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C. Is Beaten\nin College Rugby\n\u2014Page Seven\nVOL.. 29\nNELSON, B. C.     MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1930,\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNo. 161\nB* C*\nRELIEF WORK AT\n*&?*&\nRAID IN KASLO\n*uttm\nProvince    Pays     $5500,\nDominion Same and\nFernie $11,000\nI EIGHT AGREEMENTS\nSIGNED, VICTORIA\nFernie Only One in Interior; 54 Have Now\nReported\nVICTORIA, B.  C,  Oct.  26.\u2014Eight\nnew agreements with British Columbia municipalities under the federal\nemergency work schome, calling tor\n\u25a0$105,300  as  the Joint contribution\nof the federal and provincial governments,  were  signed   by  Premier\nTolmie Saturday.   This waa in addition to $322,375 lncvolved the five\nagreements which are pending, with\na total  of  4855,350 to bo released\nfor' work  under  rederal,   provincial\nand. municipal appropriations.\nThe    new    agreements    concerned   programs   of   work   put\nforward by the roll owl ni; municipalities,- with the  amount, of\nassistance requhed In each case\nshown alongside.\nBurnaby, $54,000; Nanaimo,\n9122,500; Fernie, '911,000; Co-\nquit lam, $9500; Mission . district, $5000; Conrtenay, $1600;\nPitt Meadows, $1500, and Gibson's Landing $200, totalling\n9150,300.\nn each case the cost of work\nproposed will bo double the amount\nshown ln the egreemeht, while the\nprovince's share will be one-quarter\nof the total cost.\nFifty-four out of tho 75 municipalities of the province have now\n-reported their emergency work plans\nto the government, whilo 21 have\nyet to be heard from, or, else re-\nquLa no assistance under the federal scheme.\nLABOR WINSJN\nNEW SOUTH WALES\nSYDNEY, New South Wales, Oct.\n2e\u2014(C p cable via Reuters)\u2014The\nstate of New South Wales, the most\npopulous and important of the Australian commonwealth, has turned\nits back squarely on its Nationalist\nparty government under Premier\nT. R. Bavin, and has cast its-vote\noverwhelmingly In favor of the Labor\nParty.\nFifty-one Labor members have\nbeen returned to the legislative assembly of 00 in the state elections\nwhich have Just closed. This will\nprovide the Labor party, under Hon.\nJ. T. Lang, former premfer, who was\ndefeated in 1027, with a clear-cut\nmajority. Twenty-three Nationalists\nand. 13 members of the allied country party, will comprise the opposition, numbering 36. Tho members\nunaccounted for are independents\nand two, at leastf, may he expected\nto vote with the Labor government.\nYOUNG PEOPLE TO\nMEET IN REGINA\nLONDON, Oct. 26\u2014Reginald G.\nTowne of Merritton, Ont., was elected president of the Dominion Anglican. Young \u2022 People's association at\nyesterday's session, of the 28th annual conference which has been in\nconference here for the past two\ndays. Mr. Towne, Is the retiring\nsecond vice-president of the association.\nNext year the annual conference\nwill be held^ln Reglna according to\na resolution passed to accept the\nInvitation of the Reglna district.\nTOT IS  SHOT\nWINNIPEG, Man., Oct. 26.\u2014Three-\nyear-old William Sifura is dead at\nBergen, Man., from a bullet wound\ninflicted by his sister, agod five.\nThe children were playing with a\nrevolver when It accidentally discharged.\nIS BETTER\nRt. Hon, R. B. Bennett, prime\nminister of Canada, who Saturday\nventured out for the first time\nsince taking ill at London, He attended a. tea at, No. 10 Downing\nstreet, when- overseas ministers -\"reviewed   conference  proceedings.\"\nTEA PARTY FOR\nMINISTERS IS\nCAUSE WONDER\nGathering    of     Conference\nDelegates '^Reviews\nProceedings\"\nLONDON, Oct, 26\u2014 (By George\nHambleton, Canadian Press staff\ncorrespondent) \u2014An afternoon tea\nparty at No, 10 Downing street\u2014\nthe official home of the prime\nminister\u2014has set writers who have\nattended the Imperial conference\nproceedings bubbling with speculations.\nit has been announced theere\nwould be no plenary meetings of\nthe dominion prime ministers until\nthe committees of the conference\nwere ready to report. Rt. Hon.\nRamsay MacDonald, British premier,\nwas to confer with the heads of\ndelegations in.separate and informal\nchats  and  that  was  all'.\nBut suddenly today saw a change\nIn the program. The overseas premiers were invittid to Downing street\ntogether\u2014Ht. 'Hon. R. B. Bennett,\nCanadian prime minister, ventured\nout for the first time since his\nthroat trouble started a few days\nago. The prime ministers had their\ntea and according'to the bleak official -communlaue given out ..they\n\"reviewed    conference   proceedings.\"\nNow Fleet street Is wondering\nwhat it was all about. There wr.re\nall kinds' of rumors -disseminated\nfrom stories of an Impending crisis,\nto stories of an Impending general\nagreement. , ;And Fleet street is\nstill  wondering.\nINVOLVE EXPENSE OF $22,01*,,\nTOLMIE SIGNS\nAGREEMENT ON\n$11,000 SHARE\nALIAN PRINCESS BECOMES    BRIDE\nOF KING BORIS OF BULGARIA\nML CHANGE\nB. C. RIDINGS\nAFTER CENSUS\nExpect    Split   Omineca\nBetween    Prince\nGeorge, Skeena\nCREATE PEACE\nRIVER RIDING\nAlso   Expect   gome\nTrail-Rossland\nRiding\nin\n'MOUNTIES' TO\n\u2022    -      PATROL CITY\nPORT ARTHUR, Ont., Oct. 26.\u2014\n(CP)\u2014Preparations were made in\nPort Arthur today for the reception\nand. housing of a detachment of the\nRoyal Canadian Mounted police, expected to arrive early Monday morning from Regina and Winnipeg. The\npolice detachment Is being sent to\nPort Arthur on representation from\nlocal authorities concerning the\nnature of a threat from communist\norganizations of violence \u201eta follow\nln case several demands they have\nmade on the city council are not\nmet.\nA disturbance on the streets last\nTuesday-morning saw police officers\nmauled and a prisoner released.\nDIES   FROM  INJURIES,   CRASH\nREGINA, Sask., Oct. 26.\u2014Injured\nwhen his automobile skidded as It\nstruck loose gravel on a highway\nnear here, turning over in the ditch,\nGeorge O. Gushing of Reglna died\nin hospital a few hours later. A\ncompanion, C, H. Palmer, escaped\nwith only minor Injuries.\nNO WORD FROM SEARCH PLANE, B. C.\nVANCOUVER,   B.   C,   Oot.\n26.\u2014a TSraSL   Kaelng    and    Bob    Marten,\n(CP)\u2014Slides in tho mountains and\nsnow and rain storms cut off com-\n'munlcation with the remote north\nof British Columbia over.the weekend and no word came down of developments in, the 'search for Captain TS.\" $. A. Burko and his two\ncompanlans, by Pilot Frank Dorbrandt.\n.Dorbrandt Was held at Tolegraph\nCreek Saturday, and it is not known\nkhether or not he got away for\nAtlln, 1B0, miles distant from there.\nHe Intended to proceed into the\nlAtvrti   r1v*r   district,   where   Burke.\nprospector,  have  been   missing  for\nmore than a week.\nATLIN, B. C, Oct. 26\u2014(CP)\u2014\nPilot Frank Dorbrandt, intrepid Al.\ntiskan aviator and his companion\nPilot Cope, arrived here early this\nafternoon ' from Telegraph Creek,*\nB. C, and tomorrow morning will\nhop off ln - their plane for Hard\nPost in a search for Capt. B. J. A.\nBurke, Vancouver aviator, and two\ncompanions who have \"been missing\nin the north for fifteen days, since\nthey left here to fly to Llard Post\nto InsOrv* \u00bbr>me mtnlrtv \u2022orowrty;\nVICTORIA, B. C, Oct. 26.\u2014Electoral ridings of British Columbia\nwill be re-distributed before the\nnextH provincial election, It was\nlearned here Saturday. As soon as\nthe next federal census of 1931 is\ncompleted the legislature will tackle\nthe formidable Job of reorganizing\nItself, as It did after the census\nof  1921.