThe shipowners rejected not only\nthe conditions proposed by the unions but also refused to consider the\nworkers' \"solid front\" demands\nwhich prevented any union from\naccepting peace terms until the\nothers had been satisfied.\nParalysis began spreading along\nthe waterfronts. Police in San Francisco, Los Angeles and other coast\ncities prepared for extra duty in the\nevent of trouble.\nWith the midnight deadline only\na few hours away, seven ships were\nreported tied up by \"crew action.\"\nShip movements decreased sharply,\nmall was transferred to foreign\nvessels.\nPreviously some union circles had\nexpressed the belief that only\npresidential intervention could avert\na walkout, which would involve 37,-\n000 men and tie up west coast shipping.\nFurious Gales Lash Europe\nDeath, Destruction and Disaster at Sea Left\nin Wake of High Winds; Many Distress\nCalls Heard by Coast Stations\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (CP-Havas).\n\u2014Furious galas whittled across\nnorthern Europe tonight, leaving\ndeath, destruction and gripping\ntales of disaster at tea In their\nwake.\nHigh winds and mountalnout\nwaves, lathing crippled vettelt\nand wreaking havoc on land, paralyzed shipping In parti of the\nnorth Atlantic and the Irish and\nNorth teat at the death toll neared\n40.   Property damage wat heavy.\nBritish, German and other coastguard stations were taxed to answer\nnumerous calls for help.\nThe 7347-ton British tanker Laur-\nelwood was reported drifting helplessly in the North sea off the Prussian port ot Brunsbuttell, about 70\nmiles northeast of Bremen.\nDispatches from Hamburg said\nsearching continued for the 400-ton\nlightship Elbe I, which foundered\noff the mouth of the River Elbe with\na loss of 19 hands last night.\nBUSTER KEATON\nMOORMAN\"\nLives in Small House;\nNo Servants; Fights\nWife's Suit\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (AP)\u2014Buster Kenton, motion picture comic,\npleaded in state supreme court today he Is a ''poor man,\" and aaid\nhe was being \"persecuted\" over\nalimony arrears.\nHe filed a motion to vacate a warrant of attachment tor $4600 filed\nby his divorced wife, Natalia Tal-\nmade keaton, formerly prominent\ninthemoviea.\nMrs. Keaton based her warrant on.\na divorce, decree she said required\nKeaton to pay her $300 a month tor\nth* support of their two sons, Robrl\nart is, im-JoMfk \"A      '       .\nIn his motion, Keaton said that\nwhen they were divorced in 1923\nhe gave has wife 90 per cent of their\nproperty and that subsequent lossea\nhad made him a poor man, dependent on his salary, while she is a\nwealthy woman.\n\"There is a claim against me by\nthe U. S. government for $28,000 In\nincome tax arrears,\" Keaton said.\n\"I now live in a amall six room\nbungalow In Culver City, California, with my mother, sister and\nbrother. I have no servants, cooks,\nvalets or chauffeurs.\"\nHis wife, he said, rents her town\nhouse in the Wiltshire district of\nLos Angeles for $470 a month.\nKeaton asserted she has numerous\nservants, including a cook and a\nchauffeur. His children, he said,, are\neach beneficiaries of $38,000 trust\nfunds.\nPlanes Search for\nStranded Ship\nHARBIN, Oct 29 (Thursday)-\n(AP)\u2014Fears were expressed today\nfor the safety of 150 passengers on\nthe Manchoukuo steamer Haian\nwhich haa been frozen In the Ice\nln the upper Amur river in a wild\nand uninhabited region between\nMoho and Heiho. The - government\ndispatched airplanes to search for\nthe stranded vessel which Is without communication and is understood to lack sufficient food and\nwinter clothing for passengers and\ncrew.\nWILL CONTEND TRAIL FUMES HO\nLONGER DAMAGE U.S. PROPERTY\nVegetation Grows Luxuriantly Close to the\nPlant, It Will Be Pointed Out When\nCommission Takes Up Hearing\nOTTAWA, Oet 28 (CYP) -The\ngovernments of Canada and the\nUnited States In the near future\nwill select members of a commission to Investigate the damage, If\nany, cauted by sulphur fumes\nwafted across the International\nborder from the smelters at Trail,\nB.C. The two commissioners will\nthen have to agree on the third\nmember to be the chairman.\nThe judgment of this tribunal ls\nexpected to have far-reaching effect as lt will provide a precedent\nas to the responsibility tor damage\nfrom sulphur fumes of hundreds of\nother Industrial plants In United\nStates and Canada. For nine years\nthe sulphur fumes from Trail have\nbeen the subject of international\nlitigation.\nThe International joint commission studied the case for several\nyears and came to the conclusion\nthe farmers in the state of Washington were entitled to $390,000\ndamages up to the end of 1931. The\npresent Inquiry will deal with dam\nages since then. The Trail smelter\nconvention of 1935 provided for the\npayment to the United State government of the $350,000 and the\npayment was made that year,\n' The Trail smelters have installed\nan immense plant to recover the\nsulphur and the contention of Canada will be the fumes are no longer\nln sufficient quantities to be Injurious to vegetation in the state of\nWashington, that vegetation grows\nluxuriantly closer to the plant than\nat the United States border.\nIt may also be contended there\nare many points on the border\nwhere more fumes come from United States plants across Into Canada\nthan crosses at Trail. However since\nthe Inquiry will be concerned only\nwith the Trail situation, any evidence on the situation ln other\nplaces possibly may not be admitted.\nThe brief for the United States\nhas been prepared by the state department In Washington and Canada's by John E. Read of the department of external affairs.\nFamous Seaman\nis Bead\nSCf_*raA_-?T0fc bet.\u25a0'\u00bb..'(-*\nCablc)-Sir Edgar Britten, commander of R. M. S. Queen Mary\nand commodore ot the Cunard-\nWhite Star line, died today ln a\nnursing home to which he was taken\nfollowing a stroke suffered ln his\ncabin aboard the Queen Mary.\nThe seizure occurred two hours\nbefore the Queen Mary was due to\nsail for New York. An urgent message to Captain F. V. Peel, just\nstarting a holiday with his wife at\nChandlers Ford, brought him aboard\na few minutes before sailing time.\nThe liner was able to-leave only\na few minutea late.\nLady Britten was unable to reach\nher husband's bedside before he\ndied.\nREFUSE ACCEPT\nPAYMENT UNDER\nALBERTA PLANS\nEDMONTON, Oct 28 (CP).-\nComplaints have reached the government that mortgage - holders\nflatly refuse to accept payments\nfrom old debtors under the Debt\nReduction and' Settlement act, it\nwas disclosed here by Premier William Aberhart\nDebtors claim this attitude Is distressing to them because they are\nanxious to complete the payment of\ntheir debts ahead of the time specified in the act.\nThe government, It was understood, has given no consideration to\nthe complaints, but it was pointed\nout there is power tq declare a debt\nmoratorium over the whole or any\npart of the province.\nRelief for Those\nWho Want Work\nOnly Says Pearson\nVICTORIA, Oct 28 (CP).-If unemployed transients ln Vancouver\nwill show their good faith by applying for farm jobs, the province will\nsee they are taken care of until they\nare placed, Labor Minister G. S.\nPearson told a Vancouver citiiens'\ndelegation which Interviewed the\nBritish Columbia government today.\nMr. Pearson said his department\nhad recent reports from employment offices on the prairies Show-\ning that demand for farm hands\nunder the federal placement scheme\nhad exceeded applications, thus Indicating there were places open for\ntransients now In British Columbia,\nif they returned to the prairies.\nUnless the men showed willingness\nto apply for farm placements they\nwould not be considered as showing\nan honest desire to get jobs, he said.\nMAY CONVERT QUEBEC DEBT\nQUEBEC, Oct. 28 (CP) .-Conversion of part If not the entire debt\nof the province of Quebec was authorized ln a measure sponsored by\nProvincial Treasurer Martin B.\nFisher and adopted on division by\nthe Quebec legislature today.\nSTART ACTION TO\nRULE OUT STORK\nDERBY IN WILL\nNephew and Neice Ask\nClause Be Killed in\nMiller Will\nEXECUTORS TO\nGO TO COURTS\nHE STARTED IT\nTo Ask Bench Name\nWinner of the\n\"Derby\"\nTORONTO, Oct. 28 (CP)-As the\nbaby marathon for the estimated\n$500,000 and upward estate of\nCharles Vance Millar swung Into\nthe home stretch tonight first definite steps had been taken to have\nthe highest courts of the province of Ontario supervise the finish\nand adjudge the winner.\nAs executors ot the eccentric lawyer's estate announced they had asked Mr, Justice W. E. Middleton\nat Osgoode hall to probe salient\nfeatures of the will, a final attempt\nby relatives to rule out the famous\n\"clause 9\" was launched through\nSamuel Factor, K.C, MP.\nMeanwhile all but one of the\nchief contenders among the Toronto\nmothers giving birth to mott children in 10 years had tacitly agreed\nto pool their chances ln the pending\nlegal battle which will open before\nMr. Justice W. E. Middleton Friday, Nov. 6\u2014Just six days #ft\u00abr the\ndee-de-iloni ' stork derby, closes.\nLone holdoutk Mrs. Matthew. Ken-'\n*y who* toi_H_Use wiU* fight alone\"\nto prove that 12 of her children are\neligible uW_e.\\the will,\n(Contlnutd on Paga Two)\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\nBy the Canadian Prett\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstocks irregularly higher.\nToronto   mines \u2014 Golds   lower;\nother groups higher.\nNew York\u2014Stocks slightly higher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat down % cents,\nLondon\u2014 Bar silver and other\nmetals higher; \u2022\n. New York\u2014Bar silver and other\nmetals unchanged. ,\nMontreal\u2014SUver slightly higher.\nNew York\u2014<Jotton, rubber and\nsugar lower; coffee higher.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar up\n1-84 to 1.00 1-32.     \u2022\nHere Is one Of the last photos\nmade ot Charles Vance Millar, Toronto lawyer and sportsman who is\nresponsible for Toronto's bizarre\n\"materinly marathon. Millar left a\nfund of $900,000 to the Toronto\nmother bearing the most children in\nthe 10-year period ending October\n31, 1936. At least nine mothers\nare top ranking contenders, some\nclaiming 10, others claiming nine\nchildren born during the apecified\ntime,\n\u2014Central Press Canadian Photo.\nNEW MEMBERS\nPAY TRIBUTE\nConnelly and Forester\nSpeak iri Reply to\nThrone Speech\nSTRUCK BY CAR AS\nFIXING OWN\nAUTO\nCAMPBELL RIVER, B.C., Oct. 28\n(CP).\u2014Gordon Cavin was in hospital today with injuries suffered\nwhen struck by an automobile on\nthe Island highway near Oyster bay\nand two Indians were held by British Columbia police at Courtenay\non charges of drunkeness and of\ndriving while under the Influence\nof liquor.\nCavin said he was repairing his\nmachine at the side of the highway\nwhen struck by an automobile in\nwhich the Indians, Tom Smith and\nBob Roberts, were allegedly riding.\nJury Finds Gravlin\nCommitted Suicide\nVICTORIA, Oct 28 (CP).-Vlctor\nRaymond Gravlin, former Victoria\nsports writer, committed suicide by\ndrowning on or about September 22\nwhile temporarily of unsound mind,\nwas the verdict of the coroner's\njury which today concluded the\nInquest Into Gravjin's death.\nVICTORIA,. Oct. 28 (CP)-The\nLiberal government's successful\ncandidates ln two summer byelec-\ntions, Mark Connelly, Omineca, and\nJ. Howard Forester, Vancouver-\nBurrard, today moved and seconded\nthe address In reply to the speech\nfrom the throne in the British Columbia legislature.\n\"I hope I can carry on where Alex\nleft off and serve the constituency of\nOmineca In the same satisfactory\nmanner,\" Mr. Connelly aald in pay\ning tribute to his predecessor, the\npresent Mr, Justice A. M. Manson.\nMr. Forester declared both Mr.\nConnelly and himself had won their\ncontests on the record ot the Pat\ntullo government, which thereby\nhad been endorsed in city and\ncountry within a few months.\nMr. Connelly commended the\ngovernment for Its share in bring-\ning about business improvement in\nthe past year. He saw \"wonderful\nimprovement in business in practically every line.\"\nForestry training camps had given\nyoung men a new interest in life\nand healthful employment Benefits\nof the Health Insurance act should\nbe extended to the \"small farmer\nand prospector and other people\nwho are not employees of industry.\"\nThese were just as much in need of\ncooperative insurance as the present\nprospective beneficiaries.\nMr. Forester paid tribute to the\nwork of provincial government departments. The department of the\npremier had \"maintained British\nColumbia's autonomy as full-fledged partner in confederation without dictation from eastern Interests.\nThe premier's recent tour of thc\nprovince had taken him into many\nparts not previously visited by a\nprime minister and there was evidence on every hand that his tour\nhad been of great value.\nEDMONTON FARMER, LETHBRIDGE\nBARBER EACH WIN $75,000; A MILK\nSALESMAN, ONTARIO, WINS $30,000\nRetired Railroad Conductor in Nova Scotia\nGets Biggest Slice, $150,000; One\nBought Ticket on \"Hunch\"\nBy The Canadian Pratt\nVote Is Unanimous on\nThree Counts But\nfor Russia\nWould Guard Spanish\nPorts Against Any\nWar Material\nFlying hooves of English thorough!) redi combined today, with\nthe Irish tweapttakei' whirling\ndrums to scatter more than $500,.\n000 acron Canada.\nAbout $200,000 In \"luck money\"\nw.\u00bb already aarmarkard for Canadian ipendlng before post time\nIn tha Cambridge handicap. Fifty-\none tlcketi on hortee\u2014each worth\n82188  Re.ardleii 0f tha  retult\u2014\nhad  drawn for  residents  of the\nDominion, along with 78 consolation prtxea of $800 each.\nBut the biggest shares in this pot\nof chancy  gold were  tagged for\nvarious address when Dan Bulger\ncame thundering through the stretch\nat Newmarket yesterday with Day-\ntona at his heels and Laureat II\nthird.\nIn Edmonton, Walter Snowden,\nfarmer, watched the news flash\ncome in that added $75,000 to the\n$10,000 he had already banked tor\na halt-share In his ticket on the pre-\nrace favorite. C. W. Lutes, retired,\nretired railroad, conductor of Enfield, N.S., said he was the other\nCanadian to hold a ticket\u2014worth\n$150,000\u2014on the winner. Snowden,\nwho bought his chance \"on a\nhunch\", said he knew the horse\nwouldn't fail him.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nU. S. POPULATION\nIS UP 5,338,000\nSINCE 1930\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 28 (CP)\n\u2014Estimating the country'a population at 128,429,000 on July 1,\nthe United States census bureau\nreported today this was an Increase of 8,338,000 since 1930.\nAn increase of 908,000 over\nJuly 1; 1938, also was noted,\nand Commerce Secretary Soper\nsaid this resulted,mainly from\nart eKcesI -JlBTrtn. tnei deaths\nbecause net Immigration for the\nyear ending last July 1, was\nonly 8000.\nDisperse Mob al\nBurnaby Hall\nBURNABY, B.C., Oct. 28 (CP).-\nBritish Columbia police said tonight\nthey had dispersed a mob of some\n100 men who milled around the\nmunicipal hall protesting the arrest\nof two men on obstruction and\nassault charges in connection with\nthe serving of an eviction order.\nConstable Hay Cummings suffered bruises and cuts yesterday\nwhen he went with Sheriff F. K.\nCotton to serve an eviction order\non a Neville street tenant after trying to disperse several men who\nblocked their path. The sheriff was\nhalted. Other officers were called\nand the arrests made.\nToday the two men appeared tor\na remand at the municipal hall and\na crowd quickly gathered outside.\nProtest Publicity\nin Canada of the\nSimpson Divorce\nPRE8T0N, Ont, (CP)\u2014 A ret-\nolutlon protesting \"the unnecessary publicity given by Canadian\nnewtpapers to the Simpson divorce cats\" adopted by the Preston pott Canadian Legion, has\nbean forwarded to the Ontario\ncommand.\nBENNETT HOPES FOR\nTRADE INCREASE\nADELAIDE, Oct. 28 (CP Cable\nvia Reuters)\u2014Hope that trade between Canada and Australia would\nbe developed to the greatest extent\npossible was voiced today by Hon.\nIt. B. Bennett, Canadian Conservative leader. He was speaking in response to \u2022 toast at the commonwealth club luncheon.\nPattullo Attending\nHis 21st Session\nVICTORIA, Oct. 28 (CP) .^Premier Pattullo \"became of age\" in\nparliamentary attendance when he j\nstarted yesterday his 21st session\nwith the British Columbia legislature. Sixteen sessions since 1917\nhave seen him as a member of the\ngovernment, the other five as leader\nof Ure opposition. In this respect\nhe holds a unique record in the\npolitical history of the province.\nHe ls exceeded only by R. H.\nPooley, K.C, of Esquimau, in the\nnumber of consecutive sessions attended. Mr. Pooley has been a\nmember since before the war.\nALBERTA BYELECTION NOV. SO\nEDMONTON, Oct 28 (CP).\u2014By-\nelection ln the provincial constituency of Grouard was ordered today\nIn an Alberta writ which set the\nvote for November 30. Nominations\nare to ba filed November 20. By-\nelection wu necessitated by the\ndeath in September of L. A. Ciroux,\nK.C, Liberal member, who held the\nteat since 1814.\nDECISION RE8ERVED\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP).-Mr.\nI Justice Robertson in supreme court\n, today   reserved   decision   as   to\nwhether he should commit Leslie\nGllmore, A. W. McLelan and A. B.\nPeterson, members of the British\nColumbia coast vegetable marketing\nboard, and S. J. Creech and Harry\nPatterson, board officers, fpr trial\non contempt charges.   Application\nfor the commltal was made by Lowe\nChung  and  Low  Yee,   vegetable\nexporters.\nMin. Max.\nNELSON ._   28 50\nVictoria  48 55\nNanaimo  49 56\nVancouver _  48 58\nKamloops  34 50\nPrince George   36 52\nEstevan Point  42 54\nPrince Rupert   40 50\nAtlin  - 40 42\nDawson  24 34\nSeattle   48 52\nPortland  -  44 60\nKan Francisco  50 78\nSpokane    32 60\nLos Angeles -  88 88\nPenticton  28 \u2014\nVernon  30 \u2014\nGrand Forks     24 56\nKaslo  32 -\nCranbrook   17 54\nCalgary  44 56\nEdmonton  42 62\nSwift Current  36 54\nPrince Albert   32 50\nSaskatoon  30 50\nQu'Appello     26 52\nWinnipeg   28 42\nMoose Jaw   32 84\nForecast: Nelson and vicinity-\nLight winds mostly northeast, fine\ncool at night.\nTRIAL BY JURY\nFOR RIOTERS\nVANCOUVER, Oct.. 28 (CP)\nNine jobless single men elected for\ntrial by jury when they appeared\nbefore Judge Harper In county\ncourt today on charges of rioting,\nthe result of an unemployed demonstration here two weeks ago. They\nwill probably be tried at the present sitting of the assize. ' -\u2014\u2022 *\nAll were freed on bail of $1000\nwith the; exception of two whose\nbail was set at $2008 each.\nFifteen other jobless men appeared ln police court on charges of obstructing police officers and six\nmore were arrested on downtown\nstreets and charged with begging.\nOf those who appeared in police\ncourt four were cdnvicted and sentenced to terms ranging as high as\nthree months and five were remand\ned various dates for trial. Charges\nagainst the other six were withdrawn. '\nThermometer al\n28 Degree Mark\nLight frottt and low temperatures marked Wednetday't weather fn Nelion and diitrlct The tun\nshone for only five and a half\nhoun In Nelion and Itt bait efforts failed to thove the mercury\npast the 80 degree line, five degrees lower than the previout\nday't maximum.\nAgain, and for the third time\nthlt week, the minimum wai\nmeasured below the freezing\npoint, thlt time coming to a halt\nat the 28 degree level, A cold\npenetrating wind, which blew for\nthe greater part of the day added\nto the general discomfort of everybody and wat one factor in helping to keep the mercury low.\nBRITAIN URGES\nSPANISH PATROL\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (AP).\u2014\nThe international \"hands-off\nSpain\" committee tonight acquitted both Italy and Portugal of charges or violation of\nthe non-intervention agreement despite strenuous Russian objections.\nThree separate votes on the\nvarious charges were taken\nand in each case the \"acquittal\" was unanimous except for\nRussia's dissent.\nThe Earl of Plymouth, chairman of the committee, took\nthe initiative before the bocjy ,\nand said the charges against\nItaly that she had supplied\nirms and munitions to Spanish\nFascists, either:\n1. Referred to what happened before the agreement\nwent into effect; or\n2. Had not been proved; or\n3. Were not violations.\nTHREE VOTES\nThe three votes were taken on:\n1.  Italy's  reply  to charges  by\nRussia she had supplied war materials to the insurgents ln Spain;\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nMollison Spends\nNlghllnN.S.\nHARBOR GRACE, Nfld., Oct. 28\n(CP Cable).\u2014Capt James A. Mollison postponed the second leg ot his\nflight from New York to London\ntonight after scanning reports of\nunfavorable weather on his pro- .\nposed route over the Atlantic.\nThe veteran British flier rolled\nhis monoplane Into a hangar at\nHarbor Grace airport and planned\nto spend the night here. Tomorrow, if weather conditions permit,\nhe will try his fourth transatlantic\nhop.\nHe brought his plane gracefully\nto earth at 4:25 p.m., A.S.T., after a\nflight from New York in six hours\nand 41 minutes. His schedule called\nfor an eastward \"takeoff immediately\nafter refuelling but he postponed\nhis first west-to-east ocean attempt\njust before he was due to leave.\nSQUATTERS ARE\nORDERED OUT\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP).-.\nSquatters on Kitsilano foreshore\nwill have to vacate their little village of nondescript shacks and boat-\nhouses by November 15, it was\nlearned today. .\nA. S. Tyrer, government agent,\nhas received instructions to that\neffect from the department of lands,\nVictoria, and yesterday began tacking up eviction notices. ;\nAcquitted Two Years Ago on Murder\nCharge, Youlh Now Says He's Guilty\nEarl Leffler Had Stated His Grandmother\nKilled Phillip Stroh; Faces Charge of\nCreating a \"Public Mischief\"\nWALKERTON, Ont., Oct. 28 (CP)\n\u2014Hoodwlnker of police and crown\nauthorities for two years as he kept\nthe secret of Philip Stroh's Easter\nSunday murder, handsome Earl Leffler was taken to Bruce county jail\ntoday\u2014confessed killer. He can't\nbe tried again for murder unless a\ncrown appeal is granted.\nClimaxing a case believed unique\nin Ontario criminal history, the 19-\nyear-old Carrick township farm boy\nwas arrested a few minutes before\na grand jury was scheduled to report on a murder Indictment against\nMrs. Mary Stroh, widow of the\nslain farmer and Leffler's grandmother.\nHis long-delayed confession was\npresented to the assize court several\nhours later. He pleaded guilty to\ncreating a \"public mischief\" by accusing his grandmother of the murder. The new charge, laid under\nthe common law of England, carries\na maximum sentence of life imprisonment.\nLeffler, whose confession set out\nhe accidently struck his 65-year-old\ngrandfather with an axe and killed\nhim during a quarrel, was tried for\nmurder here in November, 1934. He\nwas acquitted.\nToday he was listed as a crown\nwitness to testify against his grandmother. Mrs. Stroh, slender and\ngray-haired, was arrested last June\nafter Leffler made a statement in\nwhich he named her the killer. Ha j\nwas to describe the bitter quarrels\nhe had said took place between the\ngrandparents with whom he lived.\nBut the trial scene changed\nquickly and dramatically. Upon instructions of Mr, Justice J. C, Makins, the boy was arrested, charged\nwith creating a \"public mischief.\"\nThe grand jury returned a \"no bill\"\nagainst Mrs. Stroh and Mr. Justice\nMakins discharged with 66-year-old\nwoman, without comment.\n(Under the Canadian Criminal\nCode, a person tried for murder and\nacquitted cannot be tried again, except where a crown appeal is allowed and a new trial granted. No\nappeal was entered following Let- .\ntier's acquittal in 1934).\n.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'    \u25a0\"'.'\u25a0\u00bb   \u201e__,\u25a0__\n__\n***\"\"*'\n PAGE TWO-\nNEL80N CAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.-THURBDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER \u00bb. 19M-\nRossland and\nNelson Highs\nDebate Friday\nSimultaneous Joint\nDebates on Topic\nof Roosevelt\nLiterary societies ot thc Rossland\nnd Nelson high schools will meet\non the forensic platform Friday to\ndebate a subject now of timely fn-\njarest In connection with the depart-\ninent of social studies, the merits\nOf the electoral struggle in the United States which comes to a head in\nthe national polling of next Tuesday.\n', There will be two debates, one In\nKelson and one in Rossland, the\nborne team of cither city upholding\nfile'affirmative of the proposition\nthat the Roosevelt administration\ndeserves the endorsement of the\nAmerican electorate, while the visaing team will oppose that proposition.\nNELSON TEAMS PICKED\nNelson's teams were selected Wednesday afternoon after a final try-\nout, and the affirmative team, which\nwill defend the Nelson trenches,\nWill consist of Robert Morris, Edna\nBush,' and Georglna Williseroft,\nWith Edith Patterson as a spare,\nWhile the negative team, whioh will\nWsault the Rossland works, will\nembrace Alan Emmott, James Allan, and Janet Grimes, with William Affleck as a spare.\nThe Nelson debate will take place\nat 3 in the afternoon, in the high\nachobl auditorium, the evening\nnot to be feasible. It is not known\nhere yet at what hour the Rossland debate will be staged.\n. Owing to the Rossland high school\nhaving no senior matriculation\nClass, the Nelson teams have been\n\u25a0elected from thc students ot the\nclasses preceding senior matriculation.\nShrove Tuesday was known ln ancient times as pancake day from\nthe fact that after absolution people\n.were supposed to partake of pancakes.\nWARE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE-\nAnd You'll Jump Out of Btd in tho\nMorning R\u00bbrln' to Go\nThe Om IBM-It} pottr oat two poundi of\nBqnld blk (.nto yourtowela dtily. If tiili Mlu\ntinotflowingfrtely, your food doesn't <_lf\u00abt.\nIt init df curt In the bowe-li. Gu bloat* up\n.roti r itonuh. Tn nt coniUp* ted. J Urn f u 1\nKImdi ko into the body, entf you feel four,\nnit tnd the world looke punk.\nA mere bowel movement dowm'telweys get\nOt the cause. You need rwme thing thit world\non the liver w well. It takes thoM good, old\nCarter's Little Uver Pills to get thru two\nmndl of bile flowing freely and mekc you\nfeel up tnd up\". lUrmleen end gentle, tW\nmake the bile flow freely. They do tbe work\nof calomel bot htve no calomel or mercury In\nthem. Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pills by\nname I Stubbornly refuse anything else. 26c.\nCARLING-KUKTZ\nBREWERIES NOW\nTORONTO, Oct 28 (CP) .-Consolidation program of Brewing Corporation of Canada, Ltd., has been\ncompleted with the formation ot\nCarllng-Kuntz Breweries, Ltd., the\ncorporation announced tonight.\nThe new firm succeeds Carllng\nBreweries, Ltd., which operates a\nplant at London, Ont, and Kuntz\nBrewery, Ltd., of Waterloo, Ont\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C.-Mrs. Ernest\nGlover left Tuesday morning for\nBremerton, Wash., where she will\nbe the guest of her mother until\nChristmas.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMiss Dorothy Hardman of Trail\nis the guest of Miss Lois Fry for a\nfew days.\n\u2022 *   e\nMrs. E. J. Rose, who has been\nthe guest of her sister, Mrs. John\nRoscorla for the past nine weeks,\nleft Monday for her home in Vancouver.\n,  \u2022   \u2022\nH. D. Griswold left Tuesday\nmorning for the Boundary country\non mining business.\n\u2022 *   *\nJ. N. McLeod of Edgewood ls the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Nesbitt.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJoseph Ward has returned to Vancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nJ. B. Singer left for Paulsen.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. 0. McDougall ls spending\nthe day in Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   ,\nVernon Kingsley of Pend d'Orellle\nls visiting friends in Rossland.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Ruth Doughty of Trail was\nIn the city over the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMisses Lorna Triggs, Miriam Dally\nand Myrtle Dally have been visiting in Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFrank Amorossi is a patient in the\nMater Misercordiae hospital.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u00bb\nMr. and Mrs. Joseph Semole and\nchildren who have been spending\nthe past few months in the city,\nhave returned to their home in\nTrail.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nRt. Rev. A. K. Mclntyre has returned from Nelson, where he was\nparticipating in the installation of\nthe Bishop of Nelson. While ln the\nKootenay lake city, Msgr. Mclntyre\nwas the. guest of Mr. and Mrs. L. S.