\nPending the outcome of the census it is impossible to foresee definitely how it will affeot the existing\nconstituencies but politicians of\nboth sides agree that two important\nchanges are virtually assured already. These are the elimination of\nthe riding of Omineca and the creation of a new riding in Peace River.\n- \"The shift of population since the'\nla**t redistribution bill has entitled\nPeace River to separate representation ln the legislature. In any\ncase, .Its\/present attachment to the\ndistrict ' of Prince George, from\nwhloh It Is separated by a vast\nwilderness, Is entirely unsatisfactory\nfrom every standpoint. When this\narrangement was made the Peace\nRiver country had Uttle population, but ln the last z0 years it has\ngrown steadily and now desires to\nsend Its own member to Victoria.\nThe redistribution generally expected would extend Prince George\nwestward to take ln about half of\nOmineca, and Skeena eastward to\ninclude the other half. This would\nwipe out the present riding of\nA. M. Manson, K. C, former attorney-general, who has represented\nIt since 1916. In area Omineca Is\none of the largest rldlngB of the\nprovince, but In population one of\nthe smallest.\nWhat other changes the new census will bring remain to be seen.\nThe growth of Vancouver and its\nsurrounding area suggested that\nthey will be entitled to still larger\nrepresentation in the house and the\nincreasing population of Trail may\nrequire some rearrangement of the\nsouthern interior ridings. In any\ncase, there seems to be strong op\nposition here to increasing the size\nof the house to any extent as the\npresent forty-eight members are considered ample for the government\nof about 600,000  people.\nThe last redistribution framed by\nthe late Premier Oliver personally\neffected sweeping changes which\nprobably will be paralleled by the\nnext redistribution bill. At that\ntime the historic riding of Greenwood was merged with Grand Forks,\nRossland was combined with Trail,\nNewcastle was Joined with Cowlchan,\nand the new ridings of Mackenzie,\nCreston, Burnaby, and Point Grey-\nRichmond were created. In the\noriginal draft bill Mr. Oliver wiped\nout Esqulmajt, stronghold of Attorney-General Pooley, hut an outburst\nof indignation from that district\nforced the withdrawal of that plan\nand l&qulmalt remained.\nYoung Princess'Cries tas She\nIs Wed; Torrents of\nRain Mar Day\nBRINDISI, Italy, Oct. ' 26. (AP)\u2014\nKing Boris of . Bulgaria and his\nqueen, the former Princess Glovanna of Italy, left today aboard\nthe Bulgarian royal yacht Czar Ferdinand for the Bulgarian port, of\nVarna to the farewell cheers of\n60,000 persons.\nThe former Princess Glovanna appeared deeply affected as she bade\ngoodbye to her sister the Princess\nMafalda, and her brother, Prince\nHumbert of Piedmont. The princess,\nwho cried during her marriage ceremony yesterday, again broke Into\ntears.\nAs the ship pulled away from\nshore, however, she smiled Just as\nshe smiled yesterday after her tears.\nShe gave the madly cheering thousands lining. tha docks the Roman\nsalute, while King Boris doffed his\ncap. The populace continued cheering and inside'the harbor continued saluting until the ship . and\nIts escort of four Italian scout\ncruisers passed out of sight.\nThe royal yacht will take them\nthrough the Adriatic, Ionian, Aegean\nand' Blaok seas to Bulgaria, They\nwill arrive within a week. When the\nyoung King Boris reaches his homeland % he will have his long-deferred\ncoronation and Princess Glovanna,\nat 22 years of age, will become the\nqueen of Bulgaria.\nThe royal couple were married ln\nthe Church of St. Francis yesterday\nmorning as a tremendous hall aud\nrain   storm   raged   outside.\nASSISI, Italy, Oct. 26.\u2014Rain drlz-\nled down dismally Saturday as Princess Glovanna of Italy and Boris\nII. of Bulgaria were married In the\nChurch  of  St.  Francis.\nHer parents, Premier Mussolini of\nItaly, and royal figures of Europe\nattended the nuptials, and were\ndrenched by a driving rain which\nmarred the ceremony's incidental\npageantry.\nThe princess' white dress was\nsoaked by rain and hall ,as were\nalso  many  other  wonderful   gowns.\nThe storm broke Just before the\nthree royal trains bearing the Italian king and queen, former Czar\nFerdinand of Bulgaria, and their\nsuites arrived at the station.\nAs the automobiles pulled up irt\nfront' of tho church the rain turned\nto a pelting torrent and Giovannn's\nbeautiful wedding gown was badly\ncrumpled.\nWorse weather for a wedding\nwould have Iwen hard to find anywhere   at   any   time.\nDENY REPORT ON\nBANKS CALLING,\nPOOL GUARANTEES\nWINNIPEG, ' Oct. 26\u2014 (CP) \u2014\nPrairie premiers deny that the wheat\npool's - lending banks plan to call\nfor an implementing of the guarantee proffered by the provinces for\npool loans. On their statement, issued through Premier J. T. M. Anderson of Saskatchewan at Edmonton Saturday, follows 'publication\nof a report that the banks might\nserve notice on the provinces soon\nafter'' November   1,\nCROW'S NEST IS\nUP AT VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 26\u2014With the\nexception of Increased activity In\nCrow's Nest on the curb market and\na 10 cent advance to 2.60 in Home\nOil, there was uttle doing on the\nVancouver stock exchange yester.\nday. Comparatively heavy buying\nIn Crow's Nest sent that issue up\nto 11 cents. It receded to .10 at\nthe close, however, for a net gain\nof ly. cents.\nThe rest ot the entire list was\ndull with prices moving in narrow\nrange throughout the abbreviated\ntrading session, C. and E. Corporation gained 2 cents to .65, while\nBig Missouri managed to get up to\n*2   for  n   win   of   m   rent*.\nHARRY PAYNE\n\u2022      WHITNEY IS\nDEAD AT N. Y.\nNEW YORK, Oct. 26\u2014(AP)\u2014\nHairy Payne Whitney, sportsman\nand capitalist, died tonight at\nhts Fifth avenue home after an\nIllness of several weeks. He was\n68   years   old..\nNOT  A  DENTIST   BUT-\nMOOSE JAW, Sask., Oct. 26.\u2014\nThough not a dentist, J. Stuart,\n67, follows dental work with avidity. Today his false teeth dropped\nout as he leaned on the parapet\nof a 36-foot viaduct over a railway\nUna. Stuart grabbed for the teeath,\nlost his balance and fell to the\ntracks. He suffered\" a broken ankle\nbut was in favorable condition, tonight.\nKING BORIS III.\nNELSON FIRMS\nASK RYCKMAN\nAID BY TARIFF\nWaters   &   Co.   Wants\nDumping of Clothespins Stopped\nVENEER WORKS\nIMPORTED GLUE\nBoard of Trade Extends\nWelcome;    Minister\nLeaves for East\nGERMANY AROUSED\nOVER SILLING\nOF SHIjVJRAZE\nReports State 27 Killed as\nShell Hits Baden at Rio\nde Janeiro\nBERLIN, Oct. 26.\u2014 (AP) \u2014The\nshelling of , the German steamship\nBaden in Rio de Janeiro harbor Friday, resulting in tlie reported death\norf 27 persons on board and Injuries to a score or more others,\naroused German editorial opinion\n(today to demand that a promised\nBrazilian investigation be thorough.\nIt Is felt here that the action\nof Brazilian gunners is almost incomprehensible, although It Is said\nln some quarters that Brazilian\npolitical figures were aboard at the\ntime, fleeing from the military coup\nd'etat which overthrew the government of President Washington\nG. Luis.\nThe whole affair Is shrouded ln\nmystery, since no direct news dispatches have come from Rio do\nJaneiro\u2014presumably because of the\nstrict censorship imposel by military junta\u2014and the foreign office\nhas had only fragmentary advices\nfrom German envoys In Brazil.\nAdvices from the German legation in the Brazilian capital related\nthat a shell from fortress Capaca-\nbana hit the Baden as it steamed\nout for Buenos Aires, shooting uway\nthe rear mast. The message gave\nno information: as to casualties but\nadded that members of the legation\nstaff immediately went aboard, and\nsaid Brazilian revolutionary authorities explained that they had intended the shot merely as a warning, hitting the vessel accidentally.\nTho Brazilian ministry of justice\nclaimed that the ship displayed no\nflag.\n\"CLOSED   PORT\"\nRIO DE JANEIRO, Oct. 26.\u2014(AP)\n\u2014The statement that for the past\ntwo weeks masters of all ships\nleaving the harbor here had been\nordered either to signal or to pass\nclose to Fort Santa Cruz was made\ntoday, by Senior Costa Pinto, captain of the part. Tlie \"closed port\"\nsignal has been flying from Fort\nSanta Cruz, according to, the commander, Captain Affonso de Oar-\nvolho.\nThe shelling of tho German\nsteamer Baden by one of the Rio\nharbor forts has been explained as\ndue to disregard by Captain Rolin\nof the Baden of signals to come to\na stop.   Twenty-seven were killed.\nOfficials of the Hamburg-American line In Germany have expressed\nstrong doubts that Captain Rolln.\none of their meat experienced officers, would have run the risk of\ndisregarding such orders, or leaving\nport  without  V^lst^  his colors.\nMISSING PAGE FROM DIARY OF CAPT.\nGEORGE VANCOUVER IS AT VICTORIA\nvictoria; b. c\u201e Oct. ae.\u2014Tov(\nhalf a century, historians of British\nColumia have been looking for a\nlost page ln the diary of Oapt.\nGeorge Vancouver, the British navigator who first circumnavigated\nVancouver Island and gave his name\nto It. This has been found in\nLondon, It was announced by the\nprovincial library and archives here\nSaturday. This document was discovered by accident In the musty\nfiles of the British museum and a\nphotographic copy of It has Just\nreached John Hosle, provincial librarian and archivist. It is dated\nApril, 1796, and in Captain Vancouver's fine handwriting, -tells how\nhts ship landed at Casa Blana In\nChile. The navigator's observations\nat this point are outlined ln detail\n*r\\r\\ jSrlldniw-Hl   In   hi\"   rather  elflfnH-\ncal style.\n\"The country,\" he says, \"Is nearly\nuninhabited. We only saw about\na dozen miserable huts, calculated\nmerely as a defence against a\nscorching sun.\"\nThe discovery of this lost page\nis Important In completing one of\nthe most valuable historical records\nrelating   to   this   coast.\nIn addition - to the lost page of\nCaptain Vancouver's diary, copies of\n160 of his despatches are Included\nln the bundle of valuable data\nwhich Mr. Hosle received from\nGeorge Godwin, well-known novelist and author of London, and formerly of the Vanoouver Province,\nEarly sketches and tmaps mado on\nthlB aoast by Captain Vancouver\nnnd Lieutenant Broughton Illustrate\nthe written msterlflt.\nExtension of the anti-dumping\nclause to spring clothespins from\nSweden, and duty concessions for\nthe glue which has to be imported\nfor manufacture of veneer or plywood, were urged Saturday afternoon by Nelson delegations that\nwaited on Hon. E, B. Ryckman,\nminister of national revenue and\nacting minister of finance, when he\nwas at the Hume for two hours\nfor the purpose of receiving any\npersons who wished to wait on him\nfor any purpose. The several deputations and many Individuals who\ncalled to see the minister were all\nIntroduced to him by W. K. Esling, M. P. for West Kootenay.\nPUT IN $35,000 PLANT\nThe clothespin representations\nwere made on behalf of T. H.\nWaters & Co., by Mr. Waters, manager, and Dr. W. O. Rose, president\nof the company, who pointed out\nthat the concern, whloh had been\nin the wood-working business since\n1900, had put ln approximately $'25,-\n000 wor th of machinery ln 1921\nfor the manufacture of spring\nclothespins, with the aid of\nloan from the provincial department or Industries, Two years\nafter starting a very promising manufacture, with a high class product, the company was forced to\nclose down thc clothespin plant because of the large-scale dumping\nof Swedish clothespins of the same\ntype but Inferior quality, the deputation asserted. While operating, the\nNelson plant, which used entirely\nlocal white btrch bought from\nranchers and others, local lumber\nfor cases, and Vancouver cartons,\nenjoyed a market from eastern Saskatchewan to Victoria, and business\ntaken care of or offering amounted\nto  around   $30,000   a  year.\nNot only was the Nelson plant\nput out of business by this European competition, but two Quebec\nplants also, and Mr. Waters said\nhe did not believe this clothespin\nwas made in Canada at all today.\nWOULD   NOT   INCREASE   PRICE\nThe deputation gave the minister\nfigures to uphold the contention\nthat If the Swedish exporters were\nprevented from dumping their product in Canada, the Nelson company could supply its territory, and\nno doubt other Canadian plants do\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nVARGASM1TED\nBECOME BRAZIL'S\nNEW PRESIDENT\nWag  Liberal  Candidate    in\nElections Early in\nThis Year\nPONTA GROSSA, Brazil, Oct. 26.\n(AP)\u2014Gugullo Vargas, generalissimo,\nof tho Brazilian revolutionary armies,\nwas invited today to assume tho\npresidency of Brazil. The invitation\nwas from tho military Junta controlling the federal government at\nRio de Janeiro.\nVargas was the Liberal candidate\nfor president In the national Braz-\nIan elections early this year, but\nDr. Julio Prestea was declared the\nwinner. Prestes, who had been received by high officials In Great\nBritain, France, Spain and Portugal, and had also made a pre-in-\naugural visit to President Hoover\nin Washington, was due to take\noffice November 16.\nSince the downfall of the Wash\nIngton Luis government last week,\nhe has been held virtually a prisoner In the state executive palace\nat  Sao  Paulo.\nCol. Goes Monteiro. chief of staff\nof the Insurgent army, informed\nthe Associated Press correspondent\ntoday that \"the revolutionary movement is ended. The order for cessation of hostilities has been given\nand the revolution has won a complete victory.\"\nFORMING A NEW\nBRAZIL CABINET\nRIO DE JANEIRO, Oct. 28, (AP)\n\u2014Organization of a provisional cabinet proceeded slowly today under\nthe direction of ths new military\nJunta.\nAfr&nim Mollo Franco, formerly\nBrazilian delegate to the League of\nNations has been appointed foreign\nminister, Aristo Pinto, a former\ndeputy, has been given tho portfolio of Justice,\n'Montolro Andrade, former preal-\ndont of the Banco Oredlto of the\nInsurgent state (>r Minas Oeraes, has\nbeen named president of the Banco\nCredl-bn   do   Braull.\nInactivity of City\nPolice Followed by\nLiquor Board Order\nATTACKS TARIFF\nRt. Hon. Philip Snowden, British\nchancellor ol the exchequer, who\nvigorously attacked tariff protection\nln a speech at Manchester, declaring: \"Free trade will stay while I\nam   ln   office.\"\nEvidence Found on Four\nPremises; Summons\nSeveral Parties\nCHARGE KEEPING\nLIQUOR FOR SALE\nALEX MONROE IS\nBADLY INJURED\nON WAY, TRAIL\nFruitvale     Man     Sustains\nThree Fractures, Cuts,\nin Car Crash\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 23.\u2014Alex Monroe, 28, employed In the zinc roasting plant of the Trail smelter, is\nlying in Trail-Tadanac hospital in\na serious condition following an\nautomobile accident on Friday night\nWhen his open car left the road\nnear where the Fruitvale road Joins\nthe Columbia Garden highway he\nsustained serious injuries including\ntwo broken arms, one broken In\ntwo places, and bad cuts and bruises  about the  body.\nMr. Monroe was driving to Trail\nfrom his home at Fruitvale when\nthe accident occurred. Mr. Ewing\nof Trail, following ln another car,\npicked up the unfortunate motorist\nand rushed him to hospital. Mr.