\nMcKinnon,\nMURDER WILL OUT\nSTOCKHOLM (CP)-Found preserved in peat moss on the west\ncoast of Sweden, clothing of a man\nburied 000 years ago has been\nmoved to the museum. The man\nwas murdered, but chief Interest\nat this date is in the mediaeval\nclothing.\nm\nMpwawwii!**gg*j\u00bb\nSpend Next Week-End in SPOKANE\nand Stop at the\nCoeur d* Alene Hotel\nCanadian Headquarter,\nMrs. Harry Goetx, Mgreu.\nHome ef the Famoui\nDUTCH MILL\nComing Events in Spokane:\nHALLOWE'EN PARADE AND CELEBRATION\nOCTOBER 31ST.\nTune in on:\nThe Dutch Mill Entertainers\nover KGA fiadiu Station.\nEvery Wednesday, 3:45 pjn.\nEvery Friday, 7:30 a.m.\nSeptember Industrial Employment\nHigher in (anada But Down in B\u00bb(,\ni       hi wi   W   i *,\nGain of 28,599Throughout Dominion; Drop in\nB.C. Is971; Prairies Improve\nOTTAWA, Oct 28 (CP).-*-Indus-\ntrial employment in. Canada made\na substantial increase in the month\nof September, the Dominion bureau\nof statistics reported today. Staffs\nof 10,020 reporting firms aggregated\n1,044,178 persons on October 1, compared with 1,015,839 persons on September 1, an increase of 28,599.\nThe advance raised the index of\nemployment from 107.1 at September 1 to 110.1 at October 1. This waa\nthe highest point reached since November 1,1930. On October 1,1935,\nthe index stood at 106.1. After correction for seasonal variations the\nrise was from 102.7 on September 1\nto 105.0 on October 1.\nFirms in all provinces except\nBritish Columbia showed considerable improvement, most pronounced-\nin Quebec and Ontario. The situation generally was better than at\nthe beginning of October in any of\nthe last four years.\nEmployment In British Columbia ihowed curtailment, mainly In\nmanufacturing (owing to the termination of the fish-canning season), while transportation and\nservices alio released employees.\nOn the other hand, logging, mining and trade reported greater\nactivity, and, within the group of\nfactory   employment,   vegetable\nfood and aome othtr factorial alio\nrecorded Improvement,\nData wai tabulated from 1064\nemployer!,   whose   payrolls   declined from 92,895 person, at September 1 to 91,424 at the beginning\nof  October, a decrtaie of 971.\nIndex stood at 108.1.\nManufacturing in Canada, as a\nwhole   (particularly  in  vegetable\nfood, Iron and steel and textile factories), logging, mining and trade\nshowed heightened activity as compared with September 1, while employment declined in animal food,\ntobacco and beverage and clay, glass\nand stone plants and ln services.\nLittle general change occurred in\ntransportation, communications and\nconstruction; within the last-named,\nimprovement in building and highway work was just about offset by\ncurtailment in the railway construction and maintenance departments.\nA further increase in employment\nwas noted in the prairie provinces\nat the beginning of October, Improvement occurring In manufacturing, mining, logging, building and\nhighway construrction and trade,\nwhile railway operation and construction, services ahd communications were quieter. Index was 108.8.\nFINK'S\n2 Mon\n\u25a0   THURSDAY    FRIDAY    SATURDAY\n!   Three Dayi ot Money\u00abSavi-.g Valuei\n! A Grand Selection of New Dresses\nd Specials\nSTREET\n\u25a0   Street, afternoons, new nobby fabrics, tailored styles. Creen, blue,\n\u25a0    wine, etc. Size\u00bbl 4 to 44. 3 DAYS\u2014\nj       $149\nVANCOUVER LIST\nTURNS HIGHER\nRelief Arlington Is Up\nBut Reno Off One\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP) -\nStocks made a general lift to higher\nground on the Vancouver stock exchange today, the market closing\nwith a firm trend. Transactions\ntotalled 172,061 shares.\nPremier featured trading in the\ngold section closing up 11 cents at\n3.00. Bralome waa up 15 at 8.95, Island Mountain gained 2 at 1.30\nand Big Missouri added IM* at 47V4.\nWayside at 9, Nicola at 12 V* and\nBelief * Arlington at 39 firmed fractions. Vidette dropped 3 at 1.25,\nSheep Creek lost 2 at 82 and Reno\neased 1 at 1.24. Cariboo Gold Quart;\nwas off 7 at 1.70. Pioneer closed\nunchanged at 7.00 and Minto was up\nV, at 20. Pioneer closed unchanged\nat 7.00 and Minto was up V, at 20.\nCalgary and Edmonton Oils was\nup 4 at 1.41, Calmont gained 2 at 25,\nand British Dominion added Vk at\n19. Commonwealth advanced 1% at\n1414 while Okalta at 27!\/4, Mar Jon\nat 16 Vi and A. P. Consolidated at\n16 Vi gained fractions. Dalhousie lost\n2 at 88 and Crow's Nest dropped\n'.2 at 10.\nIn the base metal group, Pend\nOreille gained 4 at 82 and B. C.\nNickel was up 1 at 34. Noble Five\neased Vs at 2%.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Fineit In the Intaplor\"\nHUME HOTEL\nFree Bus Service\nGeo. Benwell, Prop,\nBREAKFAST 30c and UP\nLunches 40c to 50c Dinner 40c to 65c\nROTARY AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 787 NELSON, B.C. 422 VERNON ST.\nTrail Gyros Prepare\nfor Birthday Party\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 28. \u2014 Seven\nmembers of the Trail Gyro club\nattended the annual installation of\nofficers of Grand Forks club it was\ndisclosed in a report of W. Emslie\nat the regular supper meeting in\n| Crown Point hotel palm room on\nTuesday evening.\nThose who attended besides Mr.\nEmslie were: William Lauener, M.\nM Butorac, Thomas Lauriente, E.\nA. Jennings, J. M. Spowart and\nMeredith Michaely.\nLloyd Crowe, M. M. Butorac, E.\nPisaplo and J. M. Spowart were\nappointed a committee to prepare\nfor the club's birthday party to be\nheld in November.\nMusical entertainment was provided by J. Archie Phillips ar.d\nWilfred Lowery, recently of Nelson, who, with Stewart Mitchell,\nFrederick Bruce and Cecil Frerer,\nwere guests of the club.\nW. H. House, Victoria; A. Carter,\nKamloops; J. A. Robinson, G. G.\nAdams, J. D. Sutherland, C. A.\nGarrick, H. E. Ducomman, N. Ped-\nesson, Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Geuthes,\nE, L. Hall, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Elliott, R. F. MacNaughton, C. C.\nBell, W. Mellar, C. N. Spiers, Van\ncouver; J. Skinner, Trail; G. E.\nMcCullough, Calgary; Miss I. L.\nGarrick, New Westminster; A. Kinnalrd, B. Kinnalrd, Medicine Hat;\nO. C. Born, New Denver; A. W.\nHolmes and daughter, Crawford\nBay; W. H. Percival, Penticton.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN  SAMPLE ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Noise\nB.C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEI\nP. L. KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited.\nFree Parking NELSON, B.C. Phone 234\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon 8t Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nQood Comfortable Rooms\nFully Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\n.AS. E. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot  and   Cold  Water\nIn the HEART of tha City\nLow Round Trip\nFARES EAST\nALL WINTER\nfor all classes\nof travel\nIn \u2022\u00ab\u2022.* svtry doy to May 14 on\nthi air-conditionod Empire Builder.\nCoach and Tourist tickets liavi il<\nmonthi rolurn limit; Standard, 30\ndayi. Stopoveri anywhon. For tho\nfint timo, lummer faro bargcini\nall tho yoor through. Luiury, com-\nfart ond finoit lorvico ot economy\ncoit. Eicollont meoli In dlnor at\nvory low pricti. Eiamplfl of forn\n\u2022ffoctive November I:\nTo CHICAGO\nCOACH TOUHIST    STANOAUD\n$57.35 $68.80 $74.80\nSimilar low ItrM lo many olhlr points.\nRide the Air-ConrJitinneat\nEMPIRE\nBUILDER\nE.ffl. Westby, CF. & P.A.,\n321  tinker  St. Nelion\nB. C. Seeking Higher\nTariff Protection on\nProcessed Cherries\nOTTAWA, Oct. 28 (CP).\u2014An application for higher tariff protection on proceised cherries has been\nreferred to the tariff board by Hon.\nCharlea Dunning, minister of finance. The application comes from\nthe British Columbia Fruit Growers'\nassociation, Kelowna, B.C., and has\nbeen set down for hearing by the\nboard on November 26.\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nFrith Syndicate\nto Work Placer\nLeases at Lumby\nCoast Men Have Four\nLeases Near New\nDiscovery\nO. D. Frith, formerly of this district, is head of a Vancouver.syn-\ndicate which has acquired four\nplaced leases from William V. Somerville and associates in the Harris\ncreek area, near Lumby, according\nto the Vancouver Province. Somerville and his associates were the\nfirst to stake following news of a\nstrike on Harris creek recently by\nAlf Brewer and Paul Johnson. The\nProvince states:\nJames Armes and associates of\nVancouver are now conducting a\nsluicing operation on the discovery\nclaims which the Armes interests\nbonded.\nThe new operation Is on ground\nbetween Harris and Jones creeks,\na distance of approximately two\nmiles, believed to be an old channel\nof one or the other of these creeks. ^\nIt is stated that rimrock is exposed\nin some places. Jones creek, like\nHarris creek before the discovery,\nyields only colors at present.\nThe Frith interests propose to\ntest their leases with a shaft and\nby drifting on bedrock which it is\nstated is at a comparatively shallow\ndepth.\nAFTERNOON\nA group of the season's latest styles, Including Sunday Nltea and Afternoon\nDresses In blue, grten, red, etc. Sizes\n14-44, 3 Days\u2014\n$3.95\nEVENING\nHostess Gowns\u2014Every dree, one of the\nseason's outstanding styles In Moire,\nCrepes and Taffetas, ankle length. Rose,\nblue, red, tile. Sizes 14-20, 3 Dayt\u2014\n$6.95\nFUR TRIMMED GOATS\nImported tweeds or plain colors in all wool. Blue, black,\nbrown, interlined for colder weather and guaranteed\ntwo-season linings. Sizes 14 to 44.  3 DAYS\u2014\n$14.95 to $25.00\nTailored Untrimmetl Coats\nImported tweeds and plain or flecked all wool cloths.\nBlue, green, wine, brown, etc. Warmly interlined and\ntwo season linings. Sizes 14 to 44. 3 DAYS\u2014-.\nUp From $10.95\nBlouses\nA new assortment of long\nsleeve satin blouses in\nwhite, eggshell, gold, rust,\netc. Sizes 14-20. C| ge\nPullovers\nButton down front styles\nIncluded ln this outstanding range of colors and\nstyles. Slzei e> * QC\n32-44. 3 Days ... \u25bc*\u2022**\nGloves\nNew   fabrics   (Imported\n'    lightweight or nappa fleece\nand   Kayser's)   11\nlining   in   all   colors.\nGloves   for   every   coi-\nZt3. \u2022**\u2022\nLingerie\nSnuggles. Cuff Panties\nand Vests ln flesh color.\nSmall, medium, 2Q(_\nand large 3 days _ m*T\nSnuggies (By Watson\nMfg. Co.) in flesh .MUM\ncolor, 3 days m*T-\nJ. Ivan MacKay lo\nGo to Edmonton\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nl\nl\n300 Pairs of CREPE STOCKINGS\nPure silk thread crepe, full-fashioned, slendor slipper heel and reinforced jtofif\ncradle foot. All the popular colors, sizes 8 1-2 to 10 1-2 ..3 DAYS\u00a9y\nFOOTWEAR\nCHILDREN'S\nWEAR\nSHOE SPECIAL\nPatent sandal pattern, square toe and       (1 AC\nheel. Sizes 3 to 8 3 DAYS $1.TO\nPULLOVER JACKETS\nEVENING SANDALS\nLow heels, black faille cloth and silver.      {0 QC\nSizes 3 to 8 ...' 3 DAYS-P--.TO\nCamel hair, neatly trimmed. New styles in    d|1  JQ\nwine, blue, red, etc. Sizes 8 to 14 ... 3 DAYS^l-lv\nPANTIES\nWool in navy and fawn, lastex waist band. Sizes  7C\u00ab\n4 to 14 ....: 3 DAYS IJC\nARCH SUPPORT SHOES\nWith style and comfort, black and brown kid, Cuban\nheels. Scientifically built for arch support and walking ease. Widths AAA to D. Sizes            ff i AC\n3 to 9 3 DAYS\u00ab|\".-TO\nChildren's Jersey Rompers\nand Dresses\nIn blue, maize, red, etc,                  AOA to tf 1  J A\nSizes 1 to 6 3 DAYS   \u00abH>C     tpl.-W\nChildren's Shoe Special\nBlack Oxfords and Patent Straps. 3 DAYS\u2014\nSizes 5 to lO'\/a   S1.18\nSTOCKINGS\nPure botany wool, In colors camel or white.\nSizes 11 to 2  $1.29\nSizes 4V_ to7Vi\u2014  OA- Sizes 8 to 10\u2014       QA.\n3 DAYS LdZ 3 DAYS OUC\nI\nI\nI\nFINKS\nBURNS BLOCK\nPHONE 73\nReady-to-Wear\nChildren's Wear\nand Footwear\n1\n\u25a0\ni\nI\ni\n\u25a0\nI\ni\ni\nI\nI\n\u25a0\ni\ni\ni\ni\ni\ni\nI\n\u25a0\ni\ni\ni\nl\ni\ni\ni\ni\n\u25a0\ni\ni\ni\n\u25a0\n\u25a0\ni\ni\ni\n\u25a0\ni\nJ. Ivan MacKay, above, formerly\nsuperintendent of the Nelson division of the Canadian Pacific railway, has been transferred to Edmonton, succeeding superintendent J. L. Palethorpe. The latter goes\nto Medicine Hat, Alta., and Georgo\nJ. Fox will transfer from Medicine\nHat to Calgary. The transfers arc\neffective November 1.\nIt Is easier to photograph th. Pav-\nlof volcanoes, on the Alaskan peninsula, at night than In daylight.\nFog obscures them in the daytime,\nbut at night, with the aid of the\nmidnight s)jn, visibility is fairly\ngood, ~*.\nI\nCranbrook Man's\nFather Is Dead\nAlexander Stewart, for half a\ncentury an outstanding figure In\nthe iron-working trades of British\nColumbia, passed away October 25\nin a private nursing home in Victoria, at the age of eighty-six.\nBorn In Glasgow, he learned the\ntrade of iron moulding in Scotland,\nand at the time that he came to\nCanada to engage in that calling in\nthe works of A. McKelvie le Sons,\nThree Rivers, Quebec, was considered to be one of the foremost\nmasters of that craft on the continent..\nThe following year, shortly after\ntho great fire that destroyed Vancouver, he came to the little Burrard Inlet city as foreman moulder\nfor the Vancouver City Ironworks.\nThe following year he moved to\nVictoria as foreman of the Albion\nIronwoiks, remained with that noted pioneer concern until 1903, when\nhe transferred to the British Columbia Marine Company's shops at\nEsquimau to accept a similar position.\nHe was twice married, his first\nwife predeceasing him in 1913, and\nhis second passing away n few years\nago, since when he has been making\nhis home with his son, Alexander\njr., at Esquimalt.\nMr. Stewart is survived by one\ndaughter, Mrs. A. E. Norris, and\nseven sons, William, Robert and\nStanley, all of Seattle; James, of\nCranbrook; Jack, North Vancouver,\nand Hugh and Alexander, of Esquimau; James Stewart, of Victoria,\nis a brother. Sixteen grandchildren\nand seven great-grandchildren also\nmourn his death.\nFuneral services will be conducted\non Thursday in Victoria. Rev. T.\nH. McAllister will officiate. Interment will be made in the family\nplot irt*Ross Bay cemetery.\nMORE ABOUT\nSTORK DERBY\n(Continued From Ptge One)\nClause 9 provides for payment of\nthe residue of the estate at the expiration of 10 years from the testator's death, which occurred Oct.\n31, 1926, to the mother who has\ngiven birth in Toronto to the greatest number of children at shown\nby the registration under the vital\nstatistics act. This clause is being\nattacked ln particular by Mr. Factor's clients as being contrary to\npublic policy and scandalous.\nThe two who claim to be nearest\nrelatives of Millar are Alexander\nButcher and Arabella West,\" Port\nBurwell, Ont., described as nephew\nand niece, respectively of the late\nNancy Vance Miller, and assignee of\nJames A. Nocll, heir under the will\nof the said Nancy Vance Miller.\nThey filed a writ at Osgoode hall\nlate today asking the court to declare the clause pertaining to the\nbaby derby null and void.\nWhatever private attempts are\nmade to set aside terms of the will\nlegal counsel will definitely attempt to establish lt one way or the\nother before Mr. Justice Middleton\nNov. 6.\nThe executors, Toronto General\nTrusts Corporation, National Trusts\nlimited and George Roy Sproat,\nhave asked official rulings on three\npoints:\n\"1. Is clause 9 of the said will\nvalid.\n\"2. If lt ls valid, to ascertain thc\nbeneficiary or beneficiaries entitled\nthereunder.\n\"3. If lt Is Invalid, to ascertain the\nperson or persons entitled on intestacy.\"\nMore than a dozen mothers are\nexpected to hand in their \"entries\"\nto Andrew W. Hunter, solicitor for\nthe executors, as requested ln an\nannouncement today. The entrants\nare Informed they \"may attend\" the\nhearing in Osgoode hall.\nShop in Ad Columns and Save!\nCERTIFICATE TO\nBE GIVEN SALMO\nSCOUTONFRIDAY\nScouts of the district wlU pny\nhonor Friday night to Percy Wilde,\nSalmo Boy Scout recently awarded\na certificate of merit for saving the\nlife of a youngster who fell off a\nlog into the Salmon river earlier in\nthe night. The certificate arrived in\nNelson about a fortnight ago.\nDistrict Commissioner J. M,\nDronsfield will be accompanied on\nthe Salmo visit by Fred GUI, Mr.\nRossington, A. Browne and eight or\n10 Scounts from the First and Second\nNelson troops. It ls understood tho\npresentation of the certificate will\nbe made a community event\nWILL DANCE AS HINDUS\nBOMBAY (CP)-Captlvated by\nthe Indian sari (women's costumes)\na troupe of Russian ballerinas broke\ntheir Journey to Australia to \"raid\"\nBombay shops for elaborate specimens of the national dress.\nBoulder dam, when complete, will\nhave a rate*! capacity four times\nthat ot Niagara.-\n m\n\u25a0NELSON  DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY  MORNING, OCTOBER 29, 1036\t\n *>#ag THRU\nTHE RAY'S\nTODAY\n_..\u201e\u201e,   CHARGE CUSTOMERS, ATTENTION! NEW ACCOUNTS OPEN TODAY,\nIfLAan.  THURSDAY! CHARGE TODAY PAY BY DECEMBER 10th.\nk\nMEN'S OVERCOATS\n* 13-95\nMen here's your opportunity to get that new overcoat at dollars less\nthan you would expect to pay. Extraordinarily good value in 100 per\ncent all wool materials. Choose from up-to-the-minute models for\nboth men and young men. Sizes 35 to 44.    \t\nfflftt\n\u00ab(ill\nw\n-Main Floor HBC\nWORSTED and TWEED SUITS\nAll wool dark worsteds and tweeds expertly tailored in smart young\nmen's and conservative models. Sizes 36 to 44. Buy your new Winter\nsuit at this sale and save money    \t\n* 1J-95\nPurchase Your Suit or Overcoat on Our Budget Payment Plan!\n-Main Floor HBC\nMEN'S WORK SHIRTS\nFlannels in biscuit colors. Smartly tailored and full cut.\nTwo breast pockets. Sizes 14V_ to I7V_.\nEACH  \t\n$195\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nMEN'S SHIRTS AND DRAWERS\nPENMAN'S MEDIUM WEIGHT\nA very popular garment for the man who wants warmth\nwithout excessive weight. Plum shade. Sizes ft C.,\n-Main' Floor HBC\n34 to 44. PRICED AT\nAll Wool Fancy Socks\nEvery pair perfect and made from\nthe finest quality yarns. Smart new\n'shades for fall  and winter'wear.\nSizes 10 to 11 V_. JO_,\nPAIR  40C\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nHarvest Sale Specials for Boys\nALL WOOL PULLOVERS  97***\nWOOL MACKINAW BREECHES   $1.95\nLEATHER MITTS\u2014Wool lined. Pair  501\nCOMBINATIONS   95**\n-Main Floor HBC\nMEN'S WINTER UNDERWEAR\nHeavy combinations for the out-of-doors man.  Knit\nheavy rib stitch. Long sleeves and ankle length.\nA shop early special. Sizes 36 to 44. SUIT ...\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\n$1.95\nAU Wool Work Socks\nA good weight sock for winter. 3-lb.\nweight to the dozen. Crey with\nwhite reinforced heels and toes. Red\ntops. Q7.\n3 PAIRS -\"*'\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nMen's Fur Felt Hats\nNew felts for fall and winter. Dark\nbrowns, greys and in the latest\nstyles with snap brims, djl \"7F\nSizes 67\/s to 73\/s. EACH ..\u00bb)*\u2022\u2022\u00ab'\ni \u2014Main Floor H B C\nHarvest Sale of\nWOMEN'S SHOES   .\n$1-77  __t_^F\n30 Pairs Only. Regular $5.00 Pair\nA group of short liftes of our regular $500 shoes attractively\npriced. We can only promise all sizes in the lot and not in any\none line, but this value should be investigated. PAIR\t\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nBOYS' BLACK OXFORDS\nDressy black oxfords for boys. Strong enough for even\nschool wear. Sturdy sewn soles and slip soles. Rubber heels.\nSizes 1 to5V_.\nPAIR\t\n\u2014Main Flor-.r HBC\nSmall Children's Oxfords\nBlack side or patent leather uppers, leather soles and rubber\nheels. These shoes sell regularly at $1.49 pair. (1 AA\nSizes 5 to 7 V_. SPECIAL, PAIR $1.UU\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nHARVEST SALE of FLANNELETTE SHEETS\nThese are the medium size, 66 by 76 inches.   Finest heavy quality.   Can be used for double\nbeds.   Grey or white with blue or pink borders.   Limit of 4.   EACH   ._\nNo Phone or C.O.D. Orders Please\n\u2014Second  Floor HBC\n$1-00\nCHECK TEA TOWELING\nA good drying quality in 20-inch widths. Creen, orchid\nor red crossbar on cream ground. 1Q\nYARD         IOC.\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nRAG RUGS\nAt a Bargain Price\nThese useful scatter rugs are here in two sizes. Panel\nborders of green, rose, blue or gold.\nSize 27x54. <M AA     Size 30x60. <M OP\n\u20148econd Floor HBC\nEACH\nEnglish Floor Covering\n10 pieces heavy grade felt base floor covering. The designs\nare suitable for living room or bedroom. Regularly sold\nat 49c square yard, All 6 feet wide. QQ\/\u00bb\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nSQUARE YARD\nIroning Board Pad and Cover Sets\nRenew your ironing board and make your ironing easier.\nReal hair felt pad with strong tace-on cover. C7\u00ab\nSET    df C\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nWindow Blinds\nThe following standard quality\nwindow blinds will fill most ol\nyour needs. Cream or green.\n36 inches by 5 feet.\nEACH\t\n36 inches by 6 feet,\nEACH  \t\n\u2014Second  Floor  HBC\n69c\n89c\nCup and Saucer\nSpecial\nVery unusual value. Fine quality English bone china in smart\nnew decorations. Just put into\nstock to be sold at a bargain\nprice. Regular 29c value. JQfj\nCup nnd saucer  *_,r\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nSale of Hemstiched\nSHEETS\nThese good quality Wabasso sheets ordinarily sell at $2.95\na pair.-Some have slight imperfections and were bought\nat a big saving which is passed on to you. Size\n70x90. EACH  \t\n\u20148econd Floor HBC\n$1.00\nNOVELTY HEM PILLOW SLIPS\nAttractive Italian hems on a good wearing cotton, A splendid slip for general\nuse. Size 42 inches.\nEACH\n29'\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nPURE SILK LINGERIE CREPE\nThe gift season is just around the corner. Get a supply of this beautiful silk crepe at this\nlow price for lingerie, pyjamas and nightgowns. Fancy work, etc. All the mg te\ndainty pastel shades. 39 inches wide. Regular value 85c yard. aW \"  i C\nYARD           _W \u00a3\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nPRINTED TRAVEL TWEEDS\nNew patterns and new values in this favorite weave. Small checks, mottled\neffects and novelties. Makes beautiful tailored dresses at little cost. 38 inches |\nwide. YARD\t\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\n69'\nBuy your fur trimmed coat during our Harvest Sale and save dollars! Garments well\nfitted, warmly lined and interlined. Cofors,\nblack, brown, navy\ngreen and wine. \u00a3 <\u00a3 0f AA\nSizes 14 to 44. 9 ][ %\u2022\u00ab\u00ab\nPRICED \u2014t-#\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nPurchase Your Fall Ensemble en Our Budget\nPayment Plan!\nNew FaU\nFROCKS\nfor Daytime Wear\nHere is a group of smart attractive styles to suit\nmatron and miss. Tunic, peplums, princess styles\nto choose from. Rough crepes and heavy sheers in\nmaterials. Purchase your better \u00a3\nafternoon frock at a saving! Sizes \u25bc\n14 to 44. EACH\t\n\u20148econd Floor HBC\n\u00a3.69\nLADIES' FELT HATS\nm LOW PRICED!\nSelect your every day hat from this large assortment in many attractive styles. Black, navy,\nbrown, wine and green. ^1 <)A\nEACH    .J)1.-_J\n\u2014Second Flo r HBC\nSale of Home-Frocks\nJust arrived in time for our Harvest Sale. A\nwonderful new selection of dresses in smart new\nprinted ginghams. Sizes 14 to 52.\nEach 91.00     2 for ...  . $1.77\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nDolly Dimple\nDresses\nFOR CHILDREN\nMade from pure wool\njersey. Finished with\nnovelty contrasting\ntrims. Colors of navy and\nred. Sizes 2 to ffl 1Q\n6 years. EACH 4)1.13\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nGirls'Tweed\nCoats\nAll with attractive fur\ncollars. Cood assortment\nof styles. Fully lined and\ninterlined. Sizes 8 to 14\nyears.\nEACH .,\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\n$6.59\nTwo\nOutstanding\nValues\nFLANNELETTE GOWNS \u2014\nwith short sleeves. Sizes medium and large. EO-A\nEach  -WV\nFLANNELETTE PYJAMA8\u2014\nIn 2 piece styles. Small, medium and large sizes. <*_\u00ab  to\nEach  9*-*y\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nLADIES! Look at This tor Value\nPure Silk Crepe\nand Semi-Service\nHOSIERY\nnot only\n'i ties. Perfi\n49\naln Floor\nFIRST QUALITY\nHOSIERY\nHere is a group of stockings that you will buy not only for\ntheir low price but also for their excellent qualities. Perfect\nand ringless. Neat fitting at ankles and roomy ___ ^>_._\u00bb\nat the garter welt. In every seasonal shade. Sizes \"~ ____-*\"\n8V_ to lOVi. PAIR \t\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nFull-fashioned perfect hose in both semi-service and chiffon\nweight. Absolutely flawless and guaranteed to give satisfactory wear. Chiffon are silk from top to toe and the semi-\nservice have a fine lisle garter welt. Gunmetal\nLondon mist,  rifle,  moondusk,  trotteur,  cafe\nclaire, tailleurbrown, and smoketone. PAIR\n-Main Floer H SC\niu  trie sem\n69\nLadies, Buy Your Winter Gloves Now\n59c\nPlain fabric in both pull-on and button wrist styles. Suede finish gloves.\nfleece lined in both styles or heavy double silk. All three styles in black\nbrown and grey. PAIR\t\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nfytfcaiftl^ttt (IflmjwttE.l\nKIDDIES1 FABRIC AMD WOOLEN\nGLOVES\n.NCOUPQRATED\n2-J?  MAV 1670.\n\u25a0M\nCood quality fabric with novelty cuff or fine wool with\ncontrasting cuff trim. In fawn and brown\nshades only. Sizes 1, 4 and 7.\nPAIR   \t\n\u2014Main Floor H 11 C>\n59\n^3\n hfrWfr\n11 FOUR-\nORSWILL IS AGMN PRESIDENT\nNEISON HOCKEY ASSOCIATION;\nWILL SEER MORE TIME ON ICE\n-NELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER 29, 1938-\njProposal Cut Loose\nIntermediates Is\nNot Acted on\n.Y USE AITKEN\nCOACH JUNIORS\nDevelop Players;\nAwaiting Terms\nfor Arena\nOfficers ol the Nelaon Amateur\n[oekey association, elected at this\noily:: annual meeting at the city\nall Wednesday night are:\n'Honorary president \u2014 W. K.\nbirk.\npresident\u2014A. T. HDHrwill.\nBrat vice-president-Albert Wal-\nicn. ____\nSecond vice-president\u2014Fritz Far-\nnhoSz.\nSecWtary-treaaurer\u2014To be ap-\niointe\\i by the executive, the office\nratably being divided.\nRetiring Secretary Reg Taylor rented .receipts last season amount-\nIt to ;V1_-.31, of which a balance\nf: *rro.B9 remained.\nIK) JOB GET TIME\nIh: his seport President Horswill\nUted it had been \"a big job to get\nlaying tiirre last season,\" but play-\nrat in Nelson had enjoyed a great\nad more hockey and under bet-\ntt conditions than ever before. The\njoociatitii should take steps to\nmrent recurrence of the member-\nlipMrive fiasco, lie urged.\nXhttpresident had heardsome talk\nEspoosorsbip Of, teams. He felt ex-\netvjlituVe of enargy and-cash in. thia\ntaction* would.be expended to bet*\naadvai'*age in. assisting rep teams,\nponsorshw tended to concentrate\nW best i jayera. in one team, and\nm felt no thing; should be permit-\ned to interfere with other teams\nBt the general strength of the\nmm. ,   ,.\nMr. HorswuT paid tribute to hu\nmnmiltees of last season and urged.\nh\u00abt care be titken in selecting retirees to instruct them' check \"every-\nhing not accoirUng tl) Hoyle.\"\nIn contacting Denis StDenis to\nlad out what the probable line-\nip would be at til- civic centre\nirena this winter ha had been in-\nlormcd it would be tjie same as last\nims- except that V\\ memberships\nvoilld not inolude sjtalting privileges,\ntanugli the S tickqts would, the\nmmmission's aim was to* give\nroungsters all the sSditing available,\nCBls was ot course not official, aa'\nItt. Questioned' later., he said the\nusociaiion could not deal with this\nluestisBi until adivsed by the civic\n.-cnlic commission.\n(WAN* MORE TIME\n\"Wei want still mare time on the\nice;\" he added, and .urged that tlw\nIBOci-atcvn do its bi-st to provide\ngood hockey and if possible to get\njames w_th outside teams.\n\"If you put your shoulder to lile\nWheel tlie public will come to see\nyour --arses.\" he Siiid, giving box\nlacrosse **$ an instance.\nMr. Horswill had received the\nsuggestion, and passed it on. that the\nassociation confine its activties in\nfuture to junior, ju-JBnile, bantam\nmill midget ranks, the divisions recognized throughout Canada, and\nleave the oldar players to form their\nown league. The latter were playing \"for fun\" in any caae. Under\nsuch an arrangement, it had been\nproposed, the services ctf Pat Aitken,\nsenior coach, would be available fbr\nthe juniors as a means of bringing\nplayers along.\nThe proposal gave nae to a short\ndiscussion during whicli it was stated a number of juniors were signed\n'with the intermediate teams. No\nsteps were taken (or action on the\nlines suggested.\nFat Aitken spoke bristly on tho\nquestion, offering the opinion il\nwould be as well to conform to\nC. A. II. A. practice on ranking\nplayers.\nTO BUY  MEDALS\nAlex Ioanin, asking what it lind\nbeen intended, to db with the balance from last season, was informed\nit had been decided, to buy medals\ntor the title teams, and Alderman\nN. C. Stibbs, a member ot the committee charged with purchasing\nthem, stated they would Ite ord-Tedi\nsoon.\nMr. Ioanin, supported by James\nStingrose, also- propoee-d that in future in dealing wilh protests the\nabdicating commit** arWuM not\ninclude the principals concerned in\nthe protest Tney **\u00bb. it would1 Bo-\nfairer if, who. a urate\"** waa enlaced in one division at tins aaaanV\nt-on,. tile other- section** should, rata\non it They wenst infoimed. that, at*\nany time a protaat decision wa\u00ab,not\nsatisfaetony it aould: bo. appealed to\nthe league executive. Nt> action was\ntaken.\nYear Ago Nelson\nin Winter's Grip\nSix Inches of Snow\nHere; Orchards\nDamaged\nOne year ago Nelson was In the.\ngrip of winter, though after a week\nor so the grip relaxed and Indian\nsummer reappeared.\nNelson's first snowfall in the fall\nof 1935 was on Oct-mar 21,. but It\ndisappeared after whitening* the\nsidewalks.\nBut on October 28,. afHnc a preliminary flurry the evening, Before, rain in the morning: was. sn-**\ncB-ded by a snowstorm dr?ven by\na- 37-mile an hour gale, and six\ninches.ofsnow fell Bare, with a Bar*\ncruat forming ln the late afternoon,\nand tlie temperature down to 27\ndegreet. by 5 o'clock.\nCAR SNOWED IN\nCrowsnest had. ID inches of snow,\nwith the mercury onftp J above\nzero, Cranbrook had a Slot of snow,\nQueens Bay had eight inches, and\nFarron. six inches. A telephone lineman in a car was snowed In near\nBalfour,, and telephone and power\nservices were interrupted*. Trail had-\nonly sleet, but cars from Hossland\nhad a, three-inch covering ot snow.\nDuring the following night the\ntempemtura was killing to all vegetation, and the week, of hard winter\nthat followed saw skating on outdoor rinks, while the winter killing of trees that was widespread'\nthrough ths district was. credited to\nthis early freeze, which caught torn\nstill clothed with, leaves.\nWednesday's sunning weather\ngave no hint of a repetition of the\nwintry snap ol one year previous.\nBest She Ever Used For\nCOUGHS\nNo wend-rr Mrt. VkUktnhtw, Pert\nArthur, Out. hit\" Burkfty'i Mhture (triple\nim*tint) t\u00ab the beet cw-fh *\u00ab_.\u20ac_\u00bb \u25a0__* ner\nwed.  Shaft wvttMt \"Job. thii wnk ley _M\u00ab-\nN-r canfht a vry ie\u00abert c\u00abM_  1 (\u25a0\" bim\n\u2022 -toi-M er Bittkl\u00abry> mi in thc ronrnin-r he\nww M rreettjr tmprovtd that h* wm up and\n', riktvl Ha work aa asaal.\"\nIt ll thia quick, \u25a0ore relief that makes\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTUKH so HUMr. Often\ntha most stuhburu racr-ln* couch quickly\nyfcrldh to iti powerful influence. And _rou\nmn mann when you bur BUCICLKT'S\n(tripta. acUov).  Yob can get it everywhere.\nTRAIL BOWLING\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 28,\u2014Trait limes\nwon three straight games from Bank\nof Montreal and Union. Hotel won\ntwo of three from Cherry Pickers\nin Trail Bowling league competition\nat Memorial ball Wednesday night\nCbmpany Store defeated Ad'-ITews\nin two ot three games that were\nscheduled for Friday night, bul\nplayed in advance on arrangement\nof the teams. Teams and scores\nfollow:\nTrail Times\u2014\nM. Cummings   18* 17. 175\u2014 530.\nJ. Thorndale  152 171 203\u2014 526\nL.Eustis   136 215 151- 303\nD. Balfour  132 Ml 13*- -4T\nTotals      623 719 665-2008\nBank of Montreal\u2014\nH. Woodford ..... .. llfl   96 128\u2014 3_5\nD. Godwin  139 161 131\u2014431\nL. Marrs 138 136 186\u2014 460\nJ. Boyce  115 145 KB\u2014 421\nSpot.    50   50   30- 150\nTotals   591 597 65J-1804\nCherry Pickers\u2014\nF. Graham     ... 181) tag Itt- 533.\nW. Morrice        ... l\u00abT 147 IK- 4M\nG. Mactinelli .    . 17. IM 19\u00bb~ 501\nG..Graham 130 179 177- 473\nTotals       943 667 668\u20141978\nUnion Hotel\u2014\nL. POstUl  179 170 170\u2014 51ft\nT. Jones  158 IM 1W\u2014 426\nC. Blot _  182 174 164\u2014 4BQ\nB. Molisky  168 173 179\u2014 517\nWater Drops a\nlaae.Olrao*\nDropping a. bare .01 foot, during\nthe 24; hours ending Wedojudty afternoon at ft o'oloclfc, tin Wast Ami.\nat that.hour, stood at U7 fon* above\nthe low water, mark, by the old:\nLaunch club gauge.\nWater fens to\n\u00bbw*^t*---'_\u00bb  \u00bb*\u00bba-\u00ab a-a>\nHOME MODERNIZATION LOANS ARE\nAMAKE, CANADA, NOVEMBER t.\nFlashes From the Wires\n;G_i\u00ab<\u20acfftr_weiriit Promises,\nto Protect Banks\niirr New Sckwim\nSUISTeONNAlItt\nIS A RIGID ONE\nfa Cheapftt to Tlnem\nTrJism th* Amniual\nRental. Plan\nUhder. Nelson's .new water rates\nbylaw, finally adopted, at an adjourned session ot tho city council\nWednesday night, file maters, to be\nInstalled, for quantify users wii 11 be\npaid for by the. customer, big thc\ncity will do the In-falling without\ncost; and will assume thc responsibility for maintenanile.\nThis- plan dlffei-s from the almost\nuniversal practice, in metered cities,\nwhich Is to have the city pay for\n(lie meter hut charge a. rental for\nit. While- the practice avoids, any\ninvestiment' by the- cuatauner, in the\nlong, tuna, he pays in theso annual\nrentals- several timea the cost of\nCOUNCIL  UNANIMOUS\nAfter a lengthy, debate, tha council unanimously decida* tn require\nthe customers to pay for the meters\nat the start, after which they would\nb\u00bb at no further east for them, the\ncity doing, the installing, and' accepting all further responsibility.\nThe %-itrch meters* cost $1T,50,\nthe Inch meters 527.GO, tha -ii-inch\n\u00ab0, and tho H.-inch $77.30.\nMeter- rates for domestic, manu-\nftcturinr and businaos services are\nset forth in the new bylaw, which,\nalso Incorporates tha flat rates for\ndomestic users, and the general\nwater sBEvhra. regulatios-*. from the\nold\" bylaw.\nLoans for From Qr\u00bbt to\nThree Years Will\nite Available\nBishop Johnson\nVisits Rossland\nIWost Bev. Martin Ml Johnson,\nbishop of Nelson, left Tuesday for\nHossland, to visit the Catholic parishes of- Rossland and Trail.\nHeaddresses and hair ornaments\nare very Important this season.\nFlowers are being worn in coronet\nor tiara outline, as well as feathers; little birds and individual jewelry pieces. *\n[ Home modernization loam under\nI government sponsorship arc to ha\navailable almost at one* in mair\njarts of Canada says the Financial\nHost.\nBeginning with Windsor where\nbankers and1 officials et tha federal\ndepartment of tinanue have already\nagreed; upon a plan, house owners\nwill be able to secure loens of from\none to 3 yeans duration, up to $2000\nan each propurty, ami at an interest\nmte o\u00a3 only, slightly over 6 per cent.\nWindsor loans have already started\nand other centers ar* expected to\nBarti-ajTr-lia.froin Nov. fc'\nGOVERNtMENT\n6IVES GUARANTEE\nThe- government will, guarantee\nthe banks against losses up te 15%\non a total of loans up- to $59 millions. The guarantee cannot be\navailable be_pre parliamentary approval, Such approval, of course,\nwill not be forthcoming ur_ta tha\nnext session at Ottawa and this\nwould nave meant a delay until at\nleast December and mora likely\nJanuary. Arrangements therefore\nhave been worked out whereby the\nbanHa.wUlcarit*- the. lull tisk. in the\nmeantime, and, the coming legislation, will be made retroactive.\nOriginally tha interest rate mentioned was in the neighborhood of\n10% but as a result ot recent negotiations between. Ottawa officials and\nthe Canadian Bankers' association\nthe rate was substantially reduced.\nThis reduction is. expected to stitnu-\nlte interest In the scheme as il\nbrings interest an a par with ordinary commercial loans and to leas\nthan halt the uatal rate of installment buying.\nIt was also suggested at first that\nthe maximum, dura-ion of lhe loan\nbe 3 years, but the authorities, apparently have come to thc conclu\nsion ttat such a long period waa un-\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWSGPTRAIL\nTina column ia. in change of Mrs. Glenn Quayle of Trail AU\n\u2022vents at ft social nature- at interest in Trail and Tadanac will appear\nin this column. Mra. Hu-yla wilt be glad io have any suett u*ws\ntelephoned to her at her hom\u00bb in trail.\nSpot\nTotals \t\nAd Newt\u2014\nT. Hall \t\nG. Fawcett \t\nD. Dallas\t\nA. Hall\t\nTotals \t\nCompany Store\u2014\nT. Alty \t\nF. Graham \t\nJ. Merlo\t\nA. Coverdale\t\nSpot    \t\nTotali     \t\n7    7    7-  Jl\n663 684 617-2064\n188 172 171- 331\n146 Itt 14ft- 438\n148 143 173- 4H\n153 18. 123\u2014 443\n635 632 613-1880\n127 139 UK\u2014 41J\n151 161 172\u2014 483\n156 174 18\u00bb- 49\u00bb\n139 134 174\u2014 437\n35. 31 33- 109\n398 639 707-1941\n'Buy the Best1\nCROW'S NEST\nPASS COAL\nGives LiiilJijLlJllilijjTon\nMINED IN B. C. AT MICHEL AND COAL CREEK\nWest Transfer Co.\nAtOMPT SERVICE Agents TELEPHONE 33\nm\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 28.-Anglicani\nTOung People's association, in considerable number, attended a social;\nevening- tendered them by members\nof Excelsior club of Knex United\nchurch, the gathering being held in\nthe church hall, A program oC\ngames, contests and music was enjoyed, after which refreshments\nwere served. FenneU LeFlnffy\npresided at the- piano.\n_\u2022  \u2022. \u00ab\nMra. John Brothers, Hanna Bench,\nwas admitted to Trail-Tadanac hospital Wednesday morning.\n.   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Bertha Whitehead hae latt\nfor Spokane where she will spend\na few days.\nMr. and Mrs. T. H. Ollis of Trail\nannounce the engagement of their\nonly daughter, Bdltb. Kemball Bil-\nson, to Harold John Foster of Vancouver, only son ot Mr. and Mrs.\nW. B. Faster ot Kelowna, the wedding to b\u00ab solemnized in St. Andrew's Anglican church, November\n21. Mr. Foster formerly resided in\nTrail where, he waa employed in a\nbank and left here tec a few years\nto reside at the coast\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMisa Joy Kemp and Misa Nina\nKemp entertained members ot \"B.*\nbranch auxiliary to St. Andrew's\nchurch at a meeting bald at their\nhome. Concluding a business session, the hostesses served refreshments.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Harry Mathews Is a patient\nin Trail-Tadanac hospital.\n\u00bb   \u00bb   \u2022\nW. Nyberg was a visitor to Fruitvale Wedneiday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nHossland, securing 191 flags and\nplayed by Mrs. Arthur Sherman.\nMrs. W. Marsh. Mrs. T. Marsh and\nT. Negus, captured firat priies at\nthe military whist drive given Tuesday evening in Elks* hall, Ladles of\nthe Boyal Purple entertaining. Mrs.\nWilliam Simpson. Mrs. 1. Koehle.\nMis. J. Moon and George Webster,\nplaying for Trail and securing only\n68 flags, received consolation\nawards. W. Aitken. was master of\nceremonies, dancing concluding the\nevent.\n\u2022 \u2022. \u2022\nMisa Martha Schwartzenhauer at\nRossland was visiting friends In\nTrail Wednesday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. M- W. Lees, Pine avenue, entertained about 160 guests Tuesday\nwhen between the hours ef 3 and 5\nin the afternoon and 7 and 0 In the\nevening she welcomed them to her\nnew home, tha parsonage ot Knox\nUnited church. Assisting in receiving in the afternoon was Mrs. William H. Morton, with Mm B. A.\nStimmel, Mrs. W. J. Wagstaffe and\nMrs. J. B. Thorn sharing tbe honors\nin tho evening. Pink and white\ncanu-fons centered the serving\ntajpe, Mrs. T. T. Culleo, Mn. W. C.\nMacKenzie, Mrs. Herbert Clark and\nMrs. W. A. Coghlin presiding at the\nurns in the afternoon, and in the\nevening these same duties, were performed har Mrs. William C. Aston,\nMrs. David Chalmers, Mrs. Frank\nWilby and Mrs. E. Rowlands. During the afternoon guests were shown\nthrough the new home by Mre.\nFrank B. Moran, and in tbe evening\nby Mrs. Lees.\n.   *  *\nMrs. D. J. Teek, who leaves shortly for Cloverdale where ahe will\ntake up residence, was guest of honor at. a handkerchief shower, Mrs.\nArneia Lauriente entertaining. Mrs.\nA. Marchiori and Mrs. O. Pasquill\nwere winners of prize- at cards, the\nfeatured entertainment, Mrs. Marchiori. again winning an award In a\ncontest. Mts. A. B. Cottrell and Mrs.\nGeorge Hill assisted the hostess in\nserving*.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMisa Lucia Whitehead and her sis-\nlev. Joyce, were visitors in the city\nSunday from Taghum. They motored to the city arith Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Leaf who visited relatives during the week-end.\n\u2022 \u00ab     9\nMrs. G. B. Thompson, who has\nbeen spending the summer at the\ncoast has returned to Trail.\n\u2022 _  \u2022\nMrs. T. H. Ollis and daughter,\nMiss Edith Ollis ara visitors to\nSpokane for a few days.\n\u2022 *   *\nL. F. Johnson, who has been\non a vacation for the past two weeks\nat the coast has returned to TraiL\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMembers of the C. M. & S. Glee\nparty motored Wedensday evening\nto South Slocan where they entertained with a musical program\nof choir selections, and other numbers.\n\u2022 \u2022      0\nMr. and Mrs. Dave Magee of\nRobton were visitors ta Trail Tuesday evening.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. C. F. Morris, who has been\nspending u vacation with friends in\nTrail has returned to her homc at\nVletorla.\nMarion Stewart, celebrat'ng her\nthird birthday anniversary, was\nguest of honor Tuesday al a delightful children's party when her\nmother, Mrs. G. Stewart, entertained. Yellow waa the color used in\ndecorating, tha table being centered\nby an ornamented cake lighted by-\nthree yellow candles and by yellow\nchrysanthemums. All appointments\nand favors were carried out. In the\nsame shade. Assisting the hostess in\nserving were Mrs. William Young\nand Mrs. David Stewart, The guests\nwere Jacqueline Thompson, Mar-\njorit Thompson, Margaret Held,\nJune Black. Lorraine Black, Jaque-\nllne Jonea, Reta Black, Morris Black,\nBarbara Naples, Betty Burke, Tommy Young, Sonny Lenhart and David Stewart -* *\nBANK* TO BE CAUTIOUS\nIt is believed ttat tankers, who\nafter- all ate responsible ter 88%\not the peuactpal involved in each\ntransaction, will have to exercise\nconstderafate caution. No security\nbeyond the borrower's own character will ta possible because many\nof the loans will be made tor such\nnon-secured investment* aa painting or other decorating or equipment er enlargements te residences\nalready mortgaged. Under the circumstances it is believed the $30 mil-\nUnas contemplated tor such loans\nduring the coming year will be\nmore than ample to handle actual\nbusiness resulting.\nAs explained In previous issues\not The Financial Pest, any tame\nowner in geed steading will ta able\nto walk Into the local bank and\nmake arrangements for a loan up\nto $2000 tor Improving: his property.\nIt will ta repayable on a monthly\nbasis. If tbe applicant is the. owner\not several houses, then severs- loans\nwill be possible. Naturally It is expected the banks will make sure\nthat the money is to be well spent\nand the improvement contemplated,\nis in keeping with the existing\ninvestment.\nQUESTIONS FOR\nAPPLICANTS\nWhile no endorsements or collateral ara necessary and the scheme\nis stated to be free of red tape, the\napplication forms ter loans now being distributed l.ave few loopholes\nfor the applicant looking for easy\nmoney. The form calls for fullest in-\ntormatioa regarding: existing obligations against the property on\nwhich the improvements are proposed.\nThe lenders apparently are interested in knowing whether there Is\nany mortgages, though provided it\nis in good standing, such an. obligation, it ls staled, will not. be. considered detrimental. Thoy are also\ninterested in knowing whether\ntaxes and insurance have been\npaid up and whether the applicant\nis in serious debt regarding other\nloans. They want ta know about his\nemployment record over the last 3\nyears. Particulars regarding the Improvements planned, costs, contractors, etc, are requested and a signed\nstatement to the effect ttat the\nmoney to be borrowed will be spent\nan such Improvements,\nArrangements have been made te\nensure that there will be no increase\nh. the asseswnent ot any property\nimproved. The scheme tat been developed by the National Employment commission under the chairmanship Of Arthur Purvb, Canadian industrialist, with the main\nidea of providing mote work. Mr-\nPurvis points, out that on the modernization jobs contemplated a large\npart at the expenditure will go\ndirectly tote wages. Construction\nresulting, according to Ml. Purvis\nshould in. turn generate much sup-\npleuientary activity.\nSo far the plan only embraces\nhome, modernization with any permanent equipment or improvement,\nanything that would go with the\nhouse if sold, eligible for the new\ncheap money. Modernization of\nstores is not yet included, but The\nPost understands that such an extension is being considered and may\nbe drafted into the final legislaUon\nnow being prepared.\nFARMS ARE INCLUDED\nFarm somes are to be Included in\nthe scheme, but not barns, stables\nand other outbuildings. It is understood however, that if there, is any\ngeneral demand from farmers for\nmodernisation loans to cover barn\nand stable equipment would favor\nably consider the request. Such a\nmove would ta of very considerable\ninterest to farm equipment companies.\nAs the legislation now standi,\nbuilding materials, paint and equipment companies stand to benefit di-\nrcctly. hut the. range ot. home improvements is so wide that it would\nbe easier to define those not affected\nthan those that will be. Even sales\not movable equipment like furniture, refrigerators, lighting fixtures,\netc., should be boosted with any general adoption of the permanent\nscheme, because while these things\nare not covered by the new loans,\nany permanent home improvement\nis bound to be followed by new\npurchases of products to go with the\nchange.\nSILVERTON FOLK\nAT SPOKANE\nSILVERTON, B.C.-Mra. H. Dewis\nand son, Seamen, arc spending several days in Spokane.\nMiss Ella Johnson of Trail was\na visiter to her home during the\nweek-end.\nJ. Matheson and H. Dewis were\nvisitors to Sandon Friday.\nG. Kelby ef Trail was a guest of\nhis parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Kelby,\nduring the week-end.\nSeamen Dewis spent Friday in\nNelson, a guest of Mrs. A. Maclntyre.\nMiss Pearson of Trail was s visitor to tqwn during the week-end.\nA. C. C. F. whist drive was held\nIn Uie Miners' Union hall Saturday.\nThere were six tables at play. Prizes\nwere won by Mra C. H. Homer,\nladies' firstLMra. B. Millar, consolation: M. Melby. men's first, and C.\nVandergritt, consolation.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Eggloff of Edge-\nwood were visitors to town Tuesday.\nMrs. W. Munroe and daughter,\nJoyce, hav* returned to their home\nln Trail after spending two weeks\nhere, guests of Mr. and Mrs. J.\nKelby.\nMr, and Mrs, C. Berg were visitors to Sandon Friday.\nII. Dewia was \u2022 business visitor\nto Burton Ssturday.\nMr. and Mrs. T. H. Wilson, Mrs.\nW. Hunter and Mlts Dorothy Hunter were visitors to Nakusp Sunday.\nTOWNSEND LOSES\nVANCOUVra, (CP)-Btllj Town-\nsend, 1371i, tanner holder ot the\nCanadian welterweight crown, lost\na split-decision to Billy Lee, 143,\nPiute Indian ot Keno, Nevada, in\na IB-round main event here.'\nBRITISH LABOR WOULD AID\nMADRID\nIONOON, (CP C\u00bbble)-The La-\ntar party and the Trades Union\ncouncil, In Joint session, decided aid\nshould be given the Spanish government in the civil war with the Fascist insurgents. The decision represented a change tn the stand ot the\nLabor party, which voted at Its\nannual conference early this month\nto support the government in its\nnon-intervention  stand.\nDANCE IN LOFT At MAN\n' KILLED BY HORSE\nWAMNA. Sask., ICP) - While\ndancers celebrated the wedding of\nms niece In a tarn lott, Steve Ly\nstshln, 64, was tripled to death\nby horses tn a stall below. Steve,\nwife noticed his lengthy absence\nand when she went to look for hint,\nshe found, him lying in the stall,\nhis skull fractured and his chest\ncrushed in.\nFAMED JOCKEY DIES\nCOVINGTON,  Ky.,   (API-Mack\nGarner, 36, for years one of the best\nknown Jockeys on the American\nturf, died following a heart attack.\nIOY FOUND AFTER FIVE BAYS\nMISSOUIA Mont., (APJ-pitch-\nstained, hungry and tired, nine-year-\nold Murray Walkup Miller snuggled\nbetween warm hospital blankets\natter tlve days ot wandering in\nwestern Montana's rugged sapphire\nmountains. The youngster was found\nby H. J. Daigle and Charlea Lear,\nforest service employes. He wss suffering from exposure to sub-freezing\ntemperatures and hunger, but, physicians said his condition was not\nserious.\nP.I. PEACE PROPOSAL\nWASHINGTON, (API-Reinstatement ot all striking editorial employees of the Seattle Post-lntelllgencer was called for in a peace proposal advanced by the American\nFederalon of Labor's executive\ncouncil. The proposal was sent to\nthe Seattle Central Labor body, the.\nSeattle Local ot the American Newspaper guild, and the management of\nthe paper.\nSKATING CLUB\nWILL HAVE II\nWEEKS\nOne Week-Night and\nSunday Afternoon\nAre Granted\nHEAR ENVOYS\nBASKETBALL\nWALLACE WINS\nPOWELL BIV-a, BC, (CP>-\nGordon Wallace, Canadian welterweight champion of Vancouver, battled his way to an unanimous 10-\nround decision over Bobby Wood of\nPowell River in the main bout ot\na fight card here. Wallace weighed\n142 and Wood 144. The Canadian\nwelter champ took six of tho rounds\nby wide margins, lost two on low\nblows, Wood took one and tbe other\nround was called a draw.\nURGE BELGIUM QUIT LEAGUE\nBRUSSELS, (API-Belgian Fascist and Flemish Nationalists, opponents of Premier Paul van Zee-\nland's government, demanded Belgium announce Its withdrawal from\nthe League of Nations. Their proposal came atter a speech by Foreign Minister Paul Henry Spaak\nwhich, those groups contended was a\nrecession from the \"neutrality\" policy recently pronounced by King\nLeopold.\nMrs. Herridge 1$\nHakusp Hostess\nAutumn Flowers Used\nin Decoration\nNAKUSP, B.C.\u2014Autumn flowers\ntastefully arranged, were used as\ndecoration when Mrs. N. A- Herridge entertained at the tea hour\nSaturday-\nGuests were Mlse B. McWhirter,\nMrs. M. Barrow. Mrs. J. Parent Jr.,\nMiss N. Harvey, Mrs. M. Bailey,\nMrs. P. Leib of Salmo, Mrs. L. Ott,\nand Miss J. Yurick.\nPYTHIAN SISTERS\nENTERTAIN\nCourt whist vms played at IH\ntables Friday evening when the\nPythian Sisters, Myrtle Temple No.\n16 sponsored, the first ot a series\nOf such affair;:.\nPrties for high acore went to Mrs.\nW. Davis and E. J. Levesque. Consolation prizes were won by Miss N.\nBarmy tad It. Hohenllghtner.\nDancing was In order during the\nlitter part ot the evening. A tpot\ndance was won by Miss Eleanor\nWatson ud Tom Steenhoff.\nIn chaxfa of the evening's events\nwere A. E- Jones and A. Stanley.\nHAS BIRTHDAY PARTY\nMiss Hazel Herridge, who celebrated her twelfth birthday last\nweek was hostess st a delightful\nparty.\nHallowe'en novelties were used\nin the attractive table decoration\nand the games chosen were also appropriate to the season.\nA flower contest was won by\nEileen Leary and Hazel Herridge,\nwhile Georglna Munn and Edith\nHorrey were awarded consolation\nprizes.\nThose present were Misses Irene\nBuerge, Georglna Munn, Eileen\nleary, Vera Jchnton. Edith Horrey.\nClara Salstrom, May Jarbo, Alice\nHumphris, Monica Butlin and Dorothy Herrldge.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Davidson and\nbaby daughter returned Saturday\nfrom Revelstoke where they have\nbeen visiting at the home of Mr\nDavidson's parents.\nC. S. Leary, M.P.P., left Saturday for Ytctorrs..\nMrs. Colgrave, who was a guest\nother son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mra. A. Dunn, left Monday for\nher home tn Edgewood.\nMrs. W. J. Russell of Kamloops\nti a guest ol tar brother and sister-\nin-law, Mr. and, Mrs. Frank Rushton.\n\u2014       -|.ii   }i  -iv   \u25a0'     ;\u25a0\u25a0\nThirty Registered\nfor Trail Hockey\nTotal Players Expected\nto Number 70\nTRAIL. B.C, Oet a..-Ataut 30\nmen hailing from cities and towns\not Canada as tar east as Winnipeg\nregistered at tbe Trail rink Wednesday night with intention to try out\nfor the Junior and senior teams of\nthis dty. The majority were of\nsenior age. About 111 players, ot last\nyear's city Juvenile league were\namong those who signed.\nWith, about 13 of last year's\nSmokeaters and 14 of the Junior\nTigers available, the total list of\nJunior and senior players will number approxi-pately 70-\nIt is expected that Ice will be\navailable about Nov. 8 or 9 when\ncoaches will divide the men into\ngroups and after seeing them In\naction a few times, will pick out\nplayers for four teams, should there\nbe enough material, for the preseason city commercial league\nwhich it Is hoped will get away\nabout Nov. 15. This will give officials about one week to align different squads.\nCommission to Go\nInto Figures\nof Cost\nSeventeen weeks of skating, or\ntwo weeks more than the club had\nlast year, made possible by the\nearlier opening ot the season, will\nbe enjoyed by the Nelson Skating\nclub this winter, according to terms\nadopted by the civic centre commission Tuesday night\nThe dub will have one week-\nnight per week, trom 8 to 10 o'clock,\nwhich one has not yet been determined, and tt will have every Sunday afternoon tor three hours, two\nhours of which will be tor skating\nand one hour to be devoted to instruction in figure skating.\nFinancial arrangements are on tbe\nbasis ot a minimum of 150 members\nat 40 cents per member per week,\nmaking a weekly figure ot M0. For\nthis total the club may have on the\nice up to 17S members, atter which\nit must pay tor additional members\nat the 40 cents per week.\nRobert Peterson and James Cherrington were heard on behalf of tha\nnewly organized Nelson Basketball\nassociation. Inquiring about tha\npossibilities of a deal for tte badminton tall tor tha nights Dot allotted, to badminton. They suggested tbat approximately IIS plsy-\ners might be lined up In tte various\nleagues.\n|t was pointed out by tte commission ttat it would ta necessary for\nit to get Information on tha type\nof equipment required and costs\ninvolved, but It undertook to get\ninto the question and to determine\nat Its next meet;ng which will ta\nheld shortly what arrangemertta\nmight ta made.\nPlan New Pick\nof Wolf Cubs\nWill Be Attach*, to\nNo. 2 Troop of\nBoy Scoutj\nA pack ot Wolf Cubs for Nelton\ntnrop No. - of Boy Scouts is to ta\nlaunched, with the meetings of tha\npack to be held at the Scout hall on\nWednesday nighta at 1 o'clock.\nGeorge Fox being tha naw cubmaster.\nOverloading ot tbe pack attached\nto troop No. 1 is responsible tor\nthis step of expansion, and a couple\nof Wolf Cuba trom the existing\npack will be transferred to the new\none.\nParents Interested in having their,\nboys start as Wolf Cubs are asked to,\ncontact Cubmaster Fox next Wednesday night at the Scout ball, or\nsend their boya, or contact I*. W.\nGill, scoutmaster ot No. 2 troop ot\nBoy Scouts.\n'. i.n... mi 9,' mmmmmmmm\nNow Nash shows Canada\nkwTfyytyndwyziacI<M gut k\n.\n: '\n\u2022\nNEW 1937 MODELS NOW ON DISPLAY!\n<.CoiWusts,t9iitNo,lsA,isbau9e.rSu)\nAgain Naah la a atep ahead\nof the lndustry with bigger\ncars, more luxurious cars\nI nan Canada has ever before\nseen at anywhere near these\nprices. Sea them ... snd\nyou'U get n new conception\nof the JnW of car you can\nafford this year!\nC.\\MPI*.RS! TOURISTS! Vou\ncan turn your Naah car inIo a\nsleeping car. Make a roomy.\nO-foot bed in lesa than 10 .\nminutes. Ask your dealer.\njisss p5 [S5\n1 \u00abi\u00abSwVtlA\u00bb\u00ab\ni thano**\"'.\n,_u-llest aa**\njaHOW*\n-*3**$ta#_E_\nI   P\u00b0*,*'\u00bb._.nr.to\u00bbory\n1 gv&fa*\n*'\n1M0\nM\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb*\nM,otot-A-j*!,,d\u00aba-\nt._-- o\u00bb \u00b0*r\nfa-\"\"'\n\u2122 , , , CONVENIENT LOW\n\u2666All prices Canadian hat, and subject to change without terms THROUGH\nnotice. Special equipment extra. Automatic Cruising     roc. i   i   , ,\nGear available on all models at alight extra cost.\nC._.c. BUDGET\nPAYMENT PUN\nNILSON. TRAIL ANO\nROSSLAND   DEALERS\nKOOTENAY MOTORS (NELSON) LTQ.A CTftS.^\n\u25a0\u2022i-i'li' .-j'.,.')li_-iL-Uil-^^ ''   \"\"   ' ' .i     \u2014',\n\u25a0\n i-aftl\n-'it * i*r\u00abii>i **iffi*i-\u00bb.riiti.-<ii\nQUAKER OATS.rich in Natures Vitai\n\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWI, NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 29. 1MB\nPEACE RIVER GREAT COUNTRY\nBUT NELSON VISITOR PREFERS\nTO WINTER IN WARMER CLIME\nHeavy Wheat Yield in\nPast Season Says\nJimCline\n\"It's not like you ittt ibout, but\nonce you go into the Peace River\ncountry you always want to go\nback,\" declared Jim CHne, slapping\nott at Nelion on bli way to the \"0tit\nto ipend the winter. He's not fussy\nIbout Peace winters, stating \"it\nwent to 75 below there last year, and\nona winter to 84 below.\"\nJim's family ls {arming foui and\nif   i  11. i '    , i.  ,     . \u2014 ,\u25a0\u25a0 wes\nBABY* OWN SOAP\nLeaders in\nFootfashion\nEnjoy Your\nDancing Season\nANDREW'S\nEvening Slippers\n$4.50\"\u00bb$6.00\nFOR GALA NIGHTS\nCold or silver kid slippers have\nthe right glamour. Crepe sandals,\ndyed to match, all styles.