\nMonroe is a single man and is well\nknown about Trail and Tadanac.\nAGREEMENT IS\nREACHED, MEET\nON RESOURCES\nEDMONTON, Alta., Oct. 26\u2014Western premiers in conference on administration of tho natural resources\nreached an agreement -Saturday, on\nthe records to be secured from the\nDominion government. Expressions\nof general satisfaction with the conference came from the prairie premiers as they continued discussions\non the administration of the resources, turned over the provinces\nrecently by  the  government  at Ot-\nCity Police Staged Raid,\nFollowing Orders, in\nMay\nBearing orders from the - British\nColumbia Liquor Control board, at\nVictoria, 10 provincial, police officers, headed by staff Sergeant A. T.\nStephenson of Nelson, swooped Into\nthe city of Kaslo at 9 o'clock on\nSaturday night and raided several\nestablishments in search of liquor.\nAs a result several Kaslo people\nwill be summonsed early this week\non charges of keeping liquor for\nsale.\nPolice officers found evidence on\nthe following business premises;\nLakeview hotel, Kaslo hotel, Forsyth's tobacco shop and the Dominion cafe.\nThree automobiles conveyed the\npolice to Kaslo and Included la\nthe party wero officers from all\nover the district.\nWith their plans well laid tha\npolice officers went through the\ncity in quick fashion. Commencing\nat 9 o'clock the officers had completed their work by 10:15 and had\nby then secured enough evidence\nupon which to start prewcutions.\nStaff-Sergeant Stephenson stated\nlast night that the raid by the provincial officers had been ordered -\nbecause Kaslo city officials had\"\nfailed to clean up tha liquor situation there when requested by Hie\nliquor board. The board had stated\nthat If Kaslo neglected to- enforce\nthe Luquor act in the city that\nthe provincial police would be forced  to do so.\nIt was on May 24 last that Kaslo\ncity police conducted a similar raid\nwhich resulted in several arrests\nand several court cases. At tbat\ntime 'the Kaslo police were aided\nby a detachment from the provincial\npolice force.\nAU of those who will receive summonses in connection with tho\nSaturday night raid will be charged\nunder the Liquor act with havlhff\nliquor for sale.\nThe following police officers took\npart in the raid: Staff-Sergeant A,\nT. Stephenson, Nelson, Corporal <J.\nJohnston, Trail, Constable W. J. McKay, Rossland, Constable J. White,\nProcter, Constable A. Vickers, Greenwood, Constable R. Hazard, Creston,\nConstable R. Mcintosh, Nelson, Constable T. B. Woods-Johnson, Salmo,\nConstable A. E. D. Parry, Kaslo,\nconstable H. Henry, Nelson, Constable   R.   J.   Meek,  Nelson.\nB. C. TORIES TO\nMEET PENTICTON\nON NOVEMBER 29\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Oct. 26.\u2014Annual meeting of thc British Columbia Conservative association will be\nheld at Pentlcton  on November 29.\nThis was decided at a meeting at\nHotel Vancouver Saturday of the\nexecutive of the organization, T. H.\nKirk, president, presiding. It Is\nexpected the business of the convention will bo transacted ln ono\nday.\nWINS ORATORY\n.TEST\nWASHINGTON, D. C, Oct. 26.\u2014\ni'AP)\u2014Edmund A. Gulllon, 17-year-\nold American youth, Saturday won\nthe fifth inter national oratorical\ncontest. Paul Leduc, 17-year-old\nFrench Canadian, was second. Youths\nol eight nations competed. Clemento\nPerez Zanartu $ of Santiago, Chile,\nwas third.\nIDAHO RANCHER\nMURDERED\nBONNER8 FERRY, Idaho. Oct. 26.\n\u2014(AP)-\u2014Llewellyn Chartis, 40, rancher, was killed tonight by a mystery\nrifle shot, the sheriff reported, and\na murderer was sought.\nSECOND BLAST IN\nWEEK TAKES TOLL\nOF 100, GERMANY\nIs  Third  in  Four  Months;\nOver 500 Miners Have\nDied\nSAARBRUCKEN, Germany, Oct. 28\n-(AP)\u2014Tlie coai mine disaster at\nMaybach colliery yesterday appeared\ntonight to have taken at least 100\nlives. 90 bodies lay ln mortuaries,\nwhile all hope was given up for men\nknown to be still under ground.\nComing before Germany's flags\nwere hauled up from half mast\nmourning for the 262 victims at\nthe recent Alsdorf mine explosion,\nthe Maybach disaster fell upon tha\nnation as a stunning blow, The\nSaorbrucken disaster was not only\ntho second major calamity to hit\nthe German coalfields within a week.\nIt was also the third within four\nmonths.\nThe July disaster at Neurocle, last!\nTuesday's at Alsdorf, and yesterday's\nat Maybach have between then*,\nsnuffed out the lives of well o'er\n600   miners.\nDROWNS    WHILE    SKTIXi\nNEWDALE, Man., Oct. 26.\u2014Manitoba recorded Ita first thLi-l-fcrn\nfatality today. Lionel S. Dewltt.\n32, was drowned when he crashed\nthrough the lightly-frozen surface\nof Sandy lake, on which ho hnd\nbeen skating. The body was re-\noovered.\nDR. LATIMER IS AGAIN     APPEALING\nVANOOtrvER, B. C, Oct! 33.-4\nFrom a Judgment of Mr, Justice w.\nA, Maodonrald affirming the expulsion by tho Medical Council of Dr.\nVictor Latimer, -84-year-old Pentlcton physician, for iinbmreuional\nconduct, Latimer Is appealing to the\ncourt ot  sppea.1,\nG, L, Fraser, counsel far Latimer,\nIn   ^rtftanver-lnir   to   have   the   eatm\n>heard nt the present sitting.\nAlthough Latimer succeeded In\nsuprtme court before Mr, Justice\nMacdonald ln having reserved ft\nfinding that he administered nar-\nootla drugs to Mm, Helen Oliver for\nimproper purposes, Hla lordship eus-\ntuini'ri the expulsion on another\nground. He suggested tnat thn\nMedical Counoil could under all the\nI ctrfnimstianofwi   modlfv   th*  wm+#r\\n*f\n Pajjre Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1930.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C. Hotels\nf^NVWWV^*^^\nRooms with\nrunning water\nPrivate baths\nensuite\nNELSON, B. C.\nThe best hotel and dining accommodation\nin the city.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nHOME\u2014Mr. and Mrs. I. DUon, J.\nWhite, H. R. Acheaon, L. Golas,\nMia J. C. McLean, Procter; T. B.\nWoodsjohnson, Salmo; T a. McKenzle. R. E. Phillips, J. D. Lewis,\nMr. and Mra. J. H. Bennett. M. P.\nCotton, H. P cotton, E Condon,\nW j. Coo, G. White, B. McJames.\nR O. Holmes, R. W. Bishop. J.\nEntwlale, P. E. Ritchie, J. Boyd,\nJ. L. Bmlth, W. P. Kaye. J. Hutchinson, W. M_ Bell, R. T. Power,\nOkanagan Landing; O. O. Evorell.\n' J N. Oran. E. L. Hopkins-,, Mr. and\nMrs. P. S. Peters, W. J. McKay.\nRowland: Mr. and Mrs. T. Hurst,\nNelson;   H,   B.   McKinnon,   Oama\nButte; Mr. and Mis. T. R. Page.\nRobson; B. N. Sharp. Spokane; J.\nBrown. A. J. MacBeth, Winnipeg;\nP. Mclntyre, Trail; O. (Jerome. J.\nSocrtt. Montreal; R. Watson. P. E.\nBudges, Mr. and Mrs. J. Ripley.\nCalgary; Mr. and Mrs. R. Bradley.\nEdgewood; Mra. L. Wright, Fernie:\nA. Potter. Fredertcton; A. S. Spall.\nNew Denver: J Teesler, Winnipeg;\nJ. P. Johnson. Tadanao; J. W.\nJ-owler, Manchester; O. B. Appleton,\nSunshine Bay; P. Lee, Bonnlngton;\np. O. Talbot, Klmberley; T. H. Orr.\nToronto; C. T. Oughtred, H. Spott,\nP. M. Elliott, Chapman Creek; D.\nBradley\",   Creston.\nuimi^MMMsmfWmmi\nWhere the Guest Is King\nThe Savoy\nNELSON'S NEWEST AND FINEST HOTEL\nMANY ROOMS WITH PRIVATE\nBATHS   OR   SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nIgWilSMl,, tt\u00abW\u00bbVllig|uWi!^^\nNO PROGRESS IN\nCONFAB OPINES\nPRElffiFORBES\nSays Just Drifting and Getting Nowhere; Sees\nLittle Hope\nLONDON, Oct. to\u2014 (AP)\u2014The veil\nthat ha3 ermraded the deliberations of the Imperial conference\nsince Its opening session waa ripped\naside tonight by Premier G. W.\nForbes, of New Zealand, who declared that the attitude of the British\nLabor government on tariffs left\n\u2022*llttl\u00ab  hope of   real  progress.'