\nR* Andrew\n& Company\nPhone 533\nOur New\nChristmas\n.Cards  .\nHave Arrived\nNothing shows such premeditated warmth of feeling and sincerity, so much\nstudied regard for a personal greeting with all the season's betokens as to have\nChristmas cards bear a personal message with your individual name specially\nprinted thereon. Let us perform this good-will message for you.\nOur cards are sold in lots of TWO DOZEN ONLY. They are\nNew, Smart, Inexpensive and Exclusive. Priced From\u2014\n$1.75, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 Up to $4.50\nWRITE FOR SAMPLES\nIf in town, PHONE 144, and have eur local representative,\nMlu Margaret Arthur call upon you personally.\nNelson Daily News\nCommercial Printing Dept.\nBaker Street Nelion, B. C.\na halt miles trom the end ot steel,\nIn Hines Creek neighborhood.\nApparently the past season wu\na great one for that country. Wheat\ncropi were heavy, running 30 to\n10 bushels to the acre and grading\nmostly No. 2. There was a considerable quantity o{ No. 1 wheat but\nwet weather caused a good deal\not what would have graded No. 1\nto be tough and it was consequently\ngraded lower. Jim believed many\not the farmers would obtain about\n$l a bushel.\nThey also expect, he said, to get\nabout $1 a bushel for seed oils, the\nPeace having almost the only supply\nof seed oats in the far west\n\"I've seen the oats so high a six-\nfoot man could walk around in them\nand not be seen,\" Jim said, \"and in\nplaces they've run 75 bushels to the\naore.\"\nBut the Peace Is no country to\ngo into unless one has a good \"outfit\", for it's hard to get established,\naccording to Cline. A person going\nln with little money could probably\n\u2022'get by\" but he'd find it hard going.\nHe added that a large number of\nfarmers from the dried-out prairie\nareas were locating in the Peace\ncountry.\nQuestioned regarding game, JUn\nreplied: \"There's lots ot it\u2014moose\nand deer and a few bear. I've seen\nthe deer and moose, when the snow\ngets deep In winter, come right into\nthe farmyards for feed. I've seen\nmoose eating in a corral. They come\nta quite often to the straw stacks.\"\nHarvesters this year in Jim's\nneighborhood received S3 a day for\nstooking and $3.50 for threshing,\nhe added.\nCentral Institute\nMeets Next Week\nSemi-annual convention of the\nWest Kootenay Central Farmers Institute has been called for November i at Nelson, according to notices sent out by Secretary Kenneth Wallace of Boswell. The sessions will open In the dty hall at\n10 a.m.\nReturns to Alberto\nFrom Harrop\nHARROP, B.C.-MI_\u00bb Ethel Murphy returned Saturday to her home\nat Cowley, Alta., after spending\nseveral months with her brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. L.\nPeel.\nMr. and Mrs. W. D. Ogllvie spent\nthe week-end with friends and relatives at Trail.\nMiss Jessie Harrop spent Sunday\nwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E.\nHarrop.\nW. H. Foster of Nelson was a\nHarrop visitor Saturday.\nJ. Turner-Lee, fruit inspector, was\nin Harrop Sunday.\nMedicos have recently\nformula for removing ad\npainlessly.\nicrfected a\nlesive tape\nHOW OFTEN\nCAN YOU KISS AND\nMAKE UP?\nTjiEW husbands can understand\n* why a wife should turn from a\npleasant companion into a shrew tor\na whole week In every month.\nYou can say \"I'm sorry\" and kiss\nand make up easier before marriage\nthan after. If you're wise and if you\nwant to hold your husband, you\nwont be a three-quarter wife.\nFor three generations one woman\nhas told another how to go \"smiling\nthrough\" with Lydla E. Plnkham's\nVegetable Compound. It helps Nature tone up the system, thus less-\nefilng the discomforts from the\nfunctional disorders which women\nmust endure in the three ordeals ot\nlile: I. Turning from girlhood to\nwomanhood. 2, Preparing for motherhood. 3. Approaching \"middle\nage.\"\nDon't be a three-quarter wife, take\nLYDIA Jt. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND and Go \"Smiling Through.\" \u2022\u2022\u2022\nRats\nyears.\nlive   approximately   three\nWOOD IS HEAD\nOF FIRST AID\nCENTRE, NELSON\nF. B. Pearce opened the meeting\nheld in one ot the Canadian Legion rooms Tuesday evening for\nthe purpose ot forming a first aid\ncentre in Nelion.'*\nW. Wood was elected chairman.\nMr. Pearce wu elected secretary\nand C. O. Anderson, as one member ot the executive committee. It\nwas decided the election ot other\nmemben for this committee would\nbe put off until tbe next meeting,\nwhen it wu hoped more would attend.\nIt wu also decided to set the\nminimum membership at 100 and\nthe secretary wu detailed to have\nmembership cards printed and\nready for the next meeting. A discussion followed u to the division\nof classes and the time and places\nfor the folding of the classes. The\nclasses are to be divided into two\ngroups, a women's group and a\nmen's group, these are to be held\nunder the guidance ot David Rees,\nwho volunteered his services. It\ncould not be ascertained where\nthe classes were to be held and\nit wu decided to ask the cooperation of tbe school board in providing them with one of the spare\nrooms ta the Central school. .\nOther discussions pertaining ta\nmembership fees, grading and arranging ot certificates and any other\nbusiness, wu held over until the\nnext meeting on Tuesday 3.\n\u25a0 .\u2014\u2014-PAGE FIVE .\nIs Fined $12.50 for\nPassing Street Cor\nFor passing a atreet ear which*\nhad stopped to take on or discharge\npasseners, Donald A. McNicol wu\nfined $12.50 by Police Magistrate\nWilliam Brown Tuesday. He plead-1\ned guilty.\nyesterday afternoon on his tint\nbirthday. His cake wu topped with\npink and whit* rosebuds. Guests\nwere Kathleen and Betty Curran\nand Joe and Michael Meagher.\n\u2022  \u2022  *\nMr. and Mrs. E. G. Foster, Railway street, have u their guest,\nMn. Foster'i mother, Mn. C. L,\nBradley of Cranbrook.\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nThis column is conducted by Mrs. M. A. Vigneux. All news ot a\nsocial nature including receptions, private eiit-rlauuuenls. personal\nitems, marriages, etc., will appear in this column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux at her home, 510 Silica street\nZEBRA\nLIQUID en PASTE\nMrs. John Cartmel and Mrs. P.\nG. Morey were joint hostesses at\nbridge Monday afternoon benefiting\nthe I. O. D. E. Welfare fund. Those\nplaying were Mrs. James O'Shea,\nMn. J. B. Bunyun, Mrs. W. M.\nWalker, Mrs. C. W. Appleyard, Mra.\nL. V. Rogers, Mn. E. G. Smyth.\nMrs. F. F. Payne, Mrs. R. L. McBride, Mrs. Leslie Craufurd, Mrs.\nN. Murphy, Miss M. H. Cameron,\nMrs. Morey and Mra. Cartmel.\n...\nR. Baillss of Crawford Bay spent\nyesterday in town.\n\u00ab   *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. George Smith, 716\nThird street, have returned from\nen extended visit to Aberdeen,\nGlasgow and Banff, Scotland.\n* *   \u2022\nW. J. Coo was in town from Calgary yesterday.\n...\nMrs. M. E. Watts, 910 Third\nstreet, had as her guest, her sister-\nin-law, Mrs. M. Kelso ot Vancouver, who is now visiting her\nfather, A. E. Watts, at South Slocan.\n* \u2666   \u2022\nMiss Ada Brown ls at Trail visiting Mr. and Mrs. Neil Derby.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. G. McGregor of\nCrawford Bay visited in town yesterday.\n...\nMiss Florence Moss, who was a\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Long\nfor a week has returned to her\nhome in Silverton.\n...\nMra. William Gray of Salmo was\namong shoppers to Nelson Wednesday.\n...\nJ. E. Miller of Kaslo was a visitor\nto the city.\n...\nRev. J. J. Cheevers of the Slocan\nmissions visited Trail Tuesday.\nMra.  Ivor Jones\nspent  yesterday   ir\nof Bonnington\ntown.\nreturned to the home ot Mr, and\nMrs. C. I. Archibald after spending the week-end at Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nJ. F. (Billy) Bunyan of the Ymlr\nYankee Girl mill hu returned from\nspending a few days at Spokane.\n.      4      *\nMrs. G. H. Taylor, Cedar atreet,\nleft last night for Calgary to spent\na week visiting her mother, Mrs.\nJames Fraier.\n\u2022 *. \u00ab\nC. Derbyshire of Crawford Bay\nvisited town yesterday.\n...\nW. M. Stubbs, who leaves tomorrow with his daughter, Mrs.\nH. H. Pitts, is a guest at the home\not Mr. and Mre. G. B. Matthews,\nEdgewood avenue.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2666\nOn Tuesday Most Rev. M. M.\nJohnson, Bishop of Nelsn visited\nin Trail and Rossland.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. John C. Waldie of\nCastlegar were city shoppers yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nJack Annable and George Dill are\non a hunting trip to the Kootenay\nLanding district.\n...\nD. Henderson of Trail visited town\nyesterday.\n\u2022 *   .\nMrs. Leo Gagnon and her niece,\nMiss Gertrude Bourgeois, who spent\nseveral weeks visiting friends in\nNelson and district have left for\ntheir home at Montreal.\n...\nMrs. Edward Daly has returned\nto her home ta Ymir after visiting her nephew and niece, Mr. and\nMrs. R. R. Brown, Baker street.\n...\nMrs. D. Delbom of Wynndel was\na visitor in town.\n...\nMrs. E. Johnstone and son, Tom\nhave returned to Creston after visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nH. E. Thain, Fairview.\nIf a Cold\nThreatens..\nespecially designed\n\u25a0Id for nose end\nupper throat, helps\nprevent marly colds.\nVicksVatronql\nLASTING\nrWU-1-.r.rE\nSCIENCE ADVISES\nAGAINST MEALS LOW\nIN NEEDED \"BULK\"\nReports All-Bean Supplies\nThia Dietary Adjunct\nMrs. A. S. Morley of Greenwood\nwho has been visiting at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Munro, has\nleft for Trail where she will visit\nfriends before leaving for her home.\n...\nGordon Hill of the Relief Arlington mine spent yesterday in town\n...\nThomas Edgar of Vallican was\na visitor to Nelson Wednesday.\n...\nAmong city shoppers yesterday\nwu J. P. Bacon of Grey Creek.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. Hilmer Nordman of\nBeaverdell and their infant son,\nRay are guests at the home of\nMr. Nordman's mother Mrs. Aman-\ndo Nordman, Third and Cottonwood street.\n...\nMrs. J. D. Kerr and daughter,\nMiss Irene Kerr of Longbeach were\ncity shoppers yesterday.\n...\nMrs.   Farron   C.   Archibald   has\nRay  Halstrom  of\nNelson yesterday.\nYmir  visited\nMrs. D. K. Cool of Moncton, N3.,\nis a guest of her aunt, Mrs. Charles\nMaltby, Kootenay avenue, Fairview\nShe is en route to Vancouver.\n...\nMrs. George Lee-Warner's circle\nof St. Saviour's Church met in thc\nMemorial halL Those attending were\nMrs. George Lee-Warner, Mn. Reginald H. Dill, Mrs. Mark Purser,\nMrs. W. Taylor, Mrs. R. W. Dawson,   Mrs.   J.   Fraser,  Mn.   C.  H.\nHamilton, Mrs. W. R. Grubbe, Mra.\nE. Collinson, Mrs. W. W. Ferguson,\nMrs.   Bruce   Sutherland.\n...\nMrs.  John  Waldie  of  Castlegar I\nwas a shopper to Nelson yesterday. |\n...\nMaster Peter Thompson Godfrey,\nson of Mr. and Mn. A. T. Godfrey,\nVernon street, entertained four of\nhis little friends at a birthday party\nScientific tests have ihown that\nmeals which mill the proper \"bulk\"\ntend to cause common constipation.\nThia condition causes discomfort,\nand may lead to headaches, lots of\nappetite, even serious disease.\nAvoid these faulty meals by adding Kellogg's Ai.i.-IIban to your\nmenus. It supplies generous \"bulk\"\nin' convenient form. This absorbs\nmoisture, and gently exercises and\ncleanses the system. Auo-BBAN\nalso furnishes vitamin B and contain! iron.\nThe \"bulk\" in AU-Bb_N Is often\nmore effective than that found in\nfruits and vegetables u it doei not\nbreak down within the body. Twe\ntablespoonfula dally ara usually\nsufficient. If not relieved this way,\nconault your doctor.\nKello-rg'.i Att-BRAN may be\nserved as a cereal with milk or\ncream. Sprinkle over aoups, salads\nor other cereals. Or cook into appetising muffins, breads, waffles, etc.\nIt adda a delicious nut-sweet flavor\nto your recipes.\nHow much better than taking\npatent medicines\u2014sometimes harmful! Aix-Bran li told by all\" gro-\ncen. Made by Kellogg in London,\nOntario.\/''\nRECIPE*\nMENUS\nand\nHINTS\nGood\nHousekeeping\nMENU   HINT\nCorn and Dried Beef Casserole\nBaked Sweet Potatoes\nWaldorf Salad      Stewed Tomatoes\nSugar Cookies        Salted Nuts\nTea or Coffee\nThe corn and dried beef will\nserve two people. Bake enough\npotatoes for two meals, and candy\nwhat is left for dinner the second\nnight. The other recipe makes real\nsugary cookies.\nTODAY'S RECIPES\nCorn and Dried Beef Casserole\u2014\nOne-eighth pound chipped beef, one\nteupoon grated orfon, two tablespooni butter, two tablespoons flour,\nthree-fourths cup milk, one small\ncan com, bread crumbs. Pan fry\nchipped beef and onion in butter.\nCook over a low fire three minutes.\nBlend ta flour and milk. Cook,\nstirring constantly until gravy la\nthickened and smooth. In a greaaed\nbaking dish, sprinkle tirst a layer\nof bread crumbs, then put in a\nlayer of canned corn, top with\ncreamed chipped beef. Continue alternating layers until all is used.\n_____\nSprinkle bread crumbs over the top\nand bake in a moderate oven, 390\ndegrees Fahrenheit, until heated\nthrough and browned on top. When\nserving surround with toast points\nto be used u the foundation of the\nmixture.\nSugar Cookies\u2014One heaping cup\nsugar, one level cup butter, two\neggs, eight teaspoons milk, one-halt\nteaspoon baking soda, one teaspoon\ncream ot tartar, one-half teaspoon\nsalt, flour to make soft dough, about\nthree and qnc-half cups.\nWIFE PRESERVER\nReminder: Whan putting away\nwhite clothei tor the season, store\nthem unstarched and unlroned to\nkeep them white. Wrapping them\nin blue tissue paper also helps.\n-.-.-.--.-.-\u2022-._.-_\u25a0_\nDURITY\nFLOUR,\nMAKES BETTER BREAD\nVery New\nDresses\nThere's a fresh new air\nabout these new dresses.\nThey are just what you\nhava been needing to fill\nthe gap between formal\nevening gowns and your\nstreet clothes. \"Good styling, good fitting, manufactured by one of. the\nbest makers. Women's\nand half sizes.\n$7,95\nto\n$25-oo\nWool Pullovers\nand Sweaters\nYou never have too many wool\nsweaters and here are a quantity\nof new styles in slip-on and button fronts. Some embroidered\nwith vivid colored wools. Brushed\nwools and worsted types.\n$7-98\nTWIN SETS in new attractive\nstyles and colorings ......\t\nJerman Hunt's\nREADY-TO-WEAR AND DRY COQDS\nPhone 200 Baker St.\nmm.\nm^Ort\nPUMPKIN PIB\nfor Hallowe'en\nJust the right touch for the\nfestive occasion ... Royal City\nPumpkin is finer, creamier and\nbe made  at\nfirmer than\nhome.\ncan\n PAGE SIX-\nEstablished April. 22. 180.,\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n218   Baker   Street   Nelton,   British Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   of   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   Newa   Service.\nTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 29,1936\nHEALTH INSURANCE PLAN FOR B.C.\nWage earners in British Columbia have been filling\nout forms issued by the government in connection with a\nplan to establish a health insurance measure. This venture by B.C. is the first of its kind in the Dominion although other provinces are working on schemes.\nBritish Columbia is working to establish a health\ninsurance fund which, with some exceptions, will be compulsory for all employees in receipt of an income of ?1800\nor less per annum. This fund will be assisted by an\ninitial provincial grant of $50,000 for administration purposes.\nThe fund is to be built up by a 2 per cent wage tax on\nall such employees (within a fixed minimum range of\n35 cents to 70 cents per week) and a 1 per cent tax on their\nemployers (20 cents to 35 cents per week). The plan is\nto be administered by a commission to whom is to be entrusted the method of remuneration of the medical services employed, as well as the establishment of terms for\nvoluntary admissions to the fund. It is anticipated benefits\nwill include medical, laboratory and hospital service, and\ndrug supplies.\nBRITISH LABOR'S SANITY\nIt was almost a foregone conclusion that the British\nLabor party would remain cold to Communist blandishments. At the annual convention of the party, held at\nEdinburgh, it was announced that a card vote of the members showed 592,000 for affiliation and 1,728,00\/) against,\nan adverse majority of three to one.\nBritish Labor has had experience at close quarters\nwith Communist methods and tactics. This experience\nfound expression some weeks ago in a vigorous pronouncement by the British National Council of Labor, which represents several important Labor groups, including the\nTrades Union Congress.\n\"The Communist influence in Great Britain,\" said\nthe pronouncement, \"has been a serious drag upon the.\nLabor movement wherever and whenever it has been\nexercised.\"\nThe attempt to form what is called \"a popular front\"\nwith Labor is as barefaced as it is naive. The move clearly\noriginated in the Moscow propaganda office, its votaries\nin all countries'being instructed accordingly. In obedience\nto the command Canadian Communists ceased overnight to\nrevile the representative of Labor, and smilingly invited\nthem to unite for common action.\nNot only is there a gulf fixed between Communist\nand Labor ideals and philosophy but the methods of the\ntwo movements have so far been worlds apart. And\nmethods are just as important as ends. Indeed, methods\nform a fundamental commentary upon ends. The one is\nan infallible index to the other.\nELECTORAL COLLEGE FORMALITY\nBETWEEN\nNELSON  CAILY NEWS. N-L3C'', E.C.-\nI $\u2014 \u2022\n\u2022THURSDAY  MORNING, OCTOBER 29,  !\u00bb**-\n10 YEARS AGO\ni From Nelson Dally Newt Files\nBefore many years the American president and\" vice-\npresident may be elected by direct popular vote. Since\n1923 United States senators have been chosen in this\nmanner, writes Carl Schurz Lowden in the Christian\nScience Monitor.\nBut now the electoral college is the body of ratification. It is made up of 531 citizens chosen by the voters\non direct ballot of the individual states to elect the president and vice-president. Each state has as many electors\nas its members of congress.\nAfter November 4, election day, the members of the\nelectoral college meet in 48 places, that is, the Electors of\n' each state convene in its capital. Each group makes a\ncertified report of the state Electoral vote and forwards it\nto Washington. There the president of the senate opens\nthe certificates and counts the Electoral votes in the presence of the senate and the house of representatives. But\nthis is mere formality. The entire United States has learned\nby radio and through the newspapers the results shortly\nafter the ballots have been counted in the various states.\nFigures for last hunting season reveal six accidents\nin the district covered by the Nelson game office. Two\nof these were drowning fatalities and the others involved\ngunshot wounds. This season at least one fatality has\noccurred. Deer season is quite late this fall and huntsmen\nshould be on their toes when in the woods. Be careful\nin the handling of your gun and be sure you are aiming at\ngame before pulling a trigger.\nArt Kraft of Nelson in working togs.\nArt handles a truck with the greatest of ease and moved several tons\nof earth when the Neison Civic\nCentre was being constructed. He is\na great hunter and fisherman. Latest\nachievement\u2014taking a rear end out\nof a large truck\u2014Staff photo.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMARVEL CHILD\n\"When I wazh born I only weighed two 'n' a half pounds.\"\n\"Goodnesh me! Didya live?\"\n\"Cernnaly I lived! You oughta see\nme now!\"\n\u2022 O     0\nES8AY ON GEESE\n\"A geese is a low, heavy-set bird\nwhich is mostly meat and feathers.\nHis head sits on one side and he sits\non the other. Geese can't sing much\non account of the dampness of moistures. He ain't got no between-his-\ntoes and he's got a little balloon\nin his stummuck to keep him from\nsinking. Some geese, when they get\nbig, has curls on their tails and is\ncalled ganders. Ganders don't have\nto sit and hatch but Just cat and\nloaf, and loaf and go swimming. If\nI was a geese I'd rather be a gander.\"\n\u25a0   \u2022   \u2022\nRECOLLECTIONS\nAn half hour's jaunt\u2014Afternoon\ntea, conversation about bridge, John\nBoyd's lathe and Jack Entwistle's\nidea of work\u2014Sergeant Robert Harshaw switching on window lights\non Baker street. Austin Carter of1\nKamloops meeting T. H. Glover.\nTom Waters* carpenters making\nspeedy work on the new forestry\nbuilding. Peter Leslie declaring he\nhad spilled the milk and taking up\na little carpentry on the side. Recreation grounds deserted. Question\nof when will they start making ice.\nRumor that Pete Kapak and Andy\nKraft were out fishing again. Question is will they be as successful\nas in the past\u2014it has been said Pete\nhasn't landed a good catch of fish\nyet this season. W.B. Bamford strolling homeward and extending\na hearty greeting. Al Tregillus halting long enough to recall the Admiral Sims' story about the apple\npic. Al also got a kick out of the\nprogram put over by the Kitsilano\nboys' band. He talked a little about\nthe symphony orchestra and is attempting to line up recruits. Al says\nthey need cornet players. Process\nof buttoning up one's top coat as\nthe cooler night air sets in. Johnny\nSchule, new comer in town, cleaning up a barber shop. John I am\ntold, recently got a new watch,\nand lost a lot of time pulling it from\nhis pocket to see if it was still going. Tommy Lellon, a proud daddy, and making no bones about telling his friends. A lady gazing at\n\"Slim\" Morgan's now offspring and\nremarking \"now isn't it cute. Seems\nthey all say that\u2014and it always\nmakes the proud mother beam all\nover. Candy store windows filled\nwith halowe'en candles, masks anil\nwhat have you. It won't be long till\nSaturday night's -frivolity for the\nyoung folk.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nA FAMOUS ANNOUNCEMENT\nThe Tomlinson Production Company\n448   Malvern   Ave,   Akron\nAnnounces the 1933 Tomlinson\n\"Baby  Boy\".\nModel No. One\nE. F. Tomlinson, Designer and\nChief Engineer\nDorothy Tomlinson, Production\nManager\nDr. Leslie E. Bottsford, Technical\nAssistant\nModel Released Jan. 19, 1933\nOCTOBER, 29, 1928\nRev. Earnest George Turner, new\nBaptist minister, arrived in Nelson\nWednesday to take over duties here.\n\u2022 \u2022   o\nC. B. Twigg of Creston is staying\nat the New Grand.\n\u2022 *   \u00ab\nMrs. E. M. Hollson of Revelstoke\nis guest at the Hume.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCRANBROOK\u2014Mrs.   Frank\nDoodson and daughter, returned\nhome from a visit to England, where\nshe spent most of the summer.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nTRAIL\u2014Mrs. J. B. Rivett and son,\nAlfred, of Aberdeen, Scotland, arrived here to spend a six-month l\nvacation with her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. C. Lamley of |\nEast Trail.\n\u2022 *   *\nTRAIL\u2014Noble Binns, police mag- j\nistrate, left on a business trip to\nthe coast.\nMr. and Mrs. A. D. Emory have\nas their guests, Mr. Emory's sister\nand neice, Mrs. \"W. Home and Miss\nLola Home, of Hamilton, Ont.\n\u2022 9      0\nRobert Quinn of Harrop is a visitor in town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. E. Y. Brake have\nas their guests, Mrs. J. McCullum\nand Mrs. D. Campbell of Cranbrook.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. W. Powell and\nMrs. F. C. Whitehouse and T. T.\nWilson leave today by motor for a\nvisit to Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nEdmonton Commercial Grads won\ntoday's basketball game from the\nDetroit Nationals by a score of 34\nto 27 and the title scries by 65 to\n57.\n\u2022 .   \u2022\nA committee of Trail bowlers is in\nthe city to discuss play for the\nDaily News intercity trophy.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nLeo (Kid) Roy of Montreal retained his Canadian featherweight\ncrown by winning the decision over\nVic Foley of Vancouver in a 12-\nround bout\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\n.: SHAKESPEARE, THE MAN\n\u25a0y  J.  T.  BEALBY\nENGLAND IN SHAKESPEARE'S DAY\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS\nLOGAN  CLENDENING,  M.O.\nFOOTBALL HA8 MANY\nCASUALTIES\nNobody ever could accuse modern [\nlife  of  being  consistent.  Leaving I\nEngland in Shakespeare's day, the j Vasco da Gama's opening of the\n-     larger-England into which the raw. I sea-route to India (1509) were only\nSHUTTING  OUT TWO  ACES   Inexperienced    Warwickshire    lad I beginning to be felt in England dur-\npliinged when he adventured him-1 ing Elizabeth's reign.  In spite of\nAt timet nearly all players have | self   into   the   untried   surges   o(! the Jealous exclusiveness ,of Spain.\nperiods of astonishing luck.    The '\u25a0 London life-England was at that j English mariners  (Drake, Raleigh,.\t\nNorth player, Elihu Townsend, had j period undergoing a profound trans- j Humphrey Gilbert, Froblsher, j politics asideas too large a subject,\nbeen having such a streak of luck ; formation socially and culturally. | Hawkinsl forced their way to the we can stick to our Own field o_\nthe entire evening. To draw him : Like the age in which we moderns | Spanish possessions in America and ] health and find plenty of material\nfor partner was like being awarded | are living today, it was a period ot, to the Portuguese possessions in i to prove the thesis.\nthe rubber in advance. Of course all j sharp transition: the old order was j Brazil and the East Indies (these I We are spending millions of doi-\nfour players knew that such luck passing away and a new order,! were Spanish from 1580), and at- | lars a month for research to find\ncould not last forever, but while it \u25a0 sparkling with novelty and wonder,  tacked   and   robbed   the   Spanish | the cause and treatment of differ-\nlasted he made the most of it. This ! was rapidly taking its place. It was j treasure-ships. In 1577 Drake sailed\nwas the final deal of the evening.\n\u00abK4\n?QJ-\n\u2666 AKQ97643\n4 None\n410 7 \u00ab\nf\u00ab\n\u2666 10 8 5 2\n+ 07432\nA\/.-\n4J85-J\nV A 7513\n4 None\n*AJ65\nent diseases, to prevent diphtheria |\nand typhoid fever, to vaccinate children, to advise annual physical ex- j\nanimation. We have lengthened the I\nspan of human life, and saved millions  of children  in  infancy\u2014for\nwhat?    To allow more ond more\nthousands of people to be killed\n20 YEARS AGO   I\nFrom Nelton Dally Newt Filet I\n\u2666 AQ92\n\u25a0 K 10 9 _\n\u2666 -\n+ KQ10 8\nOCTOBER 29, 192S\nMrs. Willian Carruthers, who has\nbeen visiting her.son and daughter-\nin-law, Ensign and Mrs. W. J. Carruthers of the local branch of the\nSalvation Army, will leave this\nmorning for her home in Wetaski-\nwin, Alta.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. Brown of Grand Forks is\na guest at the Strathcona.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nHarold Lakes, superintendent ot\nthe Lucky Jim mine at Zincton, is\na guest at the Hume.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nShareholders report the Utica\nmine company has a cash surplus of\n$35,000 on hand, made up of profits from the shipment of ore.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe Union and Pathfinder mines\neach shipped a car of ore to the\nGranby smelter in Grand Forks\nlast week.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThere are now 3000 men employed\nat the Consolidated Mining tc\nSmelting company's smelter and refineries in Trail.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nOscar Lachmund, manager of the\nBritish Columbia Copper company,\narrived in town last night from\nGreenwood.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nGeorge P. Mulcahy, who has been\ninspecting mining properties in the\nPrinceton area for eastern capitalists, returned to the city yesterday.\n\u2022 O      0\nR. J. Creasey of Harrop recleved\nword that his son, B. Creasey, is in\nthe Etretat hospital recovering from\na gun shot wound recieved Oct.\n18, while with the 54th. battalion\nin France.\nContributions to the local branch\nof the patriotic fund for this week\ntotalled $434.75.\n-*\nBidding went: South, 1-Spade\nNorth, 3-Diamonds, to show probable slam holdings and to demand\nthat bidding be kept open until at\nleast game had been reached; South,\n3-Hearts; North, 4-Dlamonds; South,\n5-Clubs; North, 6-Diamonds; South,\n<j-No Trumps, also bitten by the\nidea that North could not lose;\nNorth, 7-Diamonds, which East doubled, as he was to make the opening lead and held two Aces.\nBefore making his opening lead,\nEast exercised his right of having\nthe declaring side review for his\nbenefit the entire bidding. When\nplayers are not sure of their best\nprocedure this rule frequently is\ninvoked. Even after bidding had\nbeen reviewed Senior still felt in\ndoubt which Ace to lead. He well\nknow that the bidding probably\nmeant that declarer held one void\nsuit. Finally he followed the sound\ngeneral rule of leading the Ace of\nhis shortest bid suit Declarer ruffed\nthe Ace of clubs, causing its leader\nto bang his first on the table in\nvexation.\nDummy was put in with its J\nof diamonds. Declarer gained entry\nto his hand by means of its K of\nspades. Three added rounds of\ntrumps were led, picking up West's\nlast diamond. Dummy's'three lowest hearts were discarded. The 4 of\nspades was led, putting dummy in\nwith its Q of spades. Then the Ace\nof spades and the good K and Q\nof clubs afforded declarer his needed three heart discards. His hand\nwas then spread, having shut out\ntwo Aces and making his grand\nslam contract doubled. His luck had\nnot failed him, even on the last deal\nof the evening.\nOf course the contract could have\nbeen defeated two tricks. An opening lead of the Ace of hearts was\none way the contract could have\nbeen defeated to that extent, as West\ncould have ruffed a second round\nof that suit. An opening lead of\nspades would have defeated the contract by at least a trick.\na transformation that affected every i into the Pacific, the first English\nclass of the community and every> man to do so. and before he re\nphase of the national existence, thc j turned home in 1580 he circumnavi-\nways of living, the practical out- gated the globe. Eight years later\nlook, the mental environment, Ideas, with other sea-captains he helped\nIdeals, ambitions, England's position ' defeat and scatter the great Armada\namongst the nations. The rate at j which Philip II of Spain had for\nwhich men lived was quickened, the four years or more been preparing j every year by automobiles, on tho\nthoughts that coursed through their for the invasion of England and its ; insane altar of the god of speed,\nI minds, their daily interests were reconversion to the Roman Catholic 0f getting somewhere we do not\n' broadened, vivified, intensified, and j faith. Twice English seamen\u2014Drake ' nee{- to be sooner than we have to\nj brought into intimate  touch with ! in 1584 and Howard and Essex In I get there In order to waste tima\nwider  issues.  Life  became  fuller; 1596\u2014destroyed part of the Spanish | bef0re getting back to where wa\nof   movement,   more   diversified, | war-fleet in its own harbor of Cadiz, i came jr0m. And most of it perfectly\npreventable.\nWe set up in all our institutions\n| broken down. Tne Darons ana greHi; mc crue-ues anu lyiaiiinc. ui mc i 0f learning athletic contests in or-\nder to increase the health and\nstrength of the body, and so arrange the rules of one of these\ncontests that the injuries to the body |\n.from playing that game amount annually to twice or three times the\nincidence of serious infectious dis-\nease\u2014such as diphtheria and typhoid\nfever, which we have learned to\nprevent.\nFootball heads the list. According j\nto a table just come to hand, there j\nwere 97 casualties from football in j\nthe United States in 1934. Wrestling\nis next with 16, basketball has 15, |\nbaseball 4, tennis none, golf one,\ntumbling one, track two.\nThe average citizen dismisses foot-\nricher in color. j From  1572 onwards .Flemish mer-\nThe Feudal System was being i chants and weavers, fleeing from\nbroken down.' The barons and great \\ thc cruelties and tyrannies of the\nnobles were abandoning their i Duke of Alva, Philip's viceroy in\ngloomy mediaeval castles a n d j the Low Countries, found a new\nstrongholds, and building them-1 home in England. And after the\nselves Elizabethan mansions, frame i Spaniards captured and plundered\nhouses with a generous supply of I Antwerp (in 1585), then the prin-\nwindows, letting In daylight and I cipal maritime trading city in north-\nsunshine. Into the new mansions big \\ ern Europe, many of the Antwerp\nwide  chimneys  were  being  built\nand instead of rushes on the floor\ncarpets   were   being   laid   down,\nmerchants settled in London, bring\ning their businesses with them\nQuite a number of new industries\nthough the leather wall-hangings, | were started in the west, east, and\noften gilded, ot the mediaeval castle i south of England, the woollen man-\nwere being retained. Glass came | ufactures being the most important,\ninto vogue for table use. Clothing j Wealth began to accumulate and to\nwas being made of stuffs richer in : spread amongst nearly all classes\nquality and brighter in color. Jew-1 of the community. Luxuries, many\nellery and gold and silver orna-! of them hitherto unknown, were\nmentation were lavishly displayed, j introduced. A single pound of sugar-\nIt was at this period that the idea J or sugar-candy from Venice, a box j bail''in\"juries\u00b0Vith's'shrufcand the\nof domestic comfort first entered\nthe minds of Englishmen. There was\ngrowing up a distinct taste for magnificence and for color in appointments and dress, and in the pageantry of public life. The rural population exchanged their mud-and-\nstud dwellings -for houses of brick,\nand even sometimes of stone, though\nstill generally thatched with reeds;\nand they took to eating meat,\nthough as a rule not more than twice\na week, Instead of so much herring.\nThe armies of the age no longer\nconsisted of knights in armor and\narchers or bowmen, and the mass of\nthem were no longer mounted men.\nThey were for the most part pike-\nmen and musketeers, who fought on\nfoot. Since Georg von Frundsberg,\nthe Father of the Landsknechts,\ncovered himself and them with\nglory In the Italian campaigns of a\nhundred years earlier, the .contending armies were often made up in\nlarge part of mercenaries and adventurers of many nationalities.\nThe full effects of Columbus' discovery of America  (1492)   and' of\nof figs from Syra in the Aegean\na jar of quince marmalade from\nBologna, a pair of silk stockings\nfrom the looms of Venice, a glass\ndish from Murano (near Venice) was\ndeemed no unworthy present for a\nforeign ambassador to give to Queen\nElizabeth. Then there were oranges\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QU1LLEN\nreminder that it is a rough-and-\ntumble game. As a matter of fact,\nmost of them are preventable and\nare due to the stupidity of the sponsors and directors of American football. The game would not be tolerated in any other country. Soccer\nis a thousand times better game to j\nfrom Sicily, and maybe saltedquail.s j p\"la\"y iYto watch\",\", good \"deal more\n(birds) from Capri near Naples-\nall rare. London cloth figured prominently at the great half-yearly fairs\nof Leipzig and Frankfort in Germany. The general.prosperity of the\nnation was due in no small measure\nto the wise government of the queen:\nshe made the normal revenues of\nthe realm the basis and starting-\npoint of the annual natiqnal budget.\nShe was careful to see that all royal\nfun and a good deal safer.\nThe open game was designed, according to my recollection, so that\nit would be more interesting to the\nspectator, and safer.\nWHEN   INJURIES  OCCUR\nSo far as the latter point is concerned. 36 per cent of all football\ninjuries occur on forward or lateral\npass plays, 12 per cent occur In\nkick-off plays, and 8 per cent in line\nplays of all kinds. That does not\nlook as if the open play had inl\nand governmental expenditures together did not exceed the actual\nrevenue. This of course was highly proved\" matters\nfavorable to trade and industry. As ,a. as th. other is conCe-ned,\nThere were stirring -doings too in\\tootMi now*has ^come the big-\nIre and, where the ONeills made t bore on earth , know of _\ngallant attempts to overthrow the , good mflny sport_lovirl- ^U< but\nEnglish rule - do\u201e.t know Jlve who g0 to g ,00t.\n(To Be Continued) ^ , baU game ,0 ^ lhe gam^ m_ey g0\n' to see the crowd, or for dear old\nHM TMF AIR TDMIt^l-IT Alma Mater' or t0 get awa>r '*m\nuin  mc Am luiNiuni ,homc \u201e,. refcree ls th(,^ player\nand drama; \"\u25a0'\"\" \u00ab\u25a0\u2022\u00bb>\u25a0  \u00ab' Tim.-  on either team: he does the wln-\nCANADIAN   RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\n5:30 News, Vancouver (B.C. Net.);\n5:45 Dance Parade, M.R.N.-Detroit;\n6:00 A Waltz Dream, Montreal; 6:30 S>:00 Magazine\nFun at Christie Street, variety, orch.,' \"\"\"\u25a0'' \"\"\" T *\"\nToronto; 7:00 Helen Traubel, orch.\ndir. Arthur Bodansky, N.Y.; 7:30\nJoe de Courcy's orch.; 7:46 C. P.\nnews, weather, Toronto; 8:00. C.R.C.\ntime signal Ottawa; Happy-Go-\nLucky, Regina; 8:30 Thirty Minutes\nto  Go,  Winnipeg;   9:00  \"\n7:30 March  of Time;\n8-00 K=public'n '    ionol coiirittee;  mng mi losmK 'or hoth sides. When\n8:15 Renfrew* of the'Mounted. (!:*.; | one \u00b0' lhesc interesting open plays\n8:30 Cavalcade of America, drama;\n10:LJ Gene Cole's\norch.; 1\u00ab:30 Larry Kent's orch.; 11:00\nSterling Young's orch.; 11:30 Jimmy\nDorsey's orch.\nCJOR\n\"You might as well forgive the\nidiot who ruins you without meanin'\nany harm. Nothin' you can do to\nhim seems as bad as he deserves.\"\nKootenay Belle mill on Sheep creek has been turned\nover for the first time.  This cornes shortly after the Wesko\nmill in the Ymir camp was tested and just before the I Two Lung\" Power-Free Squealing\nBayonne mill test on thc Bayonne, scheduled for this\nweek-end or soon after.   More mining progress for the\nKootenays.\n|   30 YEARS AGO\nI From Nelion Dally Newt Files i\nOCTOBER 29, 1904\nAbout twenty men are employed\nat the Ruth mine and mill and are\nkeeping up a steady output of ore,\nmost of which goes to the Hall\nMine's smelter.\nF. X. Johnson, secretary of the\nLa France Mining company, of\nChicago, is at the Strathcona.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA daughter was born to the wife\nof A. H. Gracey of Nelson, Oct. 29.\nA. G. Creelman, railroad contractor, is in town.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nF. Starkey came in from the\nBoundary district to enjoy a short\nstay.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. E. Annable left today for Yahk\nto inspect fruit property.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nF. E. Simpson of Cranbrook is ln\ntown.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nS. E. Oliver of Procter is at the\nHume.\nVERSE\n-*j\n499.7 m\nVancouver , 500 w\n5:10 news flashes; 5:15 Cariboo\nHacienda, Cowboys; 6:15 News; 6:45 Wrestl-\nHarry Pryce and Los Comparos, ing interview; 7:30 Financial serv-\nSenorita Angela and Senor Benito, ice; 7:45 Wally Peters guitar; 8:00\nVancouver; 9:30 Hawaiian Nights,-News comments; 8:15 Victor Ricci,\nWinnioeg; 10:00 News. Va- cuvcr; \\ songs; 9:00 Wrestling; 10:45 News\n10:15 Len Chamberlain's orch., Van-i flashes; 11:00 Len Chamberlain's\ncouver. orch.; 11:15 Eric Gee's Kolle-Jeans;\n111:45 Slumber Hour.\nKitchener in East Kootenay is gaining prominence\nthrough its hemlock timber stands. Two contracts have\nbeen let for hemlock for paper making across the line.\nScream Line Body\u2014Economical\nFeed\u2014Water Cooled Exhaust-\nChangeable Seat Covers.\nThe management assures the public there will be no new models during the balance of the year.\nCable says H. G. Wells celebrated his 70th birthday\n%>y writing his obituary.  The first chapter, no doubt.\nA U8E FOR THE HAT\nToronto   firm   has   delivered   a\nbrand new silk hat to Premier Hepburn, but he can't remember what\n'lie wager was for. or who lost it.\nHowever, Mitch shouldn't look a | and for school gardens, and at some\n*:tl hat in the crown. He may need distance away the playing.fields.\u2014\n, ii U> talk through.\u2014Windsor Star.   I Manchester Guardian.\nIDEAL   8CHOOL\nThc school child of the future\nshould have a healthier and happier time when the suggestions\nmade in the board of education's\nnew booklet on \"Elementary School\nBuildings\" have matured. The ideal\nschool, as the board conceived it,\nshould be a single-storey building\n\"opened out to the air and sunshine\nin every part.\" Round the building\nshould be space for open-air work\nFALLING LEAVES\nNow Autumn's here and from the\ntrees\n' Dead leaves fall down\nWhen rustled by the slightest\nbreeze,\nAnd on our residential streets\nProvide the ground with  many\nsheets\nOf gold and brown.\nAnd comes the bard who from this\nsight\nAnd forthwith takes his pen to write\nReceives a hint,\nAbout their beauty in a lay\nSo pretty that his work one day\nWill be in print.\nBut what of him who cleans thc\nroads?\nWhen he sets out\nHis work is there in extra loads.\nAnd as the leaves he tries to pil*\nHe sees that half will, in a while,\nBe blown about.\nThen as he buckles to this chore,\nThat is so mean\nAnd lasts for six whole weeks or\nmore,\nTlie poem that he does compose\nCan hardly be fit to disclose,\nAnd is not teen.\n-T. E. BIDDLECOMBE.\nOctober 23, 1936.\nNBC\u2014KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO  KOMO\n590 620 640 680 920\n5:00 Rudy Vallee; Dinner concert;\n6:15 Political, KPO, KFI; 6:30 Harmony Lane, dir. Josef Hornik; 7:00\nMusic Hall, Jimmy Dorsey's orch.;\n8:00 Amos 'n' Andy; 8:15 Symphony\norch. dir. Mishel Piastro; 9:15 Lanny\nRoss presents Showboat, Al Goodman's orch.; 10:00 News flashes, Sam\nHayes; 10:15 Eddie Fitzpatrick\nJr. and orch.; Political, KPO; 10:30\nGriff Williams and orch.; 11:00 Tom\nBrown's orch.; 11:30 Ran Wilde's\norch.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n5:00 Cecil and Sally, E.T.; 6:30\nJerry Fuller's orch.; 7:00 Program\nfrom CKUA; 7:30 Slices of Life;\n7:45 Pacific Paradise; 8:00 Old Time\nMusic; 9:00 News; 9:15 Old Time\nDance; 10:45 News.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nPacific Standard Time\noccurs, and the penalty is exacted,\nthe grandstand for, miles around\nwants to know what it's all about.\nOne collegian five rows down says\nit's for holding, and one five rows\nback says it's for off-side play. You\ndecide to let it go and find out\nwhich in the morning paper. By\nmorning you don't give a darn.\nF0H MINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are suitable for\nall minin. and other\ncamp bulldin.s They\nare strong, waterproof lisht and very\neasv to handle.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nDistrict Distributors\n\"Build B. C. Payroll.\"\nBRITISH  EMPIRE\nTransmission  6\nThe following frequencies will  be\nused; GSF 15.14 met.  (19.82 m);\nGSC 9.53 met. (31.32 m.i.\n6:00 p.m. -^ Big Ben. Recital of\n! songs by Albert Mallinson. Molly\nNBC-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO  KJR  KEX  KECA  KGA\n790     970    1180     1430     1470\n5:00 N.B.C. Jamboree; 6:00 Union Mitchell, contralto. Ivor John, tenor.\nStation, drama; 6:30 To be an- 6:35VTalk from Wales. 6:50\u2014Harold\nnounced; 6:45 Sports Headliners \u25a0 Ramsay, at the organ. 7:25\u2014\"Star-\n(KGO); 7:00 N.B.C. Symphony dir.. light.\" 7:40 \u2014 News and announce-\nArthur Bodanzky; Communist party, | ments.\nKGO; 7:15 Calif. Consumers, KGO; | \t\n8:00 Russ Morgan's orchestra; Sport j INTERNATIONAL\nHeadliners, KGO; 8:30 Tales of California, KGO; Phil Ohman's orch.;\n9:00 Williams sisters, vocal trio;\nPolitical, KGO; 9:15 Harry Reser's\norchestra; 9:30 Jan Garber's orchestra; 10:00 Bernie Cummins' orch.: |\n10:30 Jimmy1 Grier's orch.; 11:00\nCharlea. Runyan, organist.\nRome 3 p.m.\u2014News in English.\n2RO, 25.4 m., 11.81 meg.\nBerlin 3:15\u2014What would you do\nwithout your car? DJD, 25.4 m.,\n11.77 meg.\nLondon 3:30\u2014\"Empire Magazine,\"\nNo. 11. GSP, 19.6 m., 15.31 meg.;\n11.75 meg.; GSC, 31.3\nGARDENING IMPETUS\nA Startford man who grows huge\nvegetables tells of obtaining direc-\ntiont from a woman who appeared\nto him in a vision as he slept. Most\nof us who do any backyard gardening have been driven to lt by a\nwoman who appeared in broad day-\nHghK\u2014Woodstock Sentinel-Review.\n)\nGSD, 25.5 m.\nCB8-DON LEE NETWORK      J m_f   _*\u00bb\u25a0       \u201e   .   ,\n_. .   ...   _._. Pari\u00bb   4:15 \u2014 Musical   program.\nKVI  KFRC  KOIN  KSL  KOL    ; TPA.4 256 m   a,- meg\n570     610      940    1130    1270     ;    Berlin  6:15  Solution  to  musical\n5:15   Elbert   Lachechelle,   organ-1 riddles. DJD, 25.4 m, 11.7 meg.\n1st;   -:00   Major   Bowes'   amateur!    Tokyo 9 \u2014 \"Overseas Program.\"\nhour;  7:00'Then and Now.  music I JVH, Nazakl. 20.5 m., 14.6 meg.\nWHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING\nIT TAKES THE IRI8H la match, (2) dring out of a glass,\nThere was a big fight at a Ger- j (3) look across the room and (4)\nEven\nWith\nFresh\nMilk\nA mother writes that during a time when the cow\nwhich belongs to hcr family was dry they used Pacific Milk and got to like\nit so well that' after the cow\nfreshened they still continued to use it. For instance in\n\u25a0 tea, she says, they like It\nbetter than cream.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated of Count\nman picnic in Milwaukee, precipitated by a Communist named Lock-\nner, with an editor, George Loh,\nwhose Swastika flag was kicked Into\nthe dust. A cop by the name of\nO'Gorman, settled the hash of the\ncombatants, and lt is said he liked\nit.\u2014St. Catherines Standard.\nA TEST GAME\nTo discover if the subject is predominantly masculine or. feminine,\na new game in Boston calls for the\n] leader to ask each guest to (11 light\nlook at his or her nails. One. of\ndominant masculinity will scratch\nthe match toward him, look into the\nglass while drinking, stare directly\nwhen told to look across the room\nand cup his hand to look at the\nfingernails. One dominantly feminine, on the other hand, will scratch\nthe match away from herself, look\nover the rim of the glass while\ndrinking, let the glance wander\nwhen ordered to look at something\nand raise the whole hand to inspect\nthe fingernails.\u2014New York Post.\nI\nREAD\nPAGE\nI  8   I\n>\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n- -\n i alt?;\nAROUND THI FIRST TURN\nTrotters come rolling around the first turn at Good Time track\nGoshen, N. Y.\nJim Burrows Retired From\nRing Undefeated Canadian\nMiddleweight Titleholder\nWon His Boxing Title at Fernie in 1903 From\nJack Curley Getting Decision in a\n20-Round Championship Fight\nAT 62 YEARS OF AGE IS HALE AND\nHEARTY; SAW THE BEST IN HIS DAY\nTrail Nan is\nRetired Champ\nBy ARTHUR  R. JOY\n(Nelion Dally News Staff Writer)\nTRAIL, B.C., Out. 28.\u2014Whenever there ll a fight card staged In\nTrail, you will find him at a corner of the ring giving encouragement\nand advice to tome young fellow \"In there\" throwing punchei.   At\nthe lound of the gong he deftly slides a chair against a corner post\nand li ready to go to work.  When the gong again sounds he lifts the\nlad to his feet and ipeaki a few words that give a fellow confidence,\nend il outside again.\nHe is Jim Burrows, 62 years of age, a man to most people who ia Just\nan ardent ring follower, who at some time or other \"has done a little\nfighting,\"   or   \"was   pretty   handy^\n\u2022with his dukes when a young fellow.\"\nUNDEFEATED CHAMPION\nVery few are aware of the fact\nthat Jim Burrows, at the age of 40\nfought his last fight to a draw and\nretired the undefeated middleweight\nchampion of Canada. He fought\nJoe Uvannl of Albeny, N.Y., to defend his title which he had held for\n10 or 11 years. Before the fight, Jim\nsays, he announced that it would\nbe his last fistic encounter, win, lose\nor draw. So he drew and retired\n(till undefeated. <\nBurrows won the title by a 20-\nround decision from Jack Curley\nln 1003. Curley hailed from Alaska\nend weighed 158, the middleweight\nlimit. Jim's fighting trim was 145\npounds.\n'    Jim says he liked to fight bigger\nend heavier men.\nJ'They didn't move so fast,\" he\nrecalls, \"and were easier to hit.\"\nBurrows saw Baer when he\nthowed in Trail and feels sure that\nhe can come back, providing he\nkeeps strictly to training rules.\n\"It's pretty hard for a fellow\n\u2022when he's up on top to keep on the\n'rtraight and narrah. Baer is awfully\nfast for a big man.\"\nJim Burrows, hail and hearty at\n82, is of good old Canadian stock,\nand was born in Westville, N.S.\nWith his family he left for Spring\nHill, Cumberland county, when he\nwas four or five years of age. There\nhe remained till he was 23.\n\"I first put the gloves on when\nI was about 12,\" he reminisced.\n\u25a0. \"Gloves were pretty hard to get\nhold of ln them days. When we did\nget hold of a set they were usually\nin pretty bad shape and we used to\npatch them up and make them a\nlittle softer by stuffing them with\nhorse-hair.\"\nJim was boxing another lad who\nknew a little more about handling\nhis dukes.\nFIRST VICTORY\n\"He was hitting me pretty hard\nand I was getting the worst of it.\nI took so much and then I just went\n' after him and knocked him down.\nA few men were standing around\nand one of them remarked: \"There's\na boy that's going to make a fighter\nBorne day.'\"\nJim engaged in his first professional fight when he was 20 years\nOf age. His opponent was Hector\nConnelly and the bout was staged\nat Moncton, N.B.\n\"But the police stopped us in thc\nthird round. They figured we were\ngetting too rough,\" he related.\nHector Coftnelly was a brother of\nEddie Connelly, who was heavyweight champion of Canada at the\ntime, according to Mr. Burrows.\nSoon after the retired champion\nbeat P'lly Walsh ln Boston.\nHe engaged in several minor bouts\nend then set off for New York at\nthe age of 23.\nFIGURED HE\nCOULD FIGHT\n\"I thought I could box,\" grinned\nJim, \"but I found out I didn't know\nanything about it.\"\nHe was put to sleep for the tint\ntime by a big fellow In the ninth or\ntenth round of a bout at the New\nYork National club.\n\"My most spectacular fight was\n%-ith Chappie Reilly In a preliminary to the Fitzsimmons-Dunkhurst\n(crap at the Hercules club, Brooklyn. We fought to a 10-round draw.\nThere were 8000 spectators. We sure\nJim Burrows, retired undefeated\nmiddleweight boxing champion of\nCanada as he appears today. His\nhouse was burnt down a few years\nago and he lost everything including a few cuts and photos of him in\nhis heyday so he obliged by having\nthis one taken.--Photo by Hughes\nBros. Studio, Trail, B.C.\nkept them on their feet from the\nfourth to the tenth round. At the\nend of the bout they had to mop the\nfloor before the main bout was put\non. There was blood everywhere.\nFRIGHTENED SELF\n\"When I saw my face In the mir\nror the next morning I thought\nthat if I was going to continue boxing I would have to learn how first.'\nIt was in this fight, Jim recalls,\nthat Charlie McManus saw him and\ntook him under his wing for a few\nmonths. McManus was manager of\nMattie Mathews, world's welterweight champion and it was these\ntwo men that taught him how to\nbox.\nDuring those three months Jim\nhad several wins and losses.\nIn 1901 Jim returned lo Canada.\nThe Horton law, that had allowed\nboxing ln the state of New Yorlt\nwas repealed so boxing was stopped\nfor a few years.\nCAME TO FERNIE\nMr. Burrows came far west to\nfernie where he was employed in\nthe coal mines. Two years later he\nwon the middleweight championship of Canada.\n\"Fernie, about that time, had a\npopulation of about 5000 persons.\nMost of the boxing was done in the\nVictoria hall over the Trites-Wood\nIr Co. departmental store.\"\nOne of Jim's other important\nbouts ln Fernie was with Jack\nSlaven, ex-middleweight champion\nof Australia. He knocked Slaven out\nin the fourth round.\nLICKS AUSSIE\n\"Slaven was a big fellow. He was\n6 feet 1 and weighted 185 pounds,\nHe told everyone he was going to\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\n.\u2022(Control Bpfrd or by the Government of British Columbia,\nRowing - Tennis - Soccer - Bateball - Boxing - Wrestling\nNetttB\nLacrosse - Golf -Track - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\nPAGE ELEVEN-\n- NELSON PAILY NiWi, NELSON, \u00bb.C_THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 29, 193\u00ab.\n\u2022 PAGE SEVEN I\nOld Country Football Standings\nLONDON. \u2014 Standings in the\nEnglish football league, including\ngames played Saturday, follow:\nDlvlilon\nDf AP\n3 tt iii 1'i\n3 29 21 15\n4 20 15 14\n1 32 25 13\n1 28 21 li\n3 12 11 13\n1 84 21 13\n4 20 17 12\n2 22 21 12\n4 24 24 12\n6 19 18 12\n4 14 15 12\n5 tt It 11\n5 13 13 11\n3 lt 24 11\n8 19 20 10\n4 13 18 10\n4 19 23 10\n2 20 28 10\n3 17 22 9\n1 18 22 9\n1 14 24 7\nEnglish League\u2014First\nW L\nPortsmouth  7   i\nBrentford  6\nHuddersfield  5\nDerby  County 8\nEverton  6\nPreston  5\nGrimsby Town  8\nStoke City 4\nSunderland  5\nBirmingham  4\nCharlton A  3\nChelsea  4\nManchester C 3\nArsenal  3\nMiddlesbrough  4\nSheffield W  2\nBolton W  3\nLiverpool 3\nWest Brom  4\nManchester  U 3\nWolverhampton .... 4\nLeeds United 3\nEnglish League\u2014Seeond\nBury\nPlymouth  8\nAston Villa  5\nFulham  8\nNewcastle U  7\nCoventry    5\nSheffield U  5\nBarnsley  5\nSwansea  5\nSouthampton  - 8\nChesterfield  5\nBurnley 4   S\nNotts Forest 3   4\nTottenham  4  8\nNorwich City 3   5\nBlackburn R  3   4\nBradford C  3   5\nLeicester C  3   8\nWest Ham  3   6\nDiv.\n21 12 17\n28 16 15\n24 18 15\n19 18 15\n19 13 14\n17 12 14\n18 17 13\n17 19 13\n17 12 12\n18 23 12\n23 17 11\n14 15 11\n15 22 ll\n22 18 10\n18 lt 10\n10 13 10\n18 23 10\n15 19 9\n17 23   B\nDoncaster R   2 5 4   7 20   8\nBradford - 2 8 2 13 31   8\nThird Division\u2014Southern Section\nLuton. *Town 8 3 1 29 14 17\nBournemouth  8 3 1 20 12 17\nCardiff C  - 7 3 2 20 14 18\nWatford 6 3 3 27 18 15\nMiUwall 8 3 4 21 14 14\nSouthend   5 3 4 22 15 14\nSwindon T  5 4 3 28 16 13\nBrighton    8 5 1 1$ 14 13\nQueCns Park ft 6 4 3 16 14 13\nNotts C  5 4 3 20 19 13\nReading  6 S 1 20 19 13\nClapton Orient 4 4 4 15 15 12\nGlllingham    5 5 2 10 17 12\nCrystal Palace _ 4 5 3 22 20 11\nNorthampton 4 5 3 17 17 11\nBristol R  8 6 1 16 20 11\nWalsall   4 6 2 17 22 10\nTorquay U  3 6 3 16 20   9\nBristol C 3 6 3 13 22   0\nExeter  3 7 2 14 24   8\nAldershot   2 8 4 14 24   8\nNewport C  1 8 3 13 38   5\nThird Dlvlilon\u2014Northern Section\nChester  9 1 2 34  9 20\nLincoln C 7 2 3'28 13 17\nMansfield T -\u25a0 7 2 2 26 14 16\nStockport C-. 6 2 4 27 13 ll\nHull  - 6 1 4 17 11 H\nWrexham  B 3 4 22 17*4\nHelifex T  6 4 2 14 1514\nOldham  8 4 3 28 21 13\nHartlepools U 5 3 3 12   9 13\nSouthport   4 3 5 21 23 13\nNew Brighton 3 4 5 11 12 11\nCarlisle  U  5 5 1 19 22 11\nYork  3 4 4 15 21 10\nPort Vale  4 6 2 15 22 10\nCrewe Alex  1 4 7 14 24   9\nAccrington  3 6 2 12 13   8\nRotherham U  3 6 2 21 24  8\nBarrow  3 6 2 17 21   8\nDarlington  2 5 4 19 24   8\nTranmere  2 6 4 18 28   8\nRochdale    2 8 2 12 31   6\nGatehead    0 6 5 12 25   5\nOnly Four Changes in Maroons'\n\"One Sweet Team\"; Gorman Happy\nYouth Predominates on Forward Line and Age\non Defence; Connell in Goat and \"Big\nTrain\" Conacher Both 36 Years\n(Thli li the lecond of a Canadian Preu tirlet dealing with\nprospects of National hockey\nleague teams on th\u00ab eve of the\nnew campaign).\nBy ALAN RANDAL\n(Canadian Frets Staff Writer)\nMONTREAL, Oct 28 (CP) .-Tommy Gorman's \"one Bweet team,\" the\nMontreal Maroons, come out for\ntheir National hockey league inaugural against New York Rangers\nNovember 10 a near counterpart of\nthe 1934-35 Stanley cup winners.\nThere have been only four changes\nsince last season and the team resembles the 1934-35 outfit even\nmore than last year. One change\nbrings back the 1935 complexion.\nOne takes lt away. And Gorman\nsays the other two moves add\nstrength.\nAle*. Connell, the stone-faced Ot-\ntawan who stopped pucks for the\nGormanites in their Stanley cup\nforay, is back in the neta. Returning after a one-year retirement, he\nreplaces Lome Chabot and Bill\nBeverldge.\nCarl Voss, brought from New\nYork Americans in exchange for\nJoe Lamb, centers the veteran red\nline. He replaces Hooley Smith,\nnow with Boston Bruins, and Jerry\nCarson, ex-Canadlen emerging from\na one-year retirement, appears on\ndefence with Lionel Conacher. Carson fills the job left open when\nAmericans bought Allan Shields.\n8TANLEY CUPPER8\nOtherwise Maroons have lut\nyear's team and by the same token\nthe Stanley cuppers of 1935. Gorman thinks they'll be just as good\nthis year.\n\"What we have right here is one\nsweet team,\" he said early ln the\ntraining season. \"There's all kinds\nof fight in those boys.\"\nOn his forward Unit youth predominates. On tha defence, and\nback of it, Is age, There you find\nGoal-guardian Connell and In\nfront of him Conacher, the defensive big train.\nBoth arO 38 years old. Conacher,\nstarting his 12th season, has an edge\nof one year in lervice over the\ngoalie because of Connell's two one-\nyear layoffs.\nCy Wentworth and Stew Evans\ncomplete the defence with Bill Mc-\nKensle, up from the International\nleague, a candidate for the spare\ndefensive position.\nHare's how Gorman haa figured\nhli lines: Tha blue.line \u2014 Russ\nBlinco, Earl Robinson and Dave\nTcottler; the green line \u2014 Bob\nGracie, Gut Marker and Herbie\nCain; tha red line\u2014Carl Vou,\nJimmy Ward and Baldy North-\ncott\nThe outfit that won the Canadian\nsection title last year measured up\nso well newcomers did not get much\nof a show for the current campaign.