*\n\"We simply -seem to be drifting\nand not getting anywhere,\" Premier\nPorbeo said In an interview tonight,\n\"The whole question is wrapped\nup In that of food taxes. Mr.\nSnowden says distinctly that there\nwill be no food taxes\u2014well, you\ncan\\ bet beyond that.\n\"Instead of food taxes, the government ts suggesting theoretical problems. We are practical , people ln\nthe antipodes. We know things\nwhich wtU work and have worked,\nbut we look upon theoretical things\nwith    some    suspicion.\n\"The attitude of the government\ntherefore leaves little hope of real\n\u25a0pr-osress. We cannot force them to\nchange their views, we. can only\nput forward our side.\n\"The people of New Zealand. I\nknow, will learn with. regret that\nUttle advance has been made so\nfar in the effort to promote greater\ntrade   with   the   motherland.\n\"In adopting Mr. Snowden's view\nof preferential tariffs, the government has ln my opinion precluded\nany hope of reaj  progress,''\nNAVAL TREATY IS\nIN EFFECT TODAY\nThe London navaj treaty becomes\nbinding today upon the governments of Great Britain, the United\nStates, and Japan with Premier\nMacDonald Joining President Hoover\nand Premier Hamaguchl in an\nInternational broadcast celebrating\nthe   occasion.\nEvery section of the universe Is\nto hear the addresses made slmul.\ntaneously with the rcpositlng ln\nLondon of Japan's Instrument of\nratification, \u2022 Tho Instruments of\nGreat Britain and of the United\nStates, accepting tho terms of thc\ntreaty which for the first time limits all types of naval vessels, already\nhave been deposited.\nPremier Hamughl In Tokyo, is\nscheduled to speak first, at 0:50\nam., EJ3.T., (6:6o Nelson tlmo)\nPresident Hoover will speak from tlie\nWhite House at 10:02 o'clock (7:02\nNelson   time).\nPremier MacDonald Is to apeak\nat   10:08   from   London.\nChurch 50 Years Old\nISSG.MLERT\nSPEAKS TEACHERS\nONAROEADII\nAdfjresses   Dlscnssloii   Ses\nsion at Convention on Seat\nWorfc Reading\nSpecial services  Sunday,  OctoBer 11, marked tne  50th  anniversary ol first Sunday school superintendent to the new ohOT<m.   to all, he served\ntho erection or the present bulldlns o( the Brampton, Ont.. Presbyterian lor 34 years tn the post.    (3) Brampton Presbyterian church  erectedI 60\nchurch.    Rev. Prank Balrd, moderator of the general assembly, was the years ago. (4) Thomas Wilson, aged 88, one or the oldest memners. W) \u00abev.\nspecial speaker.   Presbyterlanlsm In Brampton dates Tjack ii 1847.   Photo- James, Prlngle, who laid the cornerstone 60 years ago and was tne imi\ngraphs here show: (1) Rev. James Wilson, present pastor. (3) D. J. McClure, pastor,    '\nBRIDE-TO-BE IS\nGIVEN GAY SHOWER\nIN PROCTER HOME\nGEOGRAPHY CAN\nBE MADE INTO\n.ROMANCE STUDY\nInspector    Hall    Addresses\nSection Devoted to\nGeography,\nSAVOT\u2014Marjorie Black, Mra. J. A.\nBlack. Sandon; C. Short, Alnsworth;\nB. Nehrand, Nakusp; O. B. Gordon.\nJ.  C.  Layton.  A. Peers, J.  Hewitt,\n. c. Mepham, J. Whitley, K. B. Jones,\n' B. J. Hastings, Mrs C. O'Brien, Vancouver-   Mr.  and  Mrs. J.  H. King,\nMr    and   Mrs.   O   P   Jaegger   nnd\n: daughter;    Mr    and    Mrs.    Fresen,\n: Benata; B. B. Satrom, P. O. Martin,\nA. H. Gould, Procter; W. M. Johnson. Mr and Mrs. W B Sloan,\nJ E, Power, H. Johnson, N. Nord-\nqulst, Trail; W. C. Stevenson, Winnipeg; L. J. Dlscombe, Victoria;\nO. O. Heaven. Grand Forks; D.\nCummins, Boswell; N. Menales. Seattle; C .Frank, Boswoll; J. Brown,\nH. G. Hood, Calgary; A Fltzslmmons,\nRevelstoke.\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapointe, Prop\nHot and cold water ln every room\nSteam   Heated\nQUEENS\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Mlkklcson.\nGrand Forks; J. sherbrook, Midway;\nD. Mackmon. Revelstoke; J. A.\nLandervllle. New Denver; B. W.\nDyeart, Trail; G. Maltland, Salmo;\nG. F. Chamock, Lethbridge; A.\nSalmlnen, Vancouver; C. Pcghln,\nSeattle; S. Kavlck. G. Radovick,\nRossland; W. Gutslnfcr. Florida; W.\nD Crawhead, G. O. Fry, Calgary;\np. McCabe, Edmonton; P. Weldon,\nFernie- Mr. and Mrs. Eastwood and\nson, 'Reglna: W. Plcldhouso, E.\nJohnson, Nelson; E. Tills, Belvcrton;\nMr. and Mrs. Sparnlcr and son;\nKuskanook; 8. Plutoer, Castlegar.\nNEW QRAND\nHOTEL\nHot and Cold water ln all rooms\nWeekly or monthly rates\nP. L. KAPAK, Prop.\nPhone 60S      P. O.  Box 1061\nNEW GP-AND\u2014C. BalUi, L. Brown,\nE. Burgquest, Trail; V. Stanberg,\nSatoio; E. Gerber, M. Mollyoff, NelBon; J. Norrlander, J. Jullaaon, O.\nLundgren, Erie; Mr. and Mrs. R,\nPreston, Rossland; E. Sarnera, Klmberley; P. Sonow, Brilliant; Mra. L.\nHoward. San Francisco; Mr. and Mrs.\nG. Rolpli. Vancouver; A. Hyrnuk,\nBeasley; H. Oljmuk. Lardo; J. Wol-\nkoff, S. Brown, Kuskanook.\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n705 Vernon St. I'honc 5371\nH. WASSlfK\nFifty Itooms of Solid Comfort\nHeadquarters for Loggers and\nMiners\nMadden Hotel\nd. a. Mcdonald\nSteam    Heated    Rooms    by    the\nDay, Week or Month\nEvery  consideration Bhown\nlo guest*,\nCor. Baker and Ward Streets\nNelson\nROCK CREEK MAN,\nINJURED, CRAWLS\nALL NIGHT, ROAD\nROCK CREEK, B. C, Oct. 26.\u2014\nInjured In an odd accident while\non a hunting trip, E. L. Steeves\nwent through a parttclularly trying experience.\nTravelling afoot, he shot a deer\nand strung It up temporarily ln a\ntree. Later he returned on a\nhorse, on which he tried to place\nthe deer. The horse, however, becoming frightened, kicked out wildly, breaking his owner's leg, and\nthen  ran away.\nMr. Steeves made splints for his\nInjured leg and crawled painfully ln\nthe direction of a road. After a\nnight thus spent he decided to\nmake a pair of crutches but he\nmade four pairs before having a\nsuitable one. With the aid of the\ncrutches he reached the road, where\nhe was found by Ted McArthur of\nMidway, who took him to a doctor.\nTWO MEN ADRIFT,\nSTORM TOSSED\nLAKE WINNIPEG\nMADDEN\u2014M. Vldcek. N. Norci-\nqulst. L. Dlscombe, Trail; P. Con-\nellson, H. Johnson, Procter; O. S\nTaylor,   Spokane.\nThe generous wrapped effect, and\nsmooth fitting, intricately seamed\ncoat bodies after the Vlonnet Idea\nare glimpsed, most frequently.\nTrail, B. C.\n5Msravtr?rn-!-=n.-!-i m~nn ~!-rrrr.r \u25a0rmrr?. :ra\nHotel Arlington\nCentrally Located\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA. P. LEVESQUE, Prop.\njMKffiiJtefckijseEK'jarOT^\nf|OUGLAC\nir  HOTEL   **\nROOMS and BATHS\nE. L. and A. GROTJTAOE\nProps.\nBtenm Heated Hat and Cold\nThroughout Water\nBox 808 Phone 283\nTrail, B.C.\nLive Stock for Sale!\nrrillE Interested buyer Is\n1 always a reader of THE\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. For\nresults that ore certain\ntry the Classified Columns.\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 26\u2014(CP)\u2014Winnipeg was without word tonight of\nthe fate of Ing-wall ThorajHOn, Lake\nWinnipeg lighthouse keeper, and his\nassistant who Saturday wore adrift\non the storm-tossed lake in a small\nboat. The radio station at Norway\nhouse, at the north end of the lake,\nwas closed and all efforts to get in\ntouch with the post by telephone\nwere   futile.\nCHURCHMEN'AT\nTRAIL ARRANGE\nNEW PROGRAM\nARCHIE GRAY, SALMO\nON HUNTING TRIP\nTeaching of geography could be\nInvested with the moat fascinating\nromance, Inspector T. R. Hall of\nKelowna, declared Saturday morning\nat the teachers' convention, In an\naddress to the geography section,\nono of the four sections Into which\ntho -assembled teachers broke up\nfor the concluding hour.\nTwenty years ago, the sick 'geography was \"the sick man on the\ncurrle.