\nGorman took six amateurs with\nhim on Maroons' maritime tour but\nof them all only Johnny Wing, forward and termer Queen's University\nall-round athlete, and Lloyd Perras,\ngoalie from Kenora, Ont, may be\ngiven a berth. That's something to\nbe decided before the schedule\nopens.\nshow them a kayo. He did. but he\nwas on the receiving end of it\"\nBurrows won a 20-rbund decision\nover Barney Mullen, a welterweight\nof repute, also at Fernie.\n\"I had two or thre? good fights\nin Spokane. I kayoed Joe Flt-gereld\nIn the opening part of the tenth\nround. He was another big fellow,\naround 175 pounds. He ml supposed\nto be a crack boxer but didn't know\nmuch about it. There were several\naround Spokane that wanted to\nmeet me but after that fight they\ndisappeared. They weren't around\nany more.\nDOUBLE  KAYO\n\"In a fight with Jack Riley in\nSpokane I knocked him out ln the\n19th round. I was staggering to my\ncorner and Riley's brother, who was\nat the ringside, hung one on* my chin\nbarehanded. There was the both of\nus lying on the floor. The police\nraised the dickens about that\n\"I broke my right hand in the\nsecond of two fights with Gerry\nMcCarty from Butte, Mont We\nfought two 20-round draws at Spokane.\"\nJim also appeared on fight cards\nat Calgary. He recalls registering\nthe kayo on a big negro named\nGeorge Paris In the ninth round.\nWhen Jim was asked If he had\nseen any leading fighters of his day\nln action he reeled off a list at long\nas your arm.\nHow many of these do you recall:\nGeorge Dixon, McGovern, Billy\nSmith, Joe Wallcott (negro), Kid\nMcPartland, Joe Olbs, Frank Kern,\nCorbett, Fitzsimmons, Johnson, Jeffries, Sharkey and McCoy.\nPATRICKTOTRY\nBAG OF TRICKS\nTo Use a Left-Handed\nLine Then a Right\nHanded One\nSunderland Wins\nCharity Shield\nSUNDERLAND, England, Oct. 28\n(CP Cable).\u2014Sunderiend Won the\nEnglish football association charity\nshield today, defeating Arsenal 2-1.\nLast year Sheffield Wednesday nosed out Arsenal 1-0 ln the final for\nthe trophy.\nWINNIPEG, Oct 28 (CP).-Lester\nPatrick, \"Silver Fox\" of the National hockey league, is all set to\npull a bag of tricks In competition\nthis winter. His rebuilt New York\nRangers will be one of the most\nunconventional playing squads ever\nto perform in the upper strata of\nhockey, he taid today after a preseason workout\n\"When Rangers take off on their\nflight to a play-off berth in the\nN.H.L., we hope to keep the opposition on the jump.\n\"We'll toss into the fray a left-\nhanded Torward line, then a right-\nhanded one; switch our defence\naround in the same manner, and\nattempt to work my unconventional\ntheories as in baseball. You've heard\nof a team using two pitchers, one a\nsouthpaw and the other a right-\nhanded hurler, to throw opponents\noff their attack.\n'^Throughout my hockey career\nI've been convinced theories weren't\nalways what they were cracked up\nto be. I want to be in a position\nwhere I can say to any player: 'Go\nin there and play defence, center,\nright wing or left wing,' and know\nhe can do it In a polished manner.\"\nAces Tops in Trail\nBasketball Fixture\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 28.-Although\nAces provided'keen competition in\nthe first half which ended with a\n4-3 count in Giants' favor, Aces\nromped off to victory In the second\nhalf when they dropped in two\nfield baskets while they held Aces\nto a \"goose-egg\" to win 8-3 a fix\nture of the Central School Junior\nBoys' Basketball league at Memorial hall Wednesday afternoon.\nTeams and scores follow:\nGiants \u2014 Ian McLeod 8, Billy\nBrowrtlie 2, Raymond Ciarelli, Robert \"Watson, Sergio sammartino and\nArgyle Armstrong.\nAces\u2014Gei-ald Armstrong 3, Frank\nTurUc, Lome ftnio, Enzo Georgetti,\nAlbert Cavallin, Jim Pearson and\nArthur LePage.\nTURF SHOTS\nWilliam Woodward, LEFT, lt owner of Granville, year's three-year-old\nchamp. RIGHT, George H. Bull, of Saratoga.\n\"DIZZY\" ON THE\nTRADING BLOCK\nDean Asks $50,000 for\nNext Season\nBRADENTON, Fla., Oct. 28 (AP)\n\u2014\"Dizzy\" Dean said today he will\ndemand $50,000 to pitch for St.\nLouis Cardinals next year.\n\"I would sign with any other\nclub for less\", he declared after\nreading dispatches quoting Branch\nRickey, vice-president and general\nmanager of the Cardinals, to the\neffect the star was on the trading\nblock if the terms were right.\n\"I'd hate to give up the St. Louis\nfans,\" Dean asserted, \"but I don't\ncare if I ever work for Rickey\nagain.\"\nRickey was said to have valued\nDean at $400,000.\n\"Since he's got that kind of a tag\non me,\" 01' Di. exclaimed, \" I\nought to be worth $50,000 to 'Sim\nnext year and that's what I'm asking from now on.\"\nAGA|N TEMPTING\nFRED PERRY\nO'Brien Offers Him\n$50,000; Jacobs\nAlso Bidding\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (AP) -\nWhether there will be a profitable organized tour of tennis professionals this winter depends on\nFred Perry\u2014and he doesn't know.\nBill O'Brien, the former rub-down\nexpert who put thc pro game on a\npaying basis, will wash his hands of\nthe sport unless Perry accepts a\ntwo-year-old flat offer of $50,000.\n\"The game needs someone who\ncan stand across the net and give\nEllsworth Vines a battle,\" declared\nO'Brien, who said he lost around\n$22,000 exploiting last year's troupe,\n\"and Perry's the man. I'm through\nmaking overtures to him. He's got\nlo come to me noV\"\nO'Brien isn't the only promoter\nin the field for Perry's services. The\nlatest is Mike Jacobs, who entered\nlhe bidding today.Mike announced\nhe would split '$15,000 between\nPerry and Vines in the hippodrome.\n\"That's all very interesting,\"\nPerry remarked, \"and quite tempting for ono exhibition, but the\nhitch in thc thing is that 'Elly' is\nin Tokyo and probably won't return for some time.\n\"I honestly and frankly can't say\nwhat I am going to do. As a matter\nof fact Ihe entire matter is out of\nmy hands.\"\nRISKO WALLOPS\nBALSAMO\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (API-Eddie (Babe) Risko, former middleweight champion, turned in the\nprize upset of the indoor boxing\nseason tonight by administering a\nsound 10-round thrashing to Harry\nBalsamo, highly-touted knockout\nspecialist from the New York subway catacombs.\nRisko scaled 161 and Balsamo\n160 V*.\nAMBERS LOSES TO\nEDDIE COOL\nPHILADELPHIA, Oct. 28 (API-\nEddie Cool of Philadelphia won an\nupset 10-round decision over Lou\nAmbers, lightweight champion, in\na non-title fight tonight.\nAmbers weighed 136', Cool 139.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\n(By Canadian Preu)\nSarnia Imperials whitewashed SI.\nMichael's college grlddert 37-0 to\nclinch their third Ontario Rugby\nFootball Union senior champlonihlp, four yeara ago tomorrow. Imperials have won the title every\nseaton since and climaxed their\n1934 triumph by winning the Canadian championship.\nMIDDLESEX AND HAMPSHIRE\nWIN\nLONDON, Oct 28 (CP Cable).-\nMtdttlctex defeated Eastern Counties 28-14 and Hampshire overcame\nKent 18-8 ln county championship\nrugby games played today.\nSALFORD MATS HULL\nSALFORD, England, Oct. 28 (CP\nCable).\u2014Inan English rugby league\ngame played here today Salford\nwoh born HijJl 14-2.   \t\nFighting Fives Win\nTrail Hoop Fixture\nTRAIL, B.C, Oct. 28.-Although\nFighting Fives were ahead only by\na 3-2 score at the end of the second\nhalf, three field baskets scored by\nStan Mcleod after the interval assured an 11-4 victory over Colombos\nin a Central School Senior Boys'\nBasketball league game at Memorial hall Wednesday afternoon.\nTeams and scores follow:\nFighting Fives\u2014S. McLeod 9. S.\nZuk, R. Forbes, G. Guild, J. Wcllon,\nJ. Twaddle, J. Page, R. Jones, F.\nAngerilli 2, and F. Dardi.\nColombos \u2014 Domlnlco Picone 2,\nOscar Lazzarotto, Tony Merlo, Archie Martini, Ormando Cavalin, Joe\nSimpson* 2, Fred Pagnan, Mike Johnston and Earl Wilson.\nBELLOISE STILL CHAMP\nI    NEW YORK, Oct. 28 (AP)-The\n;>'ew York States Athletic commis-\ni sion  today  declined to  recognize\nj Henry   Armstrong,   Los   Angeles\n{negro, as new featherweight boxing\nchampion. The commission pointed\nout  Armstrong's  bout with  Mike\nBelloise in Los Angeles last night\nwas not over the championship distance of 15 rounds and lhat, therefore, Belloise. still was recognized\nat champion. Armstrong won a close\ndecision over tho New Yorker in\n10 rounds.\nVardeen Doubles\nUp on Main Event\nSports Club Card\nTwo Five-Round Bouts\nNewcomers Will\nAppear\n10 Resolutions to Loosen Rules\noi Amateurism to Be Considered\naf Meeting of A. A. U. Next Month\nList of Notices of Motions Issued at Toronto;\nHockey Association Efforts Top All\nOthers in General Interest\nTORONTO, Oct 28 (CP)\u2014 At\nleast 10 resolutions designed to\nmake the amateur athlete a little\nlest amateur, in the accepted sense\nof the word, will be considered by\nthe annual meeting of the Amateur\nAthletic Union of Canada in Regina next month. A printed list of\nnotices of motion was received here\ntoday.\nWhile the Canadian Amateur\nHockey association's suggestion for\nbroadening of the amateur definition tops all others in general Interest, a series of resolutions from\nvarous A. A. U. branches and allied\norganizations are also down for discussion.\nAmateur heads will fight hardett\nagainst the C. A. H. A. demand thai\nprofessionals ln one sport be considered amateurs in others, that\nplayers have the right to use their\nplaying ability as a means of obtaining employment, that payment\nof broken time be permitted and\nthat professional teams be allowed\nto play against amateurs.\nAmong other resolutions are\nthese:\nBy the Alberta branch\u2014\"An athlete shall not lose his amateur status by competing with or against a\nprofessional in cricket, golf, indoor\nbowling, horseshoe pitching, quoits,\nJack Vardeen is doublin;: up on\nhis main event as the feature for\nthis week's \"Little Madison Square\nGarden'' show, with two five-round\nevents slated for top billing.\nLouis Fryling and \"Kid\" Lyle will\nfling mitts in one of the main event\nbouts, and Larry Holt tangles with\nJohnny Schule In thc other. Fry-\nling has already demonstrated his\nability on a Nelson Sports club\ncord, but 'tis said he'll hove his\nhands full with Lyle, a new arrival\nin these parts from the coast. Larry\nHolt is another newcomer, and by\nall odds one of the handsomest\nglove artists hereabouts; while\nSchule, introduced as \"the fighting\nbootblack,\" is known to have a\nfancy for wiping the smiles off his\nopponent's face.\nTwo three-round prelims bringing \"Flash\" Johnson and Ronnie\nCraeford into conflict in one, and\n\"Slug\" Wilson and Linus Morrison\nin the other, will be preceded by\nfour bouts still to be made up. New-\nlaces will be presented, along with\nVardccn's special invitation to thc\nladies to attend.\nMAROONS WIN\nSAINT JOHN, N.B., Oct. 28 (CP)\n\u2014Montreal Maroons evened their\nexhibition series with Boston Bruins\ntor.ight, winning the second game of\nthe National Hockey league teams\nsix-game maritime exhibition tour\n3-1. Boston took the first game Monday night 2-1.\narchery or soccer football. Any\ngoverning body of team sport may,\nif it io desires, permit players unable to secure amateur cards\n(through professional activities in\nanother line of sports) to play on\nteams of properly registered amateurs, under amateur regulations.\"\nBy the Saskatchewan branch-\nthat the rule permitting a professional to apply tor an amateur card\nafter being Inactive three years\nbe altered so that only one year of\ninactivity is sufficient.\nBy the Alberta branch\u2014that a\nrule permitting an amateur team\nto play not more than three times\nduring a season againtt-professional teams be altered to no limit to\nthe number of games It established.\nBy Thunder Bay branch\u2014That\ntbe A. A. U. of C. approach the Dominion and provincial governments\nwith a view of securing subsidisation of the Olympic committee ie\nasked by the central Ontario and\neastern Ontario branches and thit\nsubject will be talked over before\nthe Regina convention starts Nov. 19.\nChairman P. J. Mulqueen of the\nOlympic committee has Invited officials of the central Ontario branch\nto meet with the committee here\nSaturday night and go over complaints voiced at the branch's meeting recently.\n.\u00bb   i\nDan Bulgar's Victory lo Cost Ihe\nBookmakers More Than $25,000,000\nFavorite Romps Home in Front of the Field of\n22 in Cambridgeshire Stakes; Daytona\nSecond and Laureat Is Third\nNEWMARKET. England, Oct. 28\n(CP Cable).\u2014A large crowd cheered today as Sir Abe Bailey's Dan\nBulger led a field of 22 home in the\nCambridgeshire stakes, famous autumn handicap. But the bookmakers\nonly groaned.\nVictory of Dan Bulger, second\nfavorite in the betting, brought\nthem nothing btit headaches and\ngrief. They expected it meant they\nwould have to pay out more than\n\u00a35,000,000 ($25,000,000). Sir Abe\nBailey's three-year-old brown colt\nwas coupled in many autumn doubles with Sydney Freeman's Fet,\nwinner of the Cesarewitch.\nTwo lengths back of Dan Bulger\ncame Sir George Bullough's Daytona\nto place second. M. H. Benson's\nLaureat II was third, a short head\nback of Daytona.\nTommy Western rode the winner\nover the l'\/s-mile course. The time\nwas 1:51 3-5. The going was good,\nsoftened somewhat after yesterday'!\nrain, and the weather fine.\nDan Bulger, by Bulger-The Ram's\nWife, was handicapped at 111\npounds. Daytona carried 117 pounds\nand Laureat II, 98. The top-weighted\nentry, Finalist, carrying 127 pounds,\nwat fourth.\nREGOMASWA8 FAVORITE\nA last-minute shift In betting odd-\nestablished G. Ashworth's Pegomas\nas betting favorite at 8 to 1. Pegomas drew number one position, next\nthe rail. Dan Bulger was ln 17th\nplace and wat held at 7 to 1. Odd.\non Daytona were 33 to 1, on Laureat\nII, 100 to 6. Pegomas never showed\nwith the leaders at all.\nSir Abe Bailey, who watched the\nrace from the stands, said: \"I backed\nthe horse to win \u00a310v000.\" He did\nnot feel well enough to go down to\nthe paddock to receive congratulations from a host of friends.\nSaid Jockey Weston: \"Up the hill\nDan Bulger responded readily and\nstayed out Laureat II splendidly.\"\nTrainer Cottrill said: \"I don't bet\nas a rule, but I felt so confident Dan\nBulger would win that I departed\nfrom my usual custom and had a\ngood win. Dan Bulger wat among\nthree yearlings bought cornparat-\ntively cheaply.\"\nBOXING\nJack Vardeen's\n\"Little Madison\nSquare Garden\nFights\"\nNelson Sports Club\nFriday Nite\nOct. 28\u20148:30 P.M.\nDouble Main Event\nEach 5 Rounds\nLOUIE FRYLING\nvs. KID LYLE\nJOHNNY SCHULE\nvs. LARRY HOLT\nAnd a Cood Supporting\nCard!\nLadies especially invited.\nGentlemen   40\u00ab*J\nLadies 251\nChildren  25<*\n,\nMARLYEBONE WINS\nCLARE, South Australia, Oct. 28\n(CP Cable).\u2014En route to Adelaide\nfrom Perth, the touring Marlyebono\ncricket club touring team broke its\njourney today for a one-day match\nwith Clare. The visitors won by\nnine wickets, making 141 runs for\nsix wickets after thc home team had\ndeclared at 82 for four.\nAMERICANS TO \"BEAR DOWN\"\nOSHAWA, Ont, Oct. 28 (CP)-\n\"Tomorrow we really bear down,\"\nManager \"Red'* Dutton said tonight\nand announced his New York Americans will play a full 60-rftinute\npractice game against New Haven\nEagles behind cloied doors Friday.\nNONE FINER\nMADE\nCIGARETTE PAPERS\n fces-V eopM|\nPAGE EIGHT\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER 29. 1036-\n. ; \u2014 fr \u2014< --  . -\u00ab-\n\u2666 \u2022\u2666\u2022\u2666\u2022\u2666-.\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2022->--\u2022\u2666-\u2666\u2014\u2666*\u2666-\u2666\u2022\u2666\u2022*\u2014\u2666\u2022\u25a0\nFLOWERS AT HER FEET\nMARIE    BUZARD\n\u25a0*COrVRU-HT: tlCLCA^tO DV fKXTRAL CHESS A^'JCIATi-.\n\u00bb_*.\u00ab\u2022 \u2666 -\u2666-\u00bb\u2666\u25a0\u2022\n\u2022\u2666-\u2666\u2014\u2666\u2014\u2666-+\u00bb\u2666\u2014\u2666\u2014\u2666\u00bb\u2022:.\u2022\u2666\u2666\u2666\nRead this first:\nBy winning a S500 slogan contest, Alix Carey earns a promotion in thc advertising agency\nwhere she is employed and enlists the personal interest of John\nSayre, young president of the\nagency, whom shc secretly admires. Comin..; to New York following her parents' death, she\nhas made close friends of Kathleen Crosby and her cousin, Kim\nPreston. Alix grows to know\nSayre following a business conference one evening. Kathleen,\nWho is In love with Kim, urges\nAlix to take up golf as a social\nweapon, Kim makes love to Alix\nbut she obviously prefers his\nfriendship. Alix is thrilled when\nJohn Sayre, noticing her golf\nclubs, makes a date to play with\nher the next day. a holiday. Following an enjoyable golf game.\nJohn invites Alix to a house\nparty. (Now go on with the story.)\nCHAPTER   12\nThe holiday was on Tuesday.\nOn Wednesday at lunch, Alix said\nto Kathleen Crosby, \"Imagine, Kathleen, how beautifully your casual\nidea for me to take up golf worked\ninto the scheme of things!\"\nKathleen didn't look at hcr. She\nought lo have been ashamed of tha!\ndeliberate move, she thought, but if\nit were to mean Alix's happiness as\nwell as her own, she wouldn't feel\ntoo bad about it.\nIf it meant that it would be an\nagent to draw Alix and John Sayre\ntogether and Alix wanted that, it\nwould have been right. If it mean',\nonly unhappiness for Alix and if\nshe believed that Alix might care\nfor Kim. it would have been very\nwrong. For she had deliberately\nsuggested the idea of Alix'.-; learning the game because she knew it\nwas a social weapon.\nConnivance, scheming were no;\nin Kathleen's makeup and she surprised herself by having any pan\nof it. But she had believed that\nAlix's interest in John Sayre wai\nmore than the admiration ot an\nemployee for her chief.\nAnd while Kathleen felt a veV'\nreal affection for Alix, Alix v-tp\nhurting her. Unconsciously, Kathleen knew. Because Alix didn':\nknow how bringing her loveline*-;\nand appeal into the lives of Kathleen and Kim, she had threatened\nthe life-Ions structure that h\"d bee:;\nsi ling building between the seeond cousins.\nHad Kathleen been another kind\nof girl, she might, have done cne\nof two things: She .night hav\nbrought her love for Kim oul of\nhiding\/ confided in Alix the leve\nthat hftd been there ever since she\ncould remember. Not the easy comrade cpusin-and-cousin love but the\nlove of a woman for the on<* man\nshe knows surely to be hcr heart';;\nchoice forevermore.\nHad she don- thy. b.iih of then:\nmight ha\"r been sirred li.\" un-\nhapi-ine:'..-. tha; la;1 ;o <iuvly befov\u00ab\nthem. But she. couldn't have. Her\nlove was inarticulate, shy, and sir.'\nhad no premise on which io a?sumc\nthat it waa her right. Until .Mi::\ncame into Iheir lives, there had\nnever been a woman other than\nherself in Kim's lif:\\ Kim had made\nlove to he-- in rw!i_i.cnt\\ S'bnce\" that\nneeded no word:'. It wes i\\.- mi-ch\na pari of them as their maimers,\nthc things they &\\<\\ us well ai ihe\nthings they thought. No, she couldn't\nhave told Alix.\nNor could she have taken the\nother way. to banish Alix from the\ncircle of her life. It would have\nbeen so easy to safeguard herself\nand Kim by simply dropping Alix\nwith thc easy, deadly 'politeness of\nher clas.-. Bul she liked her, she\ncouldn't be unfair to hcr. Even\nnow when she couldn't be sure that\nAlix was intrigued sufficiently with\nJohn Sayre\u2014or not intrigued with\nKim. Because she loved Kim, she\ncouldn't understand why every oth-\n' or woman in the world didn't.\nShe was hurt by Kim's failing to\nI tell her when he saw Alix. Hurl,\nI not because she thought that he\ni was deliberately keeping something\nj from her, or because she thought\nshe had any right to know. She\n\u25a0 was hurt because it scorned so natural for him not to include* her, to\nj forget that shc might be interested.\nI All of whicli was of no doing on\n| Alix's part.\ni She smiled sweetly and sincere-\ni ly at Alix, \"You're like a kid with\nI it's first doll, Alix. Tell me all\nabout it.\"\nI \"There really isn't an awful lot\n, to tell. He happened to come into\nmy office on business . . .\"\nj \"Does he make a habit of calling around at the offices of his copy\n' writers?'' Kathleen asked inter-\n' estedly.\nI \"I've never seen him do it be-\n! fore,\" Alix answered after the brief-\n\\ est hesitation. \"Anyway, it just hap-\nj pened. He asked me to play with\ni him the next afternoon. I've never\ni been in such bad form! Then when\n! we were playing the last hole, a man\n1 named Hank Powers . . .\"\n\"Stoutish?     Red-haired?\"   Kath-\n| leen asked and Alix said he was,\n\"A   very  good  friend  of   mine.\nWell, go on. Alix.\"\n\"He was very casual, didn't know\n. lhat I'm not a friend of Mr. Sayre's\nEnd he asked mc if I were coming\nnut to the putting contest on Saturday. Then. John ... Mr. Sayre\nJ urned to me and said he'd like to\nhave me if I'd like to come, and\n\"e called me 'Alix.' Naturally, in\niumt of a stranger, I wasn't going\nPERSONAL\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE1 NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invlgorators and other\nstimulants One dose peps up organs, glands. U not delighted,\nmaker refunds few centt paid\nCall, write, Mann-Ruthertord Co\n(2884)\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 latex assortment (or '$1\nOrder direct and be sure of best\nPacked plain Free catalogue National Importers, 812-Centrc St.\nCalgary, Alta. J2885)\n\"S PI RELLA\", WORLD'S BEST\ncorset service. For free demonstration call Mrs. Stevens, Rm. 3,\nMarsden Apts. (3258)\nLOST AND FOUND\nFOUND-SMALL YELLOW DOG.\nOwner may have same by calling\nat Daily News and paying for ad.\n(3296)\nLOST-1 SlxiPnRE \/_nTTrTmbe-\ntween Kokanee and Nelson. Finder return to Renwicks Transfer.\n(3305)\nPossmore Miss to\nTee*;h School Un\nPeace River Way\nPASSMORE. B.C.-Miss B. Perry\n\u25a0-.turned  on  Sundiy from a  few\n\u00a3\u25a0;-:, spent in Nelson where she was\na sues' of Mr. and Mr?. Alex Smith,\nitreci.\n\u25a0\u25a03 M. Forbes lefl nn Tuesday\n?.ch school in the Peace River\net.\nII.   Saunders   enjoyed   some\nfishing here on Sunday, rent* to Trr.il in the evening.\nH upland  was a visitor from\nover ihe  ---cok-end. He reel  Sire:--,-  night accompanied\nA*: *ms ar.d W. R. Perry,\n. G. V.'ard of Vallican. Mrs.\npH and children of Penticton,\nv'- oui-* friends her.: on Friday.\nFalls\nWi.\ntc tc\ndis'r\nw.\nKoccl\nlu'-ni\nA.\nlv F\nMr\nSOUTH AFRICA HA8\n\"POOR WHITES\"\nCAPE TOWN (CP)-Described as\nno longer a \"public question\" but\n\"a public menace\", it is estimated\nthere arc .11)0.000 \"very poor whites\"\nin thc Unlet! of South Africa's\nEuropean   >*.--ula'.ion   of   1,800.000.\nNew Russmn Navy Shows Its Teeth\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog. a pocr\n'tetbook lewelry or fur oi anything else of value telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found\"\nAd will be inserted without cost\nto you. We will collect from the\nowner.\nlo say, 'Oh, this is so sudden!' or\nthat I didn't expect he meant it.\n\"So you're going?\"\n\"It. seems that I am. Mr. Powers\nwalked back lo the clubhouse with\nus and sat with us all during supper. It was a buffet and simply\ngrand. It got chilly at night and we\nsat around the hearth in the trophy\nroom.\"\n\"And you drove homc by,moonlight?\"\n\"Kathleen. I think you're having\nfun with me. Please don't try to\nturn what was just a pleasant afternoon and evening into a romantic\nadventure. There wasn't a moon. Or\nat least, not much of a moon.\"\n\"Hurry and go on. So then what\nhappened?\"\n\"So nothing happened! I nearly\nfell asleep on thc way homc. Fresh\nair and so much food made me\nsleepy and first thing I knew we\nwere at the door of my apartment\nand he was saying, 'Saturday, it\nis then? Can you catch the 2:10\nfrom Penn? There are some others\ncoming on that train and you'll be\nmet.' I started to say 'but' a few\ntimes and he said. \"So, it's all settled?' and it seems it is.\"\n\"And why not? It sounds jolly\nto me. Obviously he is having a\nhouse party and why not have another attractive girl? By the way, are\nyou still calling each other 'Mr.'\nand 'Miss'.?\"\n\"Certainly. He did call me 'Alix'\nonce but I guess that sort of slipped\nout. I manage to avoid trying to call\nhim anything. Are you quite sure\nvou think it's all right -for me to go,\nKathleen?\"\n\"I certainly do. And knock them\ncold. Also, Alix, be careful you\ndon't get an inferiority complex\nover the thing, Try and forget, if\nyou can, that the relationship between you and Sayre is a business\none. Make up your mind that he\nsought your company because you\nare attractive to him. And don't get\nany funny ideas about the difference in your worlds, you were talking about one day. I've been on lots\nof those parties out in that part of\nthe island and you'll run into girls\nin his own set with manners you'd\nhave been spanked for displaying.\"\n\"You make it all sound reasonable,\" Alix said. \"Up to now, it's\nall seemed a little fantastic. You\nknow, too good to be true and all\nthat sort of thing.   Cinderella in-\nLEGAL NOTICE\nLAND REGISTRY  ACT\n(Section 160)\nIN THE MATTER OF LOT 12118,\nKOOTENAY DISTRICT\nProof having been filed ln my\noffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 19594-1 to the above mentioned lands in the name of DALLY\nCOAL AND OIL SYNDICATE LIMITED (Non-personal liability) and\nbearing date the 17th October 1925,\nI HEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my\nintention at the expiration of one\ncalendar month from the first publication hereof to issue a Provisional\nCertificate of Title in lieu of such\nlost Certificate. Any person having\nany information with reference to\nsuch lost Certificate of Title is requested to communicate with the\nundersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON. B.C., this\n15th day of October, 1936.\nA. W. IDIENS,\nRegistrar.\nDATE of first publication October\n22, 1936. (3183)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWANT WORK - RELIANT, NON-\nsmokcr. Room & board. Small\nwinter wage H. Langman, Ross-\n' land, B.C. (3298)\nREFINED\" WOMAN DESIRES Position, housekeeper or companion,\nhas school age girl. Box 3295,\nDally News.  (3295)\nWOMAN WANTS JOB COOKING\nfor camp or outfits of men. Box\n3259, Daily News. (3259)\nEXPERIENCED    GIRL     WANTS\nhousework. Apply Box 3299, News.\n (3299)\nEXP. GIRrWANTS HOUSEWORK\nor cafe. Phone 659R1. (32801\nHELP WANTED\nGIRL FOR GENERAL HOUSE-\nwork on farm. Must be fond of\nchildren. Box 3297, Daily News.\n(3297)\nWANTED-ELDERLY LADY FOR\nhousework and companion. 902\nFourth street. (3285)\nEXPERIENCED WOMAN OR GIRL\nfor housework. Phone 843L. (3277)\nvited to the palace. The impossible achieved so easily.\"\n\"I told you once that nothing\nwas impossible for you if you really\nwanted it.\" Kathleen's eyes were\non the ceiling and her expression\nrich with meaning.\n\"And I told you that I have everything I want.\"\n\"Don't tempt Fate that way, Alix.\nI wouldn't dare say a thing like\nthat.   Oh, one more thing!\"\n\"Yes.\" Alix called their waitress.\n\"Don't take too many clothes and\ndon't try to outdress anyone.\"\nKathleen had made John's Invitation to Alix sound reasonable.\nThinking lt over it didn't sound\nreasonable to John Sayre. He, regretted it but he wouldn't have recalled it for the world.\nHe wasn't a snob but lt was simply that he knew lt wasn't a good\nidea to cultivate personal relationships with any girl who worked for\nhim.\nThe invitation had come as naturally as his first invitation for her\nto play golf with him. He hadn^t\nIntended, doing that either yet he\nknew that Bill Warner had crystallized the thought in him that she\nwas lovely and desiring to be alone\nwith her was inevitable.\nShe was a surprising girl, different from any he knew. He never\nknew what to expect from her. Hers\nwas a strange mixture that was both\nshy and extraordinarily poised. She\nwas a gentlewoman, from where he\ndid not know. She had brains and\nbeauty and he didn't think for a\nmoment that she would misunderstand his casual invitation.\nNevertheless he was more than\nFOR SALE\nINTERNATIONAL 6 H.P. GAS EN-\ngine used 2 months, equipped with\nclutch. Price $175 f.o.b. Cranbrook.\nCranbrook Auto Wreckers. (3053)\n25,000 FT. Itt IN.* GALVANIZED\nPipe, also large stock Black pipe\nand fittings, all sizes. Write Swartz\nPipe Yard, 220 East, 1st. Ave.,\nVancouver, B.C. (2881)\n3 CONTINENTAL GASOLINE\nPower Units, 4 cylinder, 67 h.p.\nPrice $350 f.o.b. Cranbrook. Cranbrook Auto Wreckers. \u25a0       (3053)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd.\n250 Prior St Vancouver, B.C.\n(2888)\nFOR SALE - 5 LIGHT CANDLE\nelectric fixtures. Butler silver finish. Bargain. Call Strathcona hotel.\n(3181)\nFOR SALE \u2014 BARRELS, KEGS,\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B.C. (2889)\nDINING ROOM SUITE, H.B. BLAN-\nkets, Metronome. Phone 679L.\n(?279)\nFOR SALE\u2014PEDIGREED BLACK\nScotty female pup. Box 1242, Trail.