\" and the old memory method was applied tor everything, and\nfacts were given \u00abi supposed scientific rotation. It 4 was then supposed that this was great training\nfor the memory, but today the fallacy of even that supposition was\nproven.\nNOW   TEACHING   ENRICHED\nThen the teaching of geography\nbegan to bo enriched, first by topical teaching, such as Investigating\nwhy tho wind blew, or why wheat\ngrow In  a certain place.\nLater the human side began to\nbe stressed, and interest was evoked\nin how people lived in different\nparts of tho  world.\nThe most recent development in\nteaching of geography was in de-\nvelepoment of the power of doing\u2014\nby tho project method.\nDevelopment of Ideals and of at-\ntltudrs was brought about by\npresent-day methods. Pupils grasped\nthe idea of the Inter-dependence of\ndifferent   peoples.\nAnother vital thing was the crner-\nsenco of principles. Such a principle was illustrated in the occur-\nvence of great cities. Wherever there\nwas a break in communication,\nthere a city arose\u2014such as Montreal,\nNew York. New Orleans, Vancouver.\nInspector Hall catitioned against\nusing ono method of teaching to the\nexclusion ol all others, but whatever tho method, the first three\nminutes of tho lesson period was\nvital. If Interest arid attention\nwere not secured then, they never\nwould be in that particular lesson.\nUSE   OUTSIW-J  MATERIAL\nHe advised the use of supplementary material. In securing comprehension of tlie Amazon, the fact\nthat one might sail up this mighty\nriver for 1000 miles and then find\na city the size of Vancouver with\ntbo most western civilisation was\none of the many that might be\nquoted, but this material could\nnot bo found ln the ordinary geography. It followed that the teacher\nmust, have a library. Government\npublications and railroad guides,\nboth of the'm obtainable free, were\nof Rri'at use  in this connection.\nInspector Hall emphasized tho\nvalue of the \"problem\" method with\ngeography.\nLeo Luntz of Trail led a short\nbut pungent discussion- that followed   nsp^ctor   Hall's   addreBe.\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 28.\u2014The St.\nAndrew's Cnurchmen's club heard\na report tonight on the whist drive\nheld last week by the club and arranged a- boxing . and wrestling\nsmoker -sometime ln the near future.\nThe meeting heard G. Truscott\nspeak on \"What la Wrong With\nSunday\" and the ensuing conversation waa bo interesting' that It was\ndecided to carry It further next\nweek.\nPROBLEMS STILL\nFACE CONFERENCE\nLONDON, Oct. 28\u2014(By George\nHambleton, Canadian Press staff\ncorrespondent)\u2014Two important constitutional problems are still before\nthe Sankey committee of the Imperial conference for solution. The\nfirst comes as a sequel to the stand\ntaken by Hon. Maurice Dupre, solicitor-general \"of Canada that the\nCanadian provinces must be consulted before the proposed bill repealing the Colonial Laws Validity\nact Is submitted to the Imperial\nparliament.\nThe second problem touches the\nmatter of appeals to the privy council and It 1b raised by the Irish\nFree State.\nThe first problem, concerning the\nrights of the Canadian provinces to\nbe consulted, seemed, for a time,\nlikely   to   mean   delay.\nIt Is now proposed, however, that\nthe difficulty might be overcome by\nincorporation of a suspending clause\nwhich would make the bill Inoperative until the Dominion government\nhad the opportunity of consulting\nthe Canadian provinces probably by\nholding an inter-provincial conference.\nNELSON FIRMS\nASK RYCKMAN\nAID BY TARIFF\n(Continued From Page One)\nSALMO. B. C, Oct. 26\u2014Alfred\nOawly of Nelson spent tho week\nend ln town the \u201e guest of his\nfather, C. A. Cawly.\nMiss Georgle Reld, who attends\nschool ln Nelson, was the guest of\nher cousins, tho Misses Peggy and\nShirley Donaldson, over the week\nend.\nArchie Gray left Friday for Creston where he will spend a few days\nhunting.\nSETS PARACHUTE JUMP RECORD\nTORONTO, Ont., \"Oct. 26.\u2014-Jumping from an nltltudo of .11,100 foot\n-Terry McOovern today broke the\nCanadian record of 10,200 feet established hern by Charles Daly of\nToronto less than a month ago, for\nparachut* Jumpers. He landed safely Daly stated he would attempt a\ndrop of 18,000 feet next Sunday.\nBONNINGTON  NOTES\nBONNINGTON, B. C, Oct. 27\u2014\nMiss June Baddeley, a pupii at St.\nJoseph's convent Nelson, spent the\nweek end with her mother, Mrs.\nD. M. Baddeley, at Corra Linn.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Greyson have returned after spending a few days\nthe guests of Mr. and Mrs. O. W.\nHumphry at South Slocan.\nAmong those wh'o attended the\nfuneral of Mrs. Gordon L. Thompson in Nelson, on Friday, were Mr.\nand Mrs. W. D. Ridge, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. C. Motley, Mr. and Mrs. E. O.\nJohnson, Mr. and Mrs. A. Wllley,\nMr. and Mrs. A. McKim, Mr, ond\nMrs. c. H. Bland, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Gilker, G. E. He'ibecquq, M.\nWalker, J. H. Jerome, and R. Mc-\nFadden.\nMrs. Turner Lee, Colllngwood Gray\nJack and Chrlsholm Gray, and Mr.\nand Mrs. G. N. Brown of Upper\nBonnlngton, spent Friday in Nelson to attend Mrs. Thompson's\nfuneral. , '\nDAY OF RAIN HAS\nA VARIATION OF\nBUT TWO DEGREES\nSCHOOL CHILDREN\nSEE SCENES FROM\nHISTORY OF CANADA\nNearly an Inch of rain fell Sunday\nfollowing a fino day Saturday.\nSunday's rain which totalled .74\ninch, began at midnight, and never\nstopped during the day, though it\nhalted last evening.\nThe 24 btwiXB ending Sunday at\n5 p.m. was one of the most equable\nof the year, with a variation of 1.6\ndegrees, or. for the purpose of re-\nCordlng, two degrees, as fradlons\nare disregarded unless half a degree\nor over, when they count as a full\ndegree. The exfrcmiea wore 36 and\n3D degrees,\nSaturday the mercury rose to 55,\nand fell to 39- There was .08\nInch of rain beforo dawn.\nNelson, B. C. Cafes\nThe Standard Cate\n320 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nOrEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\nllJO to 2.30 Special Lunch   38o\nB.30  to   8   p.   in.       Bupper   350\nPHONE  IM\t\nBttOTENAY CAFE\nVERNON   STREET\nDinner, 11.80 to 8.80    88c\nSupper,   5.30 to 8 p. m    80e\n\u25a0 Short  Orders a Specialty\nQuick Service\nNext Kootenay Hotel. Nelson\nThe Royal Cate\nCLASSIC   RESTAURANT\nRefinement and  Delicacy  Prevail\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\nSpecial Dinner 11.30 to 2.30   85c\nSupper   5.80 to 8     85o\nWe Specialize ln Chop\nSuey nnd Noodles\nPhone 182\nWINNIPEG, Man,, Oct. 28r-WU-\nllam Davla, veteran Canadian National railways conductor, died ln\nhospital today from Injuries received\nwhen he woe struck by an automobile Thureday. An Inquest will be\nheld.\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C, Oct. 27\u2014\nA set of films depleting the history\nof Canada was given ln the public\nschool on Tuesday evening for the\ndistrict Bchools of Bonnlngton; Crescent Valley and South Slocan. It.\nGrayson operated the lantern. Tlie\nentertainment was given under the\nauspices of the Womens Institute\nand was largely attended. Mrs. r.\nGreyson described the pictures as\nthey wero -presented occasionally\nreferring to the children when the\nslides showed home important event\nin history. Mr. and Mrs. Greyson\nwere heartily thanked for their\nservices.\nPOLICE    SEIZE   MORAN\nthe same, without the ultimate\nconsumer being compelled to pay\nmore than Is now paid for the\nallegedly Inferior foreign, product.\nIt was pointed out that at the\nInst two sessions of the King government's regime Mr. Esling brought\nthese facts before parliament ln an\nattempt   to  secure  a remedy.\nHon. Mr. Ryckman promised full\nconsideration.\nVENEER   WORKS   GLUE\nThe deputation from the British\nColumbia Veneer Works, Limited\nconsisted of Manager George Dvor-\nJetz, and Dr. Roso and W. M, Cunliffe, directors.\nAfter explaining tho origin of\nthis important and growing Nelson\nIndustry, which uses local cotton-\nwood timber and bpIIs Its product\nfar afield, the delegation gave coat\nfigures, and pointed out that the\nspecial type of glue used to glue\ntogether the cottonwood sheets ln\nmaking the veneer or plywood was\nobtainable only by Importation from\nthe United States, as this highly\nspecialized glue was. not put out in\nCanada.\nIn any tariff revision, the government was asked to safeguard the\ninterests  of this  Industry.\nTho  minister promised  that  this\nquestion  would   be  thoroughly   Investigated.\nBOARD   WELCOMES\nAnother deputation, Svlilch, however, had nothing to ask, but only\na duty to perform, consisted of\nPresident H. M. Whlmster and Vice-\npresident George A. Brown of the\nboard of trade, who attended for\nthe purpose of welcoming the minister to Nelson, Messrs. Whlmster\nand Brown were first on hand Friday night at the Hume, but the\nminister remained on his private\ncar, retiring immediately on arrival,\nand so the Intended welcome waa\npostponed  till  his  return  here.\nPred A. Starkey, commissioner\nof the Associated Boards of Trade\nof Eastern British Columbia, also\nwaited on the minister, and drew\nhis attention to the silver resolutions from the Nelson board of\ntrade and tlie oomblned Slocan\ndistrict, Arrow lakes district, and\nKaslo   boards.\nHe also supported the project for\na mail house delivery for Nelson.\nAmong prominent Conservatives\nwho waited on the minister were\nC. D. Blackwood and B. G. Matthew, president and secretary respectively of the West Kootenay Conservative   association.'\nSome visitors saw tho minister in\nconnection   with   customs   matters,\namong these being Howard Bush.\nLEAVE    FOR   PROCTER\nS. O. Blaylock, vicer-president and\ngeneral manager of the Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company of\nCanada, brought the minister and\nhis party, and Mr, Esling .from\nTrail to Nelson, visiting en route\nthe plants of the West Kootenay\nPower  &   Light  company.\nAt 6 p. m. the minister and his\nofficials left for Procter, driven by\nJ. Tvan MacKay, Canadian, Pacific\ndivision superintendent, to catch\nthe private car, which had preceded\nthem, and which later was barged\nthat night to Kootenay Landing.\nAUSTRALIA, NEW\nZEALAND CLAIM\nTHE SOUTHLANDS\nLONDON. Oct. 26-^(0 P cable) \u2014\nThfl dominions of the Antipodes\nare   rolling   their   maps   (southward\nWhile Canada aaaerts Its sovereign-\nty In the Isles of tbe Arctic, so\nAustralia and New Zealand are\ncasting gla.nces toward the great\nantarctic continent. Discussing now\nbefore the polar committee of the\nImperial conference reveals that\nNew Zealand will, probably, mako\nclaims to the sector following Its\nmeridians to the south pole. Australia  Is likely  to  claim  the  area\nPROCTER, B. 0.. Oct. 38\u2014Honoring Miss Thelma Poy of Mission,\nformerly of Procter, whose marriage\ntakes place shortly, Mrs. J. Blchan\nand Miss J. MacLe&n were hostesses\nat a miscellaneous shower at the\nhome  of Mrs. j; Blchan.\nThey were assisted by Mrs. M.\nMacLeod, Mrs. Ward and Mrs. Hurst.\nA happy evening. was spent In\ngames, dancing and bridge, after\nwhich' Kathleen Brown presented a\nshower of gifts to the bride-to-be\nin a beautifully decorated tea wagon.\nMiss Foy was greatly taken by\nsurprise and thanked the guests ln\na becoming way after which Mrs.\nJ. White made a speech.\nMarigolds and snap dragons were\nused for decorations. Later refreshments were served.\nThose who participated ln the\ngaieties   were   aB   folio wo:\nMrs. Ling, Miss Margaret - Ling,\nMr. and Mrs. Hurst, Misses Annie\nand Morag MacKinnon, Misses Co-\nrene and Catherine Galea, Misses\nEdna and Olive Dahlqutst, Ross\nBradley, Mrs. M. MacLeod, Allen\nDavies, Mr. eind Mrs. White, Angus\nMacKinnon, Mrs. Ward, Mrs. Geo.\nRichard. W. Burrows, A. Belnert,\nWro, Merrlfleld, Mrs. A. S. Ritchie,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Breach, Harold\nMerrlfleld, Cecil Mulrhead, Mr. and\nMrs. Capt. Cagle. Kathleen Brown,\nOlive   and   Donald  McLean.\nMiss Q. Bollert of the provincial\nnonnai school was tho main speaker\non one of tho dlsousajon sessions\nof the Kootenay Boundary Teachers\nconvention here on Saturday mordlng\nand took as her subject, \"Correlated\nBeading and  Seat Work-.\nIn speaking of primary work Mils\nBollert stated that the flnrt year\nto a child's school We was the most\nimportant. Professors were more\nand more coming .to study the different Phases of the child s life at\nthis stage'so that they mteht better\nguide the oreatlve facilities of,Ihe   f\nSid. Th. right *t\u00ab^(\u2122,.\u00ab';  \u25a0\nveloped   ln   outside   activities   and\nthenbrought   into   the 'classroom.\nShe thought that the pupils should\nbe given the opportunity of ohoos- ,,\nlngHhelr activities.        ...    *<     .\nIn the matter of seat work the,\nspeaker favored much review ol the\nwork taken before starting another\nnew book.   Much easy readlng.de-.\nveloped better eye-habits.   ; - \u2022_\u25a0   \u25a0\nThe child, above all, must w>\nhappy jn learning to read for from\nsuch a souroe develops love of reading, m reading he etfualljr practiced   success. .....    \u25a0.\nMiss Bollert touched on thejUf-\nferent methods of teaohlng reading.\nThe picture story method was good\nas was the etory method where the\nchild clipped pictures to t\u00bb the\netory. Lote, of reading material\nposted around the classroom also\nencouraged the child to read.\nMiss T. Rossman of Trail was\nchairman of this session.\nREAL   ESTATE   MEN   BJMTBAINED\nTORONTO, Ont., Oct. 26.\u2014Officials \u2022,\nof two real estate, companies with\noffices ln different parts of the city\nwer. served with -Interim Injunctions\non Saturday, restraining them from\nengaging ln real estate transactions\nunder what Is known aa the \"lunch\nand lecture\" method. The James\nHuteeon oompany and W. S. Pratt \u25a0\n4: oo. were the two firms.\nMme. Krestraski, wife of the Soviet ambassador to Germany, Is a\nphysician' ln a charity hosplteJ ln\nBerlin, ..\n\"Results Were\nMarvelous\" A St.\nThomas Woman Writes\nMcCOY'S*\nCod liver Extract Tableto\n\"I wee very IU with nervous\nbreak-down \u2014 after taking several\nboxes   I   feel   well   and      strong\nTake McCoy's for 38 days\u2014If you\ndont gain at least S pounds ol\nsolid, stay there flesh \u2014 get your\nmoney back \u2014 60 sugar coated\ntablets for 60 centa at City Drug\nObi or any druggist anywhere\u2014Just\nj ask for McCoy's.\nv\u25a0ftoTE^,,^\nCHICAGO, 111, Oct, 26.\u2014Working\non inlormatlon. that t3eorg- (Bugs)\nMoran was marshalling the rem*\nnanta of his gang for another fight\nwith the powerful Capone lnteresta,\nofficial* raided a resort at Bluff discovered by Scott and Shackleton.\nLake, near Wau*rtgan, today, and The British government, it is unseized   Moran.   At   the   same   time  derstood,  is  wllllna  to transfer to\nraiders combed the Italian district\nof Chicago for Domlnlck.and Tony\nAiello   and   Leo   Mongoven,   Moran\nlieutenant,    \"\nTWENTY   DIB   IN   FLOODS\nISTANBUL, Turkey, Oct. 28. \u2014\nTwenty persona have been killed by\nfloods in emyrna, delayed Turkish\ndispatches announced today. Hundreds were Injured, Train service\nhaa been discontinued. Ambulances\nwere unable to operate owing to the\ncondition of the streets. It will take\nIB days to clear the streets of\nwreckage.