\n(3286)\nHEATERSrNE\"W-AND~SECOND-\nhand. $2.75 up. The Ark. (2973)\nSLABWOOD FOR SALE. PHONE\n163.        . (3269)\nFOR SALE - FIVE DESIRABLE\nhomes;  C. F. McHardy.      (3075)\nFARM LANDS\nIMOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms In Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Information to 908 Dept of Natural\nResources. CPR. Calgary. Alta\n(2892)\nDOCS\nCOCKER SPANIEL, MALE, 11\nmonths old. Curly. Well-bred. $15.\nDelivered. T. Roynon, Nelson.\n(3259)\nHOUSES WANTED\nWANTED TO RENT FOR WINTER\nmonths, small furn. house or furn.\napt. for 2 adults. Box 3251, News.\n(3251)\nELECTRICAL\nMOTORS\nGENERATORS AND TRANSFOR-\nmers, 15,000 H.P. to select from.\nStock delivery on most items.\nCROSSMAN MACHINERY CO.\nLtd. 61 Alexander fet., Vancouver.\n(3108)\nMISCELLANEOUS\nNOTICE\nThe business of Williams Transfer will be carried on as usual\nand we wish to take this opportunity of expressing to our\nmany customers our thanks and\nappreciation for patronage during past years and hope for a\ncontinuance of our pleasant\nbusiness relations during the\ncoming years.\nMrs. Fred Williams\nGordon J. Williams\n(3301)\nNrlson Mij 2fao0\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspaper Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange connecting to\nall   Departments\t\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy \u2014 $  .05\nBy carrier per week \u2014     .25\nBy'carrier per year   13.00\n, By mail In Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas per month 60c;\nthree months $1.80, six months,\n$3.00, one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c, six months,\n$4.00, one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU. S. same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nAssayers\nMachinists\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Chemist. Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer\nSampling agents at Trail and Tacoma smelters, 301-305 Josephine\nSt. Nelson, B.C. (2933)\nGRENVILLE H GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\n!   Baker street, Nelson, B.C.   P.O.\nBox No. 276. Representing Ship-\nj   pers interest at Trail, B.C.  (2934)\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nI For all Classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding.   Motor  Rewinding,   Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street\n(2953)\nAutomobile Radiator Repain\nPatents\nFOR RENT. HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nFOR RENT-MODERN HOME,\nfurnace and electric range. Apply\nWest Transfer Co. (3281)\n8 ROOM HOUSE, FURNACE, FIRE-\nplace, newly decorated. Fairview.\nBox 3303, Daily News. (3303)\nFTTRNTsHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent.   Annable Block.\n(2890)\nCOTTAGE FOR RENT. FURNISH-\ned, warm, city water and light.\nPhone 328L3. (3246)\n4, 2 AND 1 ROOM HEATED CAB-\nina, winter rate. Shardelow's Mo-\ntor Court               ^J??06-\n7 ROOM HOUSE. PHONE 8Q8T.\nD. Maglio. (3092)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (2891)\nPARTLY FURN. 2 ROOM HOUSE-\nkeeplng suites. Ritz Apts.    (3274)\nLIGHT HSKPG. ROOMS. NO CHIL-\ndren. 918 Kootenay St.        (3268)\nPARTLY    FURNISHED\nPhone 628X.\nHOUSE.\n(3273)\nFOR   RENT - THREE  MODERN\nhomes. C. P. McHardy.        (3076)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\n1650 LB. MARE IN GOOD CONDI-\ntlon. Splendid work animal. R, W.\nHaggen. Madden Hotel.       (3201)\nHORSE, 1100 LBS., GOOD FOR\nfarm work. Apply Bill W. Grit-\nchen, Shoreacres P.O.        (3260)\nHORSE, 1100 LBS., GOOD FOR\nfarm work. Apply Bill W. Grit-\nchen, Shoreacres P.O.        (3260)\nYORKSHIRE PIGS$3.75 f.o.b. Edge-\nwood. Boothby, Edgewood.t (3208)\nCORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS\nLEARN ELECTRICITY AT HOME\nWrite for particulars Maple Leaf\nHome Study Electrical Course, published by\u2014\nHEMPHILL DIESEL\nENGINEERING SCHOOLS LTD.\n1365 Granville St., Vancouver, B.C.\n(3136)\nWANTED\nmomentarily disturbed when hi;\nman told him that Miss Cushn**\nhad telephoned from Boston to say\nthat sl)e would be in New York,\nFriday, and would like to join his\nparty.\n(To Be Continued)\nDOZEN WYANDOTTES OR LEG-\nhorn pullets. Box 8, Queen's Bay.\n (3249)\nhi TO 2 H.P. GASOLINE ENGINE\nfor cash. Box 3287, Daily News.\n (3287)\nWANTED-FIRST AID MAN. AP-\nply P.O. Box 788, Nelson.     (3262)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\n55 ACRES, 16 CLEARED. FAIR\nbuildings. Plenty running water.\nF. Storgard, Slocan City.    (3290)\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nfor expert repairs\nPhone 686 604 \u2022_ Baker St.\n(2935)\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted inventions and\nfull information sent free. The\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St. Ottawa.\n(295J)\nPhotography\nChiropractors\nJ. R. MCMILLAN, D. C. PALMER\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk, Nelson\n(2936)\nE. M. WARREN, D.C, Gilker Blk.\nNelson, B.C. P.O. Box 872.   (2937)\n(2937)\nElectrical\nJ. F. COATES, Tho Electric Store\nSupplies and Installations\nPhone 766. P.O. Bax 1065\n(2939)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nE. L WARBURTON. AGENT, NEL-\nson, B.C. Ph. 53. Res. 239 PO\nBox 668. Oils. etc. Mine Machinery and Equipment, Steam Coals.\n  (S940)\nH. D. DAWSON    ~    Nelson, EC.\nMine Surveys aud Reports\n(2941)\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-\ned, any size, 25c. Reprints, eight\nfor 25c. Deckled edge prints. Valuable coupon. \"Better prints at\nlower cost\" KRYSTAL PHOTOS.\nWilkie, Sask. (2956)\nSanitariums\nCHRONIC DISEASES MIND AND\nbody. Dr. Aldrlch, Spokane, E.\n4504 Frederick. (2957)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S 'SASH   FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant, 217 Baker st\n(2958)\nSecond Hand Stores\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale. B.C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(2942)\nWE  BUY,  SELL  Ic  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. The Ark Store.\n(2959)\nTaxidermist\nFlorists\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 215. All kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays & etc Phone 215\nMrs. Hagarty. Box 29. (2943)\nDIRK de JONG\nFront   St.,   Nelson,   B.C.   Sprays,\nWreaths and Floral displays.\nPrompt Service Given (2770)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nOpen day and night Lady attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(2914)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD.\nReal Estate, Insurance, Rentals.\nBaker St. (2945)\nR. W. DAWSON. Real Estate, In-\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St. (2946)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99.\n(2947)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 508 Ward St.\n(2948)\nJ. E. ANNABLE, REAL ESTATE,\nRentals, Insurance. Annable Blk\n(2949)\nLIFE, FIRE. AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulin. Ph. 70.    (2950)\nCHAS F. McHARDY, INSURANCE,\nReal Estate. Ph. 135. (2951)\nInvestments\nLIVING PROTECTION\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nF.A.STUART.  BOX 389\n(2952)\nP. W. R1SSLING,'TAXIDERMIST.\nGame heads, birds, rugs. Work\nguaranteed. Sport Shop, Nelson.  Thc Merc, Trail. (2977)\nWatch Repairing\nH. H. SUTHERLAND\nWatchmaker and Jeweller\nRutledge block, Baker St., Nelson.\n\"When   Sutherland   repairs   your\nsvatch it is on time all the time.\"\n(2960)\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE. Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St,\n(2961)\nWigs and Toupeei\nLADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S wtg_>\nand toupees, etc. Free Illustrated\nCatalogue. Over 20 years in B.C,\nWe buy cut hair. Hanson Hal*\nGoods Co. P.O. Box 601. Vancou*\nver, B.C. (2962)\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlie a Line\nMinimum 2 tlnei\n2 lines,  once  $ .22\n3 lines,  once _ 33\n4 lines,   once _ 44\n2 lines, 6 times      .88\n3 lines, 6 times \t\n4 lines, 6 times\t\n2 lines, 1 month  -\n3 lines, 1 month\t\n.._ 1.32\n... 1.78\n  2.86\n.... 4.29\n4 lines, 1 month _  5.72\nAll above less 10% for prompt\npayment\nThe recent war maneuvers of the Russian fleet ln the Baltic provided this picture, that shows the bin'nesslike aft-tottery of the Soviet\ntorpedo boat \"Yakov-Sverdlov\" being trained on a mythical target. The\naaneuvers, coupled with the Soviet threat on thc Spanish situation,\nused more anxiety in troubled Europe.\n .a\u00b0u\ni      i in\n'. ..   111..  1   ..'-. Ll   i    '     'I'\nRLY WINTER RUSH EXPECIED\n)N WHOLESALE ROW; SUPPLIES\nu\nARRIVING IN CARLOTS HEAVY\nr and Feed Buyers\nNot Stocking Up\nto Date\nWAITING NEWS\niOUTHERN CROPS\n)dstuffs Steady But\nJpward Tendency\ns Marked\n>\navy carlot arrivals, particularly\nnixed groceries and canned\ns, featured the week on whole-\nrow. Business about maintained\npace of the past few weeks\ngli in some lines it lacked a\ni in anticipation of the early\nte rush expected shortly.\nles of flour and feed brightened\nut buyers appear to be stocking\nI more than their Immediate\ns and sitting back watching\nmarket. Many expected prices\nUp back a little when Argen-\nand Australia crop prospects\nI announced. But since news\nbeen received that the Argen-\norop, down last year, Is about\nage this year, and that the\nItalian crop is down about IVh\nlon bushels compared with the\nlast. Increased buying Is considered\nprobable In view of the rising price\nof wheat The market generally ls\nexpected to be much stronger.\nFlour slipped lower once during\nthe week, a drop of io cents per\nbarrel being reported, but bran advanced 60 cents a ton and shorts *\u00bb1\na ton. Dealers generally expect\nprices to rise fairly steadily.    .\nFOODSTUFFS STRONG*\nThe foodstuff market remained\nmuch the same, few price changes\nbeing recorded although the tendency toward strength persisted.\nMarked price advances were expected to be announced as new supplies\nwere drawn upon,\nMeat prices for the'most part held\nsteady, with demand firmly established for seasonable meats. The\ncooked meat business has been down\nfor some time.\nEggs remained steady but local\nsupplies were said to be scarcer and\nstorage eggs were being drawn upon more heavily.\nChristmas candies, peels, fruit and\nso on are arriving in larger quantities.\nIt was an unusually heavy week\nfor arrivals, which included four\ncars of sugar, six of mixed grocer-\nlea, two of Edgewood timothy hay,\nand two of meats, In addition to\ncar lots of salt, canned goods, canned milk, potatoes, onions, flout\nand feed, and so on.\nI   \t\n\u2014\u2014NELSON DAILY NIWS, NELSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 29, 1938-\nmd Mining News\nToronto Stock Quotations\nkfield    1.45\nry Holllnger       .05%\nI Metals 28\nMissouri _     .48\nlo -      .24\nlorne _ 8.90\nlge River Ex      Ml\nAnkerite   10.00\nMslartic _ ISt\n[boo Gold   1.85\n:le Trethewey  1.21\ntrai Manitoba       .20\ntrai Patricia   3.75\nbougamou   1.74\nSt Copper _ 3.75\nlarium\nslftS.\nne .\nn Exploration _ \t\notado _ \t\njonbridge\nl's Lake ...\nd Belt ....\nInada \t\n\u25a0drock \t\nlinger  ....\nvey  \t\n[son Bay .\nNickel .....\nI Con\n.land Lake  \t\n\u2022 Maron\t\nashore  \t\nI* Long Lac  \t\n1.75\n65.25\n53.37\n.07\n1.22\n11.50\n.74%\n.15\n.31\n2.79\n13.37\n.67\n29.75\n61.12\n.45\n.58\n.-OH\n55.00\n6.40\n4.80\n21\n.03%\n4.20\n)le Leaf _\t\nftblc -.._-*.\t\n\u00abod Cockshutt\t\nbtyre  -  40.25\nI R L Gold   1.69\nfittie Grahamme 19\nMatters Gold  1.15\nling Corp  \u201e 2.20\nIssinR  2.40\n\u2022antla  _ 68.50\nkhill _ _ .24%\ntoaster  1.15\nid Oreille _   .85\nklc Crow  6.25\nneer Gold  7.05\nmler Gold \u201e  3.03\nio Gold  1.25\nSan Antonio \u201e _\nSheep Creek\t\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSiscoe  \t\nSmelter Gold \t\nStadccona - _ \t\nSt Anthony \t\nSudbury Basin\t\nSullivan _\nSylvanite \t\nTeck Hughes\t\nToburn   _\nTowagamac ._\u2014_..\nTreadwell \t\nVentures \t\nWaite Amulet \t\nWayside -..\nWhite Eagle _,\nWri\u00abht Hargreaves _..\nOILS\nAJ-tx\nB A Oil \t\nC and E Corporation .\nChemical Research ....\nDalhousie _.\t\nHome Oil\t\nImperial Oil ...\nInternational Fete\t\nMerland  \t\nNordon  \t\nRoyallte\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bros  \t\nBeU Telephone ....\nBrazilian\t\nBrew tc Dist\t\nCan Bread\n2.36\n.81\n1.98\n4.30\n.06\n.60\n.17\n5.65\n1.90\n3.00\n5.20\n3.85\n.75\nat\n2.54\n1.84\n.09%\n.03 %\n7.70\n.40%\n23.00\n1.43\n1.05\n.70\n1.08\n22.87\n37.12\n.10%\n.11\n28.79\n.._ 10%\n... 180%\n...   16%\nCan Car and Foundry \t\nCan Cement . . ______\n6'\/,\n12%\n11%\nCan Dredge  _.   44\nCan Malting\t\nCPR  _.\nCons Smelters _\nDom Bridge \t\nDom Stores\t\nDist Seagrams _\nFord Canada A .\nGoodyear Tire ..\nHiram Walker .\nLoblaw A\t\nMassey Harris ..\nSteel of Canada .\n3414\n12%\n64%\n48 Vi\n10%\n22%\n23%\n84\n42%\n21%\n5%\n70\nVancouver Stock Exchange\ndsted\nBid\n? Consolldted .\n.16%\nalgamatcd\t\n.10\nMissouri \t\n* .47V4\n8.95\niw te Dlst\t\n.85\ntish  Dominion.\n.19\n_ge River Con.\n.03%\n1X Gold    \t\n.10\nibooGoldQ \t\n1.70\n. E Corporation\n1.41\nist Breweries ..\n13.25\nnmonwealth O.\n.14%\nrtonia     -\n.10%\nrgal Oil\t\n.16%\nDO Oil \t\n1.00\ntrnational \t\n.21\nind Mountain ....\n1.30\nttenay Belle\t\n.1)2\n- Siccar     ..   _\nDoug Segur Ex\n.02\n.10%\nLeod Oil (New)\n.22\nito Gold \t\n.20\nJel Oil  \t\n.28%\nrnlng Star  -\n.02%\nueer Gold \t\n7.00\n\u25a0nier Gold \u2014\n3.00\nmler Border\t\n.00%\natsino Copper ..\n.01%\n10 Gold    .\n1.24\nives MacDonald\n.00\nly Mines -\n\u2014\nmon Gold\t\n.08\".\niep Creek\t\n.82\nloner Oil\t\n.15%\nrlor Bridge\t\n.06\nlalta  -\n.08\nlette   -\n1.25\nlllngton \t\n.01)\nRBS\nfcandrla   _.\n\u2014\naconda ..._...\t\n.05%\n[tec Oil\t\n.03%\n\u2014\ntver Silver\t\n.01%\nC Nickel  .,\n.34\nII Mountain\t\n.11\nliadlan Rand\t\n\u2014\nImont Oil    \t\n.25\npttal Estates .....\n7.85\np Est Warr\t\n2.00\nngress Gold \t\n.07\ntk Province\t\n\u2014\nOws Nest ..'.\t\n.10\nlhousie        \u2014\n.01\n.housie Oils \t\n.08\n.04\nBtator  .\n.03\ninwcll    \u25a0\u25a0   \t\n.03\nlrvicw Amal\t\n.08%\njra Mining \t\n.65\n\u25a0feral Gold\t\n.03\nAsk\n.17%\n.11%\n.49\n9.00\n1.00\n_!0\n.04\n.11\n1.78\n1.43\n13.75\n.15%\n.11\n.17%\n1.04\n.22\n1.34\n.88\n.02%\n.11%\n.20%\n.29\n.02%\n7.10\n8.02\n.01\n.02\n1.25\n.12.\n09\n.85\n.09%\n.05\n.08\n.04%\n.00%\n.02\n.35\n.05\n.26\n8.15\n2.90\n.07%\n.00%\n.11\n.02\n.74\n.06\n.04\n.04\n.08%\n.70\nBid\nFreehold Oil _     .09%\nGeo Copper          .30\nGlacier Creek  01\nGolconda    .    10\nGold Mountain 12\nGeo Enterprise .....     .02%\nGeo River  _.     .01%\nGrandview      .02%\nGrange Mines       .02%\nGrull Wihksne 12%\nHaida Gold      .00%\nHedley Amal 17\nHighwood Sarcee.     .10%\nHome Gold    02%\nIndian Mines      .01%\nInter Gold          .08%\nIndependence  -     .00%\nKootenay Flo 00%\nMadlsol Oil  _     .02%\nMar Jon Oil 16%\nMercury OU  11\nMeridian  _.     .02\nMerland   _     .10%\nMcGillivray     18\nMid West Pete .....     .03%\nMorton Wolsey ....     .00%\nMarmot Metals      .00%\nNicola Minea 12%\nNoble Five      .02%\nNordon  11%\nOkalta Oils Com ..     .27%\nPacalta            .05%\nPend Oreille 83\nPilot Gold  _     J>3%\nPorter Idaho      ...     .04%\nQuesnelle Quartz..      \u2014\nRanchmen's              .35\nReliance Gold     02%\nRelief Arlington ..      .39\nReward  04%\nRoyalite    29.25\nRufus Argenta      .01\nSilbak Premier .....    2.40\nSilvercrest    _      \u2014\nSilverado Com        .02\nSilversmith  _     .01\nSnowflake           .00%\nSouthwest Pet 19\nSunloch Mines 18\nTaylor Windfall....      \u2014\nU D L  92\nUnited Empire      .01%\nUnited OU     _     M\nViking Geld  01%\nVulcan Oil    .. : .84\nWaterloo Mines   ..      .01\nWaverley  Tangier     .00%\nWellington     00%\nWesko Mines       .23\nWhitewater       .02\nYmir Y Girl      .40\nWINNIPEG LOSES\nEARLY GAINS\nOne-cent Advance Wiped Out\nUnder Selling\nWrNNIPEG, Oct 28 (CP) .-Wheat\nprices showed notable lack of resistance to moderate selling on the\nWinnipeg grain exchange today,\ntumbling from early one-cent gains\nto close unchanged to % cent lower.\nExports totalled 500,000 bushels,\nOctober closed at $1.11%, November\n$1.11%, December $1.09% nnd May\n$1.10.\nInteresting to traders was a private forecast that Argentina this\nyear would produce 275,000,000 bushels of wheat a sharp increase over\nlast season when a partial crop\nfailure resulted,\nLiverpool closed l%d higher, but\nChicago followed Winnipeg's late\nlower trend, closing % down.\nOperations were inactive in the\ncash and coarse grains markets,\nprices closing little changed.\nBAR QOLD UNCHANGED\nMONTREAL\/ Oct 28 (CP).-Bar\ngold ln London unchanged at $34.76\nan ounce ln Canadian funds; 142s 2d\nin British. The fixed $35 WrsWng-\nton price amounted to $34.89 in Canadian.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (AP) .-Copper steady; electrolytic spot and future 10.00; export 10.15-20.\nTin firm; snot and nearby 45.62%-\n76; future 49.45.\nLesd steady; spot New York 4.70-\n75; Eaat St. Louis 4.55.\nZinc quiet; East St. Louis spot and\nfuture 4.89.\nIron, aluminum, antimony, quicksilver, platinum and wolframite unchanged.\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nat 44 %.\nAt London \u2014 Closing. Copper,\nstandard spot \u00a342 8s 9d; future \u00a342\n13s 9d; electrolytic, spot, bid \u00a348\n10s; asked \u00a347.\nTin, spot \u00a320410s; future \u00a3203 5s.\nLead, soot \u00a318 17s 6d; future\n\u00a318 16a 3d.\nZinc, spot \u00a315 3s 9d; future \u00a315\n8i9d.\nBar allver firm, 3-16 higher at\n20%d.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Oct. 28 (CP)-But-\nter prices held barely steady on\nCanadian commodity exchange produce section today.\nButter spot close\u2014Que. 24%.\nWheat, No. 2 nor. 1.18; barley, No.\n3 C.W. 70; No. 1 feed 46; spring\nwheat patents 6.70; bran, ton, 28.25;\nshorts 30.25; middlings 36,25; rolled\noats, bag, 3.25.\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014Silver futures cloaed unchanged to 10\npoints up. Sales six contracts: 2 Oct., 4 Dec.\nOpen  High   Low Close\nOct -    44.50    44.60   44.80 44.50\nDec    44.50   45.00   45.00 44.50\n30 Industrials .....\n20 ralla\t\n20 utilities\t\n40 bonds \t\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh Low\n _.  176.531 174.54\n    58.81 58.02\n     35.35 34.87\nClose Change\n174.84-up ,48\n58.22\u2014up .10\n34.90-off '.08\n104.99-up   .07\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nAss'd Breweries  11%\nBell Telephone _  150\nBrazilian    16%\nB C Power A -  85\nBruck Silk  8%\nBuUd Prod  52%\nCan Bronze   44\nCan Car Fdy '.  12%\nCanada Cement   _ 11%\nCan Cement Pfd   95%\nCan elanese     _  27%\nCan Ind Al A  6%\nCan Ind Al B  5%\nCPR\nCanadian Steamers _\nCockshutt \t\nCon M te S\t\nDominion Bridge\t\nDominion Glass\t\nDominion Text\t\nDryden Paper \t\nGn St Wares\t\nChas Gurd _..\t\nHamilton Br\n12%\n2%\n9\n63%\n47%\n112%\n74\n10\nt\n13%\n60%\nImperial Tob Can \t\nInU Nickel     \t\nMassey Harris  \t\nMcCoU Frontenac \u201e   14\nMontreal Power     34%\nNational Steel Car 27%\nOgllvie     235\nPower Corp\nQuebec   ..\nShawinigan\nSherwin Wma\n16\n19%\n25%\n20%\n13\n70%\nSouth Can Power  _\nSteel of Can\t\nCURBS\nB C Packing  _...._    12%\nBrew Jt Dlst 80\nB A Oil     22%\nCanada Dredge    45\nCan Malting     34%\nCan Wineries         3\nDominion Stores'   .' 10%\nFord Can A     23%\nImperial Oil     22%\nIntl Pltrol    36%\nMitchell Robt     13%\nPrice  Bros       14%\nPage Hersey      98\nBANK8\nCanada       58\nCanadlen     139\nCommerce    '.. 163\nDominion   204\nMontreal       209\nNova Scotia  285\nRoyal   184\nToronto   : 227\nPROFITS TAKEN\nAT MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Oct 28 (CP).-The\nstock market shuffled back to Its\nstarting point late today when brisk\nprofit taking appeared.\nNickel held even at 61 while\nSmelters jumped a point to 69%.\nNoranda gained % and Woods Manufacturing five points to BO.   ,\nMINES HIGHER\nNoranda Up a Point st\nToronto    '\nTORONTO, Oot 28 (CP). - A\nhigher ovsrsess market gave bate\nmetali a substantial lift In today'a\nsession of the Toronto mining exchange.\nNoranda stepped up a point\nHudson Bay '\/_ and Falconbridge\n%. Sherritt Gordon advanced 10\nc:ntsto$2. Ventures gained 2 and\nWaite Amulet 7 cents.\nEldorado eaisd seven cents while\nhalf a dozen golds, Including Mo-\nnr.t.i which held 3 cants of an 8-\ncent advance, accounted for action\nIn that group. Oils were-Irregular.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP) \u2014\nMining shares sold on the Vancouver stock exchange today:\nListed; Tr! Miss 5000, Bralorne\n555, Cariboo 100, Dentonia 6250, Island Mount 1590, Koot Belle 10,000,\nMinto 2600, Morn Star 1000, Pioneer\n1490, Premier 8125, Reno 450, Sheep\nCreek 3700, Taylor Br 500, Vidette\n1000, Wayside 5600.\nCurb: B C Nickel 2700, Br Mount\n1000, Cap Est 75, Cap Est Warr 36,\nCongress 9500, Fawn 1000, Federal\n4100, Geo Cop 200, Grange 500,\nGrull Wihk 6800, Home 1000, Inter\nGold 14,900, Marmot Metals 5000,\nMeridian 1000, Nicola 6000, Noble\nFive 4000, Pend Oreille 400, Pilot\n200, Relief Arl 1000, Reward 700,\nUnited Emp 9000, Wesko 700, Whitewater 1000.\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAsk\n.10%\n.45\n.11\n.12%\n.03\n.01%\n.03\n.02%\n.14\n.00%\n.19\n.11%\n.02\n.02%\n.17\n.11%\n.03\n.11\n.22\n.00%\n.13\n.03\n.28\n.06%\n.85\n.05\n.10\n.36\n.02%\n.40\n.05\n30.00\n.01%\n2.70\n.04\n.25\n.14\n1.00\n.02%\n.00%\n.01%\n.87\n.02\n.00%\n.29\n.03\n.42\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nKresge S S .....  27%\n27%\n27%\nAllied Chemical 232%\n228%\n2211%\nKroeg Groc     22%\n22%\n22%\nAmerican Can.. 125%\n124%\n125%\nMock Truck ....   47%\n47\n47%\nAm For Pow...    7%\n6%\n6%\nMilwaukee pfd.    2\n1%\n2\nAm Mach & Fy   22%\n22\n22\nMont Ward    58%\n57%\n57%\nAm Smel te K. 91%\n0%\n90%\nNash Motors ...   18%\n17\n17%\nAm Telephone. 180%\n178%\n178%.\nNat Dairy Prod  26\n25%\n25%\nAm Tobacco 100\n99\n99\nN Pow tc Light   12%\n12\n12\nAnaconda 46%\n46%\n46%\nNY Central   46Vi\n45%\n45%\nAtchison     80%\n78%\n78%\nPac Gas Ic Elec   37%\n37%\n37%\nAuburn Motors  32%\n32\n32\nPackard Motors   12%\n12%\n12%\nAviation  Corp.    5%\n5\n5%\nPenn R R    43%\n42%\n42%\nBaldwin      5%\n5\n5\nPhillips Pete ...  45%\n45\n45\nBait & Ohio ......   23%\n22%\n23\nPure Oil    18%\n17%\n17%\nBendix Av _.-.   29%\n28%\n28%\nRadio Corp     11%\n10%\n10%\nBeth Steel   71%\n70%\n71\nRadio Keith Or    7%\n7%\nIV,\nCanada Dry __   18%\n18%\n18%\nRem Rand     21%\n21%\n21%\nCan Pacific ....   13\n12%\n12%\nSafeway Stores  39%\n37%\n37%\nCerro de Pasco  61%\n60%\n60%\nShell Union ....  26%\n20%\n26%\nChes ir. Ohio.....   76%\n76\n76\nS Cal Edison ....   31%\n31%\n31%\nChrysler  128%\n126%\n126%\nSouth Pacific...   44%\n44%\n44%\nCon Gas NY...  46%\n45%\n45%\nStan Oil of Cal   39%\n30%\n39%\nCorn Prods   71%\n71%\n71%\nStan Oil of Ind  40%\n39%\n39%\nC Wright pfd ....    8%\n6%\n6%\nStan Oil of N J  68%\n67%\n67%\nDupont   168%\n169\n169\nStewart Warner  21%\n21\n21\nEast Kodak  173%\n172\n172%\notudebaker      15\n14%\n14-n\nEl Pow & Light   14%\n14%\n14%\nTexas Corp    47%\n46%\n47\nErie       15%\n15%\n15%\nTexas Gulf Sul  37%\n37%\n37%\nFord English ....    8%\n8%\n8%\nTlmkcn Roller.  67%\n67\n67%\nFord of Canada  24\n24\n24\nUnderwood T....   82%\n81%\n82%\nFirst Nat Stores  51%\n51%\n51%\nUnion Carbide. 100\n98%\n98%\nFreeport Texas   26%\n25%.\n25%\nUnion Oil Cal..   23%\n23%\n23%\nGeneral Electric  48%\n47%\n47%\nUnited Aircraft  24\n23%\n23%\nGeneral Foods..   40%\n40%\n40%\nUnited  Biscuit   32%\n32\n32\nGeneral Motors  73%\n72%\n72%\nUnion Pacific... 144%\n143\n143\nGold Dust    14%\n13%\n13%\nU S Pipe     54%\n53%\n53%\nGoodrich    25\n24%\n24%\nU S Rubber ....   35%\n85%\n35%\nGrsnby     3%\n3%\n3%\nU S Steel    76%\n74%\n79%\nGreat Nor pfd...  43%\n42%\n42%\nVanadium Steel  23%\n23\n23\nGreat West Sug  35%\n35%\n35%\nWarner Bros ....   14%\n14%\n14%\nHowe Sound ....   63%'\n53\n53\nWest Electric .. 146%\n145%\n145%\nHudson Motors..   20%\n19%\n19%\nWest Union    92%\n90%\n90%\nInter Nickel ....  61%\n60%\n61\nWoolworth     61%\n60%\n60%\nInter Tel te Tel   12%\n12%\n12%\nWrlgley     71%\n70%\n70',i\nKenn Copper...   57\n56%\n56Vi\nYellow Truck....   18%\n18\n18\nCataary Livestock\nCALGARY, Oct. 28 (CP).-Re-\nceiots Tuesday, cattle 585; calves\n361; hogs 425; sheep 133; Wednesday, to noon, cattle 250; calves 88;\nhogs 257; sheep 471.\nCattle active; good butcher steers\n$4 to $4.25; heifers $2.75 to $3.25;\ngood stocker steers $2.50 to $3.\nNo hog sales', selects $7.35; bacons\n$6.85; butchers $6.35.\nGood lambs $5.50; medium and\nfeeder lambs $4.75.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP). \u2014\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStraight   Tough\nNo. 1 hard Ill        109\nNo.  1 nor 109%      107%\nNo. 2 nor. 108%      106%\nNo. 3 nor.   104%      102\nNo. 4 nor.  103%      101\nNo. 5 wheat 100 97%\nKo. 6 wheat     93 90%\nFeed     84 81%\nMoney\nBy the Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal: Pound 4.88 29-32; US\ndir .99 31-32; franc 4.65.\nAt New Yoik: pound 4.89; Cdn\ndir 1.00 1-32; franc 4.65%.\nAt Paris: Pound 105.12 fr; US dir\n59.46 cents; Cdn dir 59.46 cents.\nCHICAGO UP AND\nDOWN AGAIN\nProfit-taking Cuts Early\nSession Cains\nCHICAGO, Oct 28 (ftP) .-Wheat\nprices marched up the hill today,\nbut then marched down again, covering a range of about a cent a\nbushel\nThe chief new stimulus was s\nreport that hot winds had done damage to crops in Australia. Selling\nto realize profits on advances Waa\nlargely the reaaon for reactions.\nChicago wheat closed unchsnged\nto % lower, com unchanged to %\noff, oats unchanged to % down, and\nrye varying from % decline to %\nadvance. Provisions results ranged\nfrom 2 cents setback to an equal\ngain.\nINDUSTRIALS UP\nSmelters Cains a Point\nto 631-4\nTORONTO, Oct. 28 (CP).-The\nToronto Industrial share market advanced on increased volume today\nalthough prices were shaded.\nCanadian Car Common dropped\nan early gain of %. Nickel Weakened to finish % off at 60%, Smelters reflected an advancing London\nmarket by pushing up a point to\n83%. \\\nIndustrial Alcohol A, up %, had\nthe only advance ln the distilleries.\nBrazilian eased off as did Abitibi\nissues and Gypsum.\n-PAGE NINE\nFUTURE FINANCING B. (. FRUIT\nGROWERS AND CONTROL OF NEXT\nYEAR'S (ROP THEME DIRECTORS\nMeridian Meeting\nIs Deadlocked\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 <CP)-\nAn extraordinary general meeting\nof shareholders ot Meridian Mining\nCo., Ltd., today was adjourned to\nNov. 18 when no agreement could\nbe reached on a proposal to sell the\nmill equipment to Congress Gold\nMines, Ltd, for 250,000 of the latter company's shares.\nEastern Sales\nTORONTO, Oct 28 (CP)-S-les\nof 100 more shares on the Toronto\nstock exchange, Industrial section,\ntoday; 3960 Brazilian; 980 BR te Dis;\n100 B C Pow A; 2747 C Car te T;\n395 C Ind Ale; 1154 C P R; 140\nCockshutt; 248 C Smelters; 890 D C\nSeag; 1115 J)o S le C B; 888 Ford\nA; 3698 Nickel; 235 Mass Harris;\n280 H Walkers; 150 W C Flour.\nMONTREAL, Oct 28 (CP)-Salet\nof 100 or more shares on Montreal\nstock exchange today: 200 BC Pow;\n1526 Brazilian ; 200 B C Pow B;\n1005 Can Cement; 3292 Can Car; 480\nAlcohol A; 419 CPR; 150 Cockshutt; 485 Smelters; 175 Dlst Seag;\n557 Dom Bridge; 1369 Nickel; 330\nMassey; 433 Nat Brew; 1501 Noranda; 420 Steel Corp.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (CP).\u2014Sterling exchange steady at $4.88 for 60-\nday bills and ot $4.89 for demand.\nCanadian dollars 100 1-32.\nFranc 4.65% cents.\nLire 5.26% cents.\nDominion Livestock\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 28 (CD-Cattle 2200; steers 4.75; heifers 3.75;\ncalves 6.50.\nCalves 630; vealers 5.50.\nHogs 1550; bacons 6.75.\nSheep 750; lambs 6.75; sheep\n2.50.\nINTER. SILVER GAIN8\nMERIDEN, Conn, Oct. 28 (AP).\n\u2014The International Sliver company\nand Its Canadian subsidiary reported today an estimated net gain after\ndepreciation of $114,972 for the\nquarter ended Sept 30. The net gain\ncompares with a net loss of $80,941\nfor the corresponding period tn 1935.\nBOND8  BETTER\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (AP)\u2014 A\nlighter note was struck in the bond\nmarket today and most prices closed\nunchanged to higher. U. S. government bonds closed off 3-32 of a\npoint to up 1-32.\nForeign obligations were little\nchanged.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (AP) .-Closing*.\nBrazil Traction 17%; Can Pacific\n$13%; Nickel \u00a362%; Central Mining \u00a325%; Crown Mines \u00a315%: Ind\nOrd 23s 7%d; Ford Ltd 35s 10%d;\nGen Elec Co Ltd 90s 9d.\nBonds: Brit 2% pc Consols \u00a386\n5-16; Brit 3% pc War Loans \u00a3106%;\nBrit Funding 4s 1960-90_\u00a3117%.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 28 (API-\nWheat cash: No. 1 heavy dark northern aprlng 60 lbs. 1.44%-50%. No.\n1 red durum 1.20%. Flour, carload\nlots, per barrel in 98-pound cotton\nsacks; family patents unchanged,\n7.20-40; -standard patents, unchanged, 6.90-7.10. Shipments 13,159.' Bran\n17.50-28.