\nthe   dominions   lte   rights   by   discovery ln these lands.\nCANADIAN   CHOIR   WINS\nPRIZE   AT. BLACKPOOL\nBLACKPOOL, Eng., Oct. 3B.\u2014The\nCanadian* choir, of Brantford, Ont'.,\nwon fourth prisse in the Blackpool\ntmwical festival last ntsht, Julius\nHarrison, the conductor and composer, who acted as adjudicator; remarked that Brantford choir gave\nthe mualo great significance, but\nfailed ln their teohnleal work. The\nchoir consists of 39 -women and\n26 men.\n..JLNFACT.7\nPerhaps you believe in your invincible luck.\nYou may figure that; having got by without\ninsurance this far, you can manage a while\nlonger. Ard you MAY be right. But' why\ntake rash risks when protection is so cheap, so\nsure? Policies which cost you comparatively\nlittle, give you absolute and complete Insurance.\nThey protect you . . . .not a hope, but a factl\nConsult With Us Today Regarding\nYour Insurance Problems.\nFor FIRE Insurance\nAutomobile, Life, Accident and Siuk-\nness, Plate Glass and All Other Forms of\nInsurance.\nJ. E. ANNABLE.\nC. D. BLACKWOOD.\nR. W. DAWSON.\nH. E. DELL.\nP. E. POULIN.\nC. F. McHAKDY.\nW. M. WALKER.\nJESSE KEMP, Trail, B. C.\nFor LIFE Insurance\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Tbe Great Wert Life Assur\u00bb\nance Company.\nR.   W.   DAWSON,  Manufacturer's  Life   Assurance\nCompany. \u00bb\np.   E.   POULIN,   North  American  Life  Assurance\nCompany.\nC. F. McHARDY, Monarch Life Assurance Company.\nS. C. LATORNELL, Dominion Life Assurance: Com-\npany.\n TflB NELSON DAILY NEWS \"   MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1930.\nPage Three,\nBISHOP DOULL\nSAYS LAMBETH\nBDILTBRIDGES\nTells ^Executive   Conference\nProvided Way (o three\nUnion Projects ,\nORTHODOX, OLD CATH-\nOLICS, SOUTH INDIA\nBirth    Control    Resolution\nShould Be Taken With\nOthers\nThat the great Lambeth conference, attended by 307 Jslehops from\nall parts of the world, and recently\nconcluded, performed the function\nof bridge-bulling, building connections from the Anglican church^-\nthe \"bridge\" church \u2014 to ancient\nfaiths '.on the one hand, and to\nnon-eplaoopal faiths on the other,\nwaa asserted Friday , by Rt. Rev.\nA. J. Doull, bishop of Kootenay, to\nthe executive committee of the diocese of Kootenay, which after full\nday sessions wound up Its deliberations, which have .covered three\ndays. He declared a.great constructive work: for the unity of the\nChristian church had been accomplished. .     ^   .\nHis lordship's address, which. was\ngiven at the morning session, and\nwhich briefly reviewed the great\nAnglican gathering, which extends\nfrom the first week of Jply to the\nmiddle week of August, was the\nfeature of. the day's proceedings,\nthe bishop having only returnedto\nthe  diocese  *W\u00bbh England   a fortnight \u25a0ago.\nSIX   COMMITTEES\nDescribing the organisation of the\nconference. Bishop Doull stated the\nconference met for one week in\nfull session, when the various subjects were Introduced by appointed\nspeakers, after which tbe committees were formed,- Then for a fortnight the conference broke up into\ncommittees, * aim *' finally, reassembling In full session for a fortnight\nthe conference received the reports\nof committees and'acted upon them.\nThe six committees dealt respectively: with the Christian doctrine of\nGod, the life and wltnosa of the\nChristian, community^ *u*alty of the\nchurch,. -; the. Anglican cbrnmunlon,\nthe ministry of th9 churoh,' and\nyouth and. Its vocation.\nThe moat' valuable of all the reports, the bishop declared, was the\none. dealing with the Christian doctrine of 'Clod, which was one of\ntho most -waluable contributions\nmade to the subject ln modern\ntimes.\nBishop Doull himself served on\nthe committee dealing with the\nunity of the church, a large one\nof about. .70. members; which divided into two flections.The first\nsection dealt withs the question of\nreunion with the Holy Orthodox\nchurch of the east, often popularly\nreferred to as the Greek .Catholic\nchurch, snd the Old Catholics, a\nbody chiefly founded in parts of\nGermany and Switzerland, and embracing also the ancient church of\nHolland..\nUNION, WITH\nEASTERN   CHURCH\nThis -committee had before It a\nvery impressive delegation from the\neast, \"the most. Important delegation that ever* came from eastern\nChristendom to the -west,\" Bishop\nDoull described It, headed by his\nall holiness and beatitude the pope\nand patriarch of Alexandria, Mele-\ntlos II. Jrvery patrlarchlate of the\nHoly Orthodox ohurch was represented   on   the   delegation    except\nthat of Moscow, the Soviet authorities having forbidden any Russian bishop to leave that country\nfor the purpose of representing the\nchurch in Russia at. Lambeth. One\nof the most impressive moments at\nLambeth was when this delegation\nwas received by the archbishop of\nCanterbury, who greeted the delegation, which replied through tbe\npatriarch  of  Constantinople.\nVery great progress was made,\nBishop Doull asserted. In bringing\nabout much closer Inter-communion\nbetween, tho Anglican church and\nthe Orthodox church and the Old\nCatholics. On. all essential points\nthese three churches, he said, found\nthemselves ln complete agreement.\nThe patriarch of Alexandria stated\nthat the ecumenical council of\nthe Eastern church would be held\nnext year, at which he .would re>\nport the result ot the delegation's\nconference with the Anglican blnh-\nops.\nSOUTH INDIA COALESCING\nThe Becond section of the committee on unity, the bishop said, dealt\nwith the question. of union with\nthe non-episcopal bodies, and its\nbig q-uestlon was with reference to\nthe bodies ln south India, where\nthe Christiana of* the Anglican\ncommunion were looking forward to\nunion with the united church of\nSouth India, the latter itself a\nunion of the Presbyterian, Congrega-\ntionalist, Lutheran nnd YVesleyan\nMethodist churches. .The scheme of\nunion as amended by the \"council\nof the whole church\" In India,\nthat is. of the Anglican body, received general * approval by a unanimous vote, of the conference..\nThe South India church, when\nformed, would not be a part of\nthe Anglican communion, Bishop\nDoull explained, but the relation\nof the Anglican communion to It\nwould be one of partial but Increasing communion, somewhat similar\nto the relation with the Church of\nSweden. Prom the moment of\nunion, he stated, all ordinations\nwould be episcopal, so that  ln 30\nDepartment of Trade and Commerce\no\u2022rrAw^ Canada\nOcro&ei- 2Sth, 1930.\nTo Wage Earners,\nEverywhere in Canada.\nDon't be Penny Wise Pound Foolish!\nBaa it ever oecmred to you that bar gains, even honest-to-goodnws\nbargains, are. not always an unmixed blessing?\nOf course many to called bargains are not real bargains at all. Like the\nrosy apple that is rotten at the core, they appear to be something that\nthey are not. A bargain is only a real bargain when it is offered you at a\nprice less than what the article is really worth.\nDue to causes that predicate a loss to some Canadian producer, real\nbargains are sometimes available to you. And when they are, and you\nneed the articles offered, you would be foolish not to take full advantage\nof them. For if you don't, someone else willl Meanwhile anyone buying\nthem is doing the Canadian producer a good turn by helping him to'\ndispose of merchandise that, for one reason or another, he is compelled\nto convert into immediate money.\nBut when the subject of the bargain is a foreign-made article, the whole\nsituation takes on a different aspect.\nLike as not the foreign producer, whom you would be