\nBelieve Dominion Not\nLikely to Act\nin Time\nREVISED TRUCK\nLICENCE HELPED\nCreston Man Lauds\nAssociation for\nIts Action\nFuture financing basis of the B.C.\nFruit Growers' association, and\nsteps to provide some scheme for\norderly marketing in the absence\not any proposal from the Dominion\ngovernment were matters ot major\ndiscussion when directors of the association met at Kelowna. William\nKlern of Creston was the only\nsouthern Interior representative attending.\nReporting the meeting, the Kelowna Courier atates in part:\n\"It la through our machinery that\nmarketing control must be worked,\"\ncommented Capt. H. A. Porteous,\nand President A. K. Lloyd remarked that lt would be impossible to\nobtain total unanimity on any one\nscheme.\nIN STRONG POSITION\nThe B. C. F. O. A. ls ln the\nstrongest position it ever was, the\ndirectors considered, but the question was asked If that was the result of keeping direct marketing\ncontrol out of the association or\nbecause it was keeping the balance\nbetween the shipper and the grower.\nIt was the general opinion that the\ngovernment would not take the necessary action to provide a control of\nmarketing ln time for next season's\ncrop, and the directors believed that\nlt would therefore be necessary to\nstep in and take a hold on the situation.\nOne proposition propounded was\na one-desk plan, but removed from\ncentral soiling. All claims would be\nhandled over one desk.\nDANGEROUS GROUND\nTo go Into a marketing control\nscheme, the B. C. F. G. A. would be\ntreading on dangerous ground, the\nmeeting decided. It would mean' a\ngreat deal if the right solution was\nobtained, but if the organization\nguessed wrongly, then everyone\nwould be antagonized.\nAnother possible solution volunteered was to have the province of\nAlberta put in the marketing act\nas a provincial scheme, to link up\nwith B.C.'s legislation. It might be\npossible to have a one-desk plan\nwith a single purchasing agent for\nthe prairie buyers. In this way, one\ndelegate suggested, lt could not be\nstated that sales were being made\noutside the province, the point on\nwhich central selling was defeated.\n8ET UP MACHINERY\nIt was pointed out at another stage\nin the discussion that the B. C. F.\nG. A. need not take any part in the\nactual machinery for control. What\nthe association could do, however,\nwould be to appoint a plan fixing\ncommittee and then spread ils find\nings before the growers.\nIn order to formulate a control\nplan to be operative before 1937\ncrop, action should be taken at\nonce, lt was considered. The grow\ners would not support any make\nshift plan, such as la operating at\npresent, for another season.\nPossibility of reviving the government grant was mooted for the\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Oct. 28 (CP)-Brlt-\nish and foreign exchange closed\nsteady today.\nArgentina, peso   2790\nAustralia, pound  3.0047\nIndia, rupee  3703\nJapan, yen  ._._   .2862\nNew Zealand, pound \u201e 3.9361\nSouth Africa, pound _. _ 4.8662\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nTO  DI8CU88 MARKETING\nLEGISLATION\nVERNON, B.C, Oct 28 (CP).-A\ndelegation of five members of the\nBritish Columbia Fruit .Growers'\nassociation and an undetermined\nnumber of shippers' representatives\nwill visit Victoria to discuss provincial marketing legislation with\nHon. K. C. MacDonald, minister of\nagriculture. The growers' committee decided on this action at a meeting here which followed adjournment yesterdiy of a Joint meeting\nof the B.C.F.G.A. executive and the\ntree fruit board in Kelowna.\nli. C. F. G. A. but lt was considered\nthat, if it wu possible to get along\nwithout it the result would be better as the grant was always an uncurtain quantity,*\nCrtESTON MAN V\nCOMMENDS\nThat the revised regulations (or\n'anners' truck licences had worked\nout very well ln the Creston ares.\nwas W. Klern's advice. This revision\nud been of benefit to the agricul-\nural Industry throughout the province, lt was considered, and the\n?armers' Institutes hsd also aided\nthe B. C. F. G. A. ln obtaining the\nchange.\nIn this discussion W. Klern observed that 20 combines were et\nwork ln the Creston area. Thia statement provoked a great deal of Interest among the association directors.\nAction taken by President Uoyd\nin support of the 1936 stabilization\nplans, was confirmed by the directors. Expressions ot appreciation\nwere voiced by directors for the\nwork carried on by President\nLloyd, Vice-President Porteous and\nSecretary Hayden, ln obtaining\nsome form of a stabilized deal\n\"It made a lot ot difference to\nus,\" was Mr. Klern's statement\nGAINS RULE AT\nNEW YORK\nNEW YORK, Oct 98 (AP).-In-\ndustrial specialties gave buying\ncolor to today's stock market but\nmany recent leaders were unable to\nmake much headway.\nTransfers totalled 1.632,130 shares\nagainst 1,310,770 Tuesday.\nA few Issues surged forward 2 to\ni or more points, some to new five-\nyear peaks, but small fractional advances predominated.\nGrowing public spending lifted\nthe merchandising group.\nThe motors were given a play,\nbut fell back later. The utilities\nlacked stamina.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Oct 88 (CP).-Or_ln\nfutures quotations:\nOpen High Low Close\nWheat:\nOct ....   112     111%   111%   111%\nNov.    112-    112%   111%   111%\nDee _   109%   110%   109%   108%\nMay    ..   110%   111     109%   110\nOats:\nOct      43%    44%    43%    44\nNov     44       44%    44       44%\nDec     43%    43%    43%    43%\nMsy     44%    44%    44%    44%\nBarley:\nOct -    61%    61%    81%    81%\nNov.     81%    61%    60%    81\nDec     99%    99%    99       59%\nMay     58%    98%    58%    98%\nFlax:\nOct     183%   183%   182%   162%\nDec    164%   164%   163     168%\nMay . ..   168     168     168     168%\nRye:\nOct     70%     70%    70%    70%\nNov .,  -       -       -       70%\nDec _    69%    70%    69%    69%\nMay     71%    71%    70%    71\nCash wheat: No. 1 hard 114%; No.\n1 Nor. and track 111%; No. 2 Nor.\n110%; No. 3 Nor. 107%; No. 4 Nor.\n105%; No. 9 100%; No. 8 84%; teed\n81%; No. 1 Garnet 106%; No. 2\nGarnet 106%; No. 1 Durum 131%;\nNo. 4 special 97%; No. 8 special\n91%; No. 6 special 87%; screenings\n$11 per ton.\n_       _       .(1...   .... ^\nConsolidated Mining & Smelling\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAIL-BRITISH COLUMBIA\nMANUFACTURERS OF\nELEPHANT Brand\nCHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nAmmonium Phosphates \u2014 Sulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates \u2014 Complete Fertilixeri\nPRODUCERS AND REFINERS OF\nTadanac Brand Metals\nCOLD SILVER\nELECTROLYTIC\nLEAD ZINC CADMIUM BISMUTH\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBv Coo. McMainit\nLADIES AND GENTLEMEN\nOP OUR FARCtTV-BEFORE\nWE HEAR FROM THE NEJCT\nSPEAKER-MR5 JI6GS-\n\"    _ NEXT MANOR-WILL\n50URPC*LITICAL\nPARTY SONS-\n PAOE TEN-\nAllenbury's\nBYNOL\nMalt With Cod Livar Oil\nltt\u00bbim     $100\nat\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nPropagation of\nDeer Is Meeting\nSuccess in B.(.\nAces Defeat.\nComets in Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 28.\u2014Aces defeated Comets 34-22 in a fixture of\nthe intermediate division of the\nTrail Basketball league at Memorial\nhall here Wednesday night. The\nscore at the interval was 11-8 for\nthe Aces. Teams and scorers follow:\nAces: Burrows 6, Welykochy 13,\nA'W-tinelli 1, Zinio 2, Baldassi and\nKirby 4.\nComets: Robb 6, Weir, Kendall,\nLewis 6. Miles, Fitzpatrick, Mandeville 2, Bremner 8, Temple and Stevenson.\nDoing Well on Graham\nIsland; Elk Are\nReleased\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone (55     810 Kootenay St\nPropagation of deer hai met with\nconsiderable success ta British Columbia, particularly on Graham island of the Queen Charlotte group,\nthe annual report of the B.C. game\ndepartment reveals.\nA number of deer were released\non the island in 1900 and have increased to the extent that open\nseasons have been permitted for\nfive years past. Pheasants introduced on the same Island in 1918\nhave also done well.\nWithin the last few years a number of elk have been trapped in the\nOkanagan and released on Graham\nisland, and it is expected they too\nwill prosper. There are no predatory animals except black bear on\nthe Island and they are negligible\nas far as the larger game animals\nare concerned.\nApparently the only game animal\nnative to the island is a dwarf\nspecies of caribou on the high ridges,\nand which also is indigenous to\nMassett island. These were never\nnumerous and for a number of\nyears have been reported to be\nscarce. No report of any being\nseen has been received by the game\ndepartment for a considerable time,\nand the impression prevails that\nthey are extinct.\nAnother species of deer, the English fallow, somewhat larger than\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 21. 1\u00bb-tr-\nthe coast deer but not as large as\nthe mule deer of the Interior, bluer\nta color than the native deer and\nhaving palmated antlers something\nlike a caribou, have been privately\nreleased on James island. Some of\nthese are being trapped and released on other Islands ln the Gulf\nof Georgia and on the mainland.\nMORE ABOUT\nSWEEP WINNERS\n(Continued From Page One)\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Cood Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 - Foot of Stanley St.\nDRY WOOD\nNow that colder evenings are here have\nthe wood bin filled up and be warm and\ncomfortable.\nFIR AND TAMARAC - 12-inch\n1 Rick 2 Ricki 3 Ricki Cord\n$2.50 $4.50 $6.50 $8.00\nFIR AND TAMARAC-16-inch\n1 Rick 2 Ricki 3 Ricki\n$3.50 $6.00 $8.00\nI CORD, 4 FT  $7.00\n1 Rick\n$3.00\nI Rick\n$4.00\nBIRCH-12-inch\n2 Ricki 3 Ricks\n$5.00 $7.00\nBIRCH-16 inch\n2 Ricki\n$6.50\nCord\n$9.00\n3 Ricki\n$8.50\nCORD, 4 FT. BIRCH  $7.50\nNelson Transfer\nCompany, Limited\nPHONE 35\nNELSON\nDOOR\nMATS\nBEFORE THE WET WEATHER COMES BE SURE AND\nCET A DOOR MAT FOR THE FRONT\nAND BACK DOOR\nIt saves the floors on which you have put so much\nwork and also saves considerable labor in cleaning.\nWE HAVE SIZES AND STYLES\nFOR EVERY PURPOSE\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\n^\nHE CAN QWT\nA Lethbridie, Alta., barber\u2014James\nWestbrook\u2014can put away his clippers if he wants to, because he held\nthe only ticket in Canada on Day-\ntona, the second horse. It is worth\n075,000.\nMilk Salesman Arthur Kirk, ln\nLeamington., Ont., has decided he'll\ntake his share ot about $30,000 and\nbreed and train horses. He held a\n$50,000 ticket, but sold a half-share.\nA neighbor, with whom he had\nan agreement, gets a third of Kirk's\nnet proceeds. Albert Ecclestone, of\nBracebridge, Ont., likewise held a\nticket on the third horse. He also\nis reported to have sold a half-share.\n\"I  KNEW\"\u2014\nBy J. F. SANDERSON\nCanadian Preu Staff Writer\nEDMONTON, Oct. 28 (CP)-'i\nknew that horse * ouldn't tail me.\nHe couldi*'t. He couldn't.\"\nIt was almost a prayer as uttered\nhere today by Walt Snowden, Roch-\nfort Bridge farmer when he learned over the Canadian Press wires\nin a newspaper office to learn Dan\nBulger won the Cambridgeshire\nstakes In far-off Newmarket. It\nmeant $85,000 for the soft-spoken\nSnowden, a man who always plays\nhis hunches.\nIt was almost a story-book setting. Two years ago Snowden, born\n56 years ago In La Mars, Iowa, left\nhis drought-stricken South Dakota\nfarm to come to Alberta. Since then\nhe has been plugging along.\nSnowden, like many other western farmers, hasn't handled much\nmoney in the last year or two. A\nsweep ticket would cost him $2.50\nand he pondered a long time before\nbuying one. He took a chance because he considered himself \"average lucky\"\u2014and because he always\nplays his hunches.\nSnowden signed his ticket: \"In\nwant, hurry\" and went back to his\nfarm work.\nA few days ago Snowden was offered $10,000 cash by an English\nbookmaker for a half interest in his\nticket. It didn't take him long to accept and the money was in the\nbank before he even told his wife,\nThat night he went to a wrestling\nshow in Edmonton. Things were\nbreaking for him. Maybe 'hat hunch\nwas going to work. Maybe it would.\nAnd today Dan Bulger led the\nfield at Newmarket. Snowden, his\nwife and two daughters were lined\nup in the wire room of an Edmonton paper when the flash came\nthrough.\nFigures and letters danced before\nthe eyes of Mrs. Snowden and the\ndaughters. Their eyes welled with\ntears. They didn't try to talk. They\ncouldn't,\nplays his hunches, \"just knew\" that\nBut Snowden, the man who\nhorse couldn't fail him. \"Maybe\",\nhe hazarded, \"that shovelling of\ncoal and the grasshoppers I dreamed of last night carried him\nthrough.\"\nThe scientists say that th- oceans\nwere the original abode of life on\nthe globe.\nMrs. Kapak Loses\nBrother in Europe\nNick Fedorak Worked\nin Kimberley and\nNelson District\nNICK FEDORAK\nWord has been received by Mrs.\nP. Kapak of Nelson and Fred Fedorak of Grand Forks of the death in\nEurope of a brother Nick Fedorak\non October 4. He was known in East\nand West Kootenay and went to\nEurope to reside in 1932. He was 39\nyears of age and worked with the\nC. M, te S. company in Kimberley,\non Kootenay river widening work,\nTaghum bridge and at Corra Linn\npower plant construction.\nIt was In 1932 he went to his native land to take up farming and\naccording to word received by Mrs.\nKapak he died suddenly from a\nheart seizure.\nHe is survived by his wife and\nmother and father in Europe, Mrs.\nPete Kapak of Nelson, Fred Fedorak in Grand Forks, Mary Fedorak\nin Europe, Mrs. V. Wasyluk, hospital patient in Kamloops and a\nsister Mrs. Annie Bobk in Europe.\nAbove is a photo of Mr. Fedorak.\nIt was taken in Nelson just before\nhe left for overseas.\nColombos Win\nin Hoop Game\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct 28.-Although\nShieks were only two points behind Colombos at half time the latter Increased their margin steadily\nuntil the end of the game to win\n34-20 in a fixture of the Trail Basketball league, senior men's division, at Memorial hall Wednesday\nnight. Teams and scorers follow:\nColombos\u2014Baillie 8, Brandoilni 2,\nMerlo 4, Sammartino 14, Battistella\n6, and Christante.\nShieks\u2014Burrows 2. Turik, Battistella 4, Strachan 10, Kirby, Pagnan 3, Hill 1 and Salsiccioli.\nRube Nesbitt refereed.\nFIVE-PIN RACE\nGETS UNDER WAY\nGELINAS'ALLEYS\nBankers,  Vaisar.\nand\nSafeway\nbowlers opened the Five Pin league\nseries last night on\nGelinas alleys.\nVassara with 2554\nud most pins\nwith Bankers next with 2458 while\nSafewaya drew\nup\nthe\nrear with\n2367 pins.\nH. Hunt was high Individual with\n261 and be took high aggregate as\nwell with 688 pins.\nScores were:\nVASSAR8\n1st.\n2nd.\nSrd.-Tot.\nW. Anderson ...\n140\n147\n114\u2014401\nH. Birch \t\n209\n134\n194-537\nD. Edwards\n134\n132\n98\u2014364\nL. Whltelock .\n196\n214\n154-564\nH. Hunt\n261\n244\n183-688\nTotal\n940\n871\n743-2554\nBANKERS\nA.   Wallach   ..\n207\n145\n145- 497\nF. Lows\n151\n188\n182\u2014 521\nH. Grant\n160\n126\n166- 452\nB. Marley\n178\n162\n130- 470\nA. Gordon\n148\n153\n215- 516\nTotals\n844\n774\n838-2456\nSAFEWAY\nF. Sims\n104\n211\n182- 497\nP. Selinger\n127\n199\n130- 456\nF. Anderson .\n123\n149\n181\u2014 453\nJ. Scambler .\n176\n153\n147- 476\nA. Erickson ..\n13\n157\n185-485\nTotal\n673\n869\n825-2367\nMORE\nABOUT\nBIRTH CONTROL\n(Continued From Page One)\nSHIP IN TROUBLE\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (AP).-Mac-\nKay radio reported tonight receipt\nof a message from the steamship\nAfghanistan advising it was drifting\ning in heavy gales and that its steering gear had been carried away.\nMacKay reported the message said\nthe ship was in latitude 56.40 north,\nlongtitude 33.55 west.\nThe world series this year drew\nthe largest paid attendance since\n1926.\nThe crown drew attention to a\nnews service report of a speech by\nRev. Claris E. Silcox, secretary to\nthe social service council of Canada\nand an expert sociological witness\nfor the defence, delivered August\n28, 1935, in Williamstown, Mass., in\nwhich attention was drawn to the\nalleged fear of out-breeding in the\nminds of English-speaking Canadians.\nQUINTS A 8YMBOL\nMr. Silcox, crossexamlned by\nCrown Attorney Raoul Mercier, admitted making the speech in which\nhe was reported es having said the\nDionne quintuplets were a symbol\nto the English-speaking Canadians\nof fear they were being out-bred.\nCrown Attorney Mercier asked' if\nhe could define the origin of that\nalleged fear, to which witness replied where a feeling existed that\ncertain groups, \"either on racial or\nreligious lines,\" were outbreeding\nother groups there was a basis for\nfear.\nFurther grounds for suspicion\nwould arise, the witness said, if\nknowledge of birth control methods\nwas being deliberately withheld\nfrom a group being encouraged to\nraise large families.\nMr. Silcox, the day's only witness,\nemphasized, however, he did not\nadmit the fear was correct. From a\nsociological standpoint, he declared,\n\"lt might be a very good thing if\nthe French outnumbered the English.\"\n, In support of his answer that\nbirth control might result ln an\nincrease rather than a decrease In\nthe Canadian population, Mr. Silcox\ninstanced the high birthrate ot the\nNetherlands where contraception is\nlegal with the lower birthrate of\nadjacent Belgium where such measures are fprbidden by law.\nDetroit recently repealed a  10-\nmile-an-hour speed limit for horses.\nFREE!\nFREE!\nA Credit Note of $15.00 ona New\nMajestic Radio\nor Your Choice of one of a Number of\nGENERAL ELECTRIC\nHousehold Appliances\nWith your Nelson Daily News of Friday morning you\nwill receive a full page circular on Majestic Radios.\nWhen looking over these wonderful radio values you\nwill note a number on the lower left hand corner of\nthe circular. . .\nKeep This Number and Your Circular\nuntil Saturday. Then WATCH OUR ADVERTISEMENT\nin SATURDAY'S DAILY NEWS. If your number is\nthe same as the number published in the advertisement you are then entitled to YOUR CHOICE OF A\nGENERAL ELECTRIC IRON, TOASTER, PERCOLATOR, WAFFLE IRON OR SANDWICH TOASTER\nOR A\n$15 Allowance on the Radio Shown to\nthe Left.\nTh* Rodn*y\nTHE MAJESTIC\nRODNEY\n$12995\nSee Our Window for the Prizes\nPeebles Motors\nPHONE 119\nBAKER ST.\nNELSON, B. C.\nMORE ABOUT\nITALY, PORTUGAL\nCLEARED\n(Contlnutd From Pagt Ont)\n2. Charges by the Spanish government against Portugal that she\naided the insurgents;\n3. Russian allegations charging\nboth Portugal and Italy with sending In arms and ammunition.\nThese developments within the\ncomnutjee in its lengthy sessions\ntoday were disclosed in a communique Issued before midnight.\nThe communique also disclosed\nthe Portuguese representative on\nthe committee declined to accept\nRussia's proposal for control ot Portuguese ports by naval vessels of\none or more of the member nations of the committee.\nIvan Maisky, Russian ambassador\nto London, told the committee Russia would combine its control proposal with a proposal made today\nby Lord Plymouth for control of\nSpanish ports and frontiers to see\nthe non-intervention agreement was\nobserved.\nThese proposals, the communique\nsaid, will be referred back by the\nvarious diolomats on the committee to their home governments.\nTO 8TUDY PROPOSALS\nGerman and Italian representatives Insisted they were anxious tn\nmake the agreement effective and\nindicated their governments would\napprove, but they said the proposals\nmust be studied.\nCharles Corbin, French ambassador to London, said France was\nwilling to accept anything that\nwould make the agreement effective.\nThis setback to Russian allegations\ncame after charges and countercharges had been made by rival\ncamps for weeks.\nIt is expected Russia will reply\nto Italian charges of Russian violations of the neutrality pact at next\nweek's meeting.\nToday's session was marked by\nclashes between Maisky and Francisco Calhelros, Portuguese delegate.\nDino Grandi, Italian ambassador\nto London, and Prince Otto Von\nBismarck, German charge d'affairs.\nand Calhelros all insisted the Russian reply \"clarifying\" Russia's\nthreat to quit the committee stiil\nleft the situation in doubt.\nGrandi said it was essential to be\ncertain Russia was adhering to the\npact before proceeding further.\nLord Plymouth asserted Britain's only concern was to prevent the Spainsh civil war from\nspreading Into an International\nconflict.\nMaisky declared he feared \"a\nterrible military catastrophe\" If\nthe Insurgents win In Spain.\nElectric Clock\nfor Ice Arena\nFive-Foot Dial Will\nBe Controlled by\nTime-Keeper\nIn crucial games In the National\nHockey league last winter, in New\nYork, Toronto, Montreal, Detroit,\nand other big league cities, the radio\nannouncers used to tell of burly defence men, defending a one-goal\nlead, looking anxiously at the clock\nto see how much longer the agony\nhad to last.\nThat is what will be seen in nelson's Civic Centre arena the coming winter, as a consequence of\nacceptance by the Civic Centre commission Tuesday night of an offer\nfrom the Imperial Tobacco company\nof Montreal c'. an electric clock and\nscoreboard, and all the fixings.\nThe dial of the clock will be five\nfeet across, and will record the minutes, operation being electrical.\nIt will be controlled from the\ntime-keeper's booth, where a small\ncabinet-size clock will tick off the\nseconds. The electrical scoreboard,\nwhich will be a part of the installation will also be controlled from the\nofficials' box. The apparatus of\ncourse will advertise the Imperial\nTobacco company.\nThe new feature should be popular with players and fans alike, and\nwith all, in fact, except the small\nboys who hitherto have got a kick\nfrom ringing up the goals on the\nscoreboard.\nCLAIM VICTORY\nMADRID, Oct. 28 (AP)\u2014The Socialist government tonight claimed\n\"the most marked triumph\" since\nthe Spanish civil war began with\nthe bombing of the insurgent airports at Seville, Granada, and Ca-\nceres.\nOfficial reports said a government\nsquadron loosed a deadly rain of\n225-pound bombs on Tabalada airfield, Seville, destroying five Junkers bombers on the landing ground\nand nearby hangars where \"planes\nwere being repaired and where\nthose recently delivered from foreign countries were being assembled.\"\nIn Madrid Itself, however, wearied defenders rationed food for the\nrefugee-swelled population of .,-\n500,000 and mobilized 36,000 additional civilians for the front lines.\nIn addition to the Fascist armier\ntonight within 10 miles of the capital, another army of bedraggled refugees from other areas increased\nthe gravity of the Madrid situation.\nVerifying persistent reports that\nMadrid was faced with starvation\nunless  supplies arrived soon,  the\ncivil governor, Carlos Rubiera, organized a provision committee to\ndole out the dwindling food stores\nbit by bit to the hungry inhabitants.\nFor the final assault on the city\nItself, the   Fascists  were  saving\na deadly fleet of 200 \"baby\" armored cars and tinks. Leaders said\ntheir men should be able to kill\nall who opposed their triumphant\nentrance Into Madrid.\nMinistry Regies\nlo Neufield\nGet Your Job in the Want Ads\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANTED-4 DUAL WHEEL LOG-\nging trucks, 2 ton, with dual trailers. Equipment good condition.\nExperienced drivers. F. R. Rotter,\nSalmo, B.C. Phone Rotter-Spur.\n(3307)\nNELSON GIRL, 21 YEARS OLD.\nwith business college education,\nwould like position in office to\ngain experience. Wages no object.\nApply P.O. Box 875. (3306)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nBadminton racquets restrung. Holland's, opp. Telephone Office. (2987)\nCall 144 for Christmas Cards.\nNelson Dally News\n(3155)\nRemember the date\u2014Nov. 17th.\nSt. Saviour's Mothers' Club Sale of\nWork. (3292)\nSee our new arrival of shirts and\nPyjamas. JACK BOYCE.        (3171)\nPythian Sisters Hallowe'en Masquerade Dance at K.P. Hall, Salmo,\nOct. 30th. (3293)\nReserve Tuesday, Nov. 3rd, for\nWomen's Institute Tea and Musical.\n(3294)\nFirst Silver Slipper Club dance\nFriday. Admission by card only.\n(3263)\nPedigree wire haired fox terrier\npuppies for sale. Apply Bex 1091,\nNelson, B.C. (3302)\nAttentionl-Ladies Curling Club\ngeneral meeting City HaU Thursday, 3 p.m. (3284)\nWhere to get the best badminton\nracqusta and birds?\u2014THE 8P0RT\nSHOP. (3215)\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (CP Cable)\u2014\nThe air ministry tonight replied to\ncriticism by Lord Nuffield, motor\ncar manufacturer, of its \"shadow\"\nscheme for manufacture of airplane\nengines with an assertion that one\nof Lord Nuffield's plants specialized in engines of lower horse power than those required by the air\nforce.\nLord Nuffield Issued a statement\nlast week, complaining of \"political Interest\" in the air ministry, in\nexplanation of his withdrawal ol\nWolselcy Motors, Ltd., from the government scheme. The scheme involved building six government-\nowned factories for production of\nairplane engines.\nThe air ministry statement, issued in the form of a white paper,\nalso said they were convinced the\nbest system was that whereby different firms would manufacture\nparts of airplane engines, instead\nof each one manufacturing entire\nengines.\nLord Nuffield conferred at length\nwith Prime Minister Baldwin today.\nHALLOWE'EN TEA and sale of\nHome Cooking TODAY. St. Paul's\nparlors, 3 to 6. Program.       (3289)\nSmart, distinctive, exclusive and\ninexpensive are the Nelson Daily\nNews Christmas Cards ... Phone 144\nfor samples or call personally. (3155)\nWomen's Canadian Club Nov. 3rd\nHume Hotel. W. R. Watson, B.A.,\nLL.D., of Toronto, will speak. Subject: \"Who is Handicapped?\" (3304)\n40 years practical experience In\nmusical Instrument repair work and\nbow rehalrlng. Webbs Music House,\n306 Baker street, late of Calgary.\n(3253)\nNelson Curling Club season 1936-\n37 membership limited to 240. Duet\n$13.50. Tickets on sale at Bush's,\nWood Valence, H. 8. Watson or the\nsecretary. Season opens Nov. 15.\n(3242)\nNelson Little Theatre's mystery\nplay, \"A Murder has Been Arranged\", originally scheduled for presentation October 30th, has been\npostponed until Monday, Nov. 16th.\nTickets already purchased will be\nhonored on that date. (3291)\nHEADS SASKATCHEWAN\nTORIES\nREGINA (CP). - Saskatchewan\nConservatives named J. G. Diefen-\nbaker K.C, 40-yc-r-old Prince Albert barrister, their provincial party\nleader. He succeeds Dr. J. T. M.\nAnderson, former premier, whose\nresignation was received by the\nconvention today.\nEvery young person in Hallowe'en\nd'sguise, costume or makeup, is invited to be on hand in the Lakeside\nService yard ot 8:15 p.m. Saturday.\nJudging will take place at 8:30 sharp\nfor the two cash prizes offered by\nthe Candy Box. (3288)\nWEEK-END  EXCURSION\nTrail to Cranbrook. Leave Trail.\n7  a.m.  arrive  Cranbrook  7:30\np.m. $7.35 return.\nCREYHOUND LINES\nPhone 800\nNelson Depot \u2014 205 Baker St.\n(2842)\nForsyth\nFall\nShirts\nSee these new patterns In\nshirts by Forsyth. Madel\nin all collar styles\u2014For-j\nfused, Button Down ant\nSoft.\nGuaranteed\u2014A new shir\nfor one that fails.\n$2.00   $2.50\n$3.00\nEMORY'I\nLimited\nTrail Pats Bear\nBons Tons 21 tol\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 28-Pats hi\nBon Tons to the small score of r\npoints while they ran up a tt\nof 21 to win an intermediate ga\nof the Trail Basketball league\nMemorial hall here Wednet\nnight. Teams and scorers .olloi\nPats\u2014Kennedy 4, Groves, Cm\n6, C. Graham 3, Coverdale, L. M\ndoch, Hood 2, D. Murdoch and]\nSmith 6.\nBons Tons\u2014C. Wyatt, Balano!\nM. Turik 2. L. Sammartino, Pad\n2, T. Ludovlchi and D. Baldossl.l\nRube Nesbitt refereed and W|\nMilburn was scorer.\nThe lake formed by Boulder dl\nholds water equivalent ln quantl\nto the entire flow of the river f\ntwo years.\nFor that stubborn cough gat a bot|\nof\nGlycerin Honey and Lemof\nAT\nSMYTHE'S\nPrescription Druggist\nPhona 1.\ncardigan'\nCOATS\nHeather shades. All wool.\nDandy for work.     Jfif AB\nEach  - *    *]|\nHI-LO-V Coats for fair and'\nstormy weather. Medium and\ndark heathers. CI O-J\nEach  *****\nSilk and Wool Cardigan-\nWarren Knit. $4,9')\nGODFREYS*!\n^*     LIMITED  l\n318 BAKER       PHONE 270 |\nLAST TIMES TODAY\nComplete 8howi\n2:00-7:00-8:36\nT^Mootfs\nOur Home\ni\nAdopt., (torn Ml. SoldwW.\nCo>mopolllai> Mojailnt o9rlet\n.,-_ HENRY FONDA\nCHARLES BUTTERWORTH\n r\nPlus\nMARY ELLIS\nin\n\"     1\n'Fatal Lady\n\/\/\n______.'(_.._. 11\n\u25a0     ii.iiii-ri-_-klfa'l^^\n-\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_1936_10_29","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\/1.0412343","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":"1936-10-29 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":"1936-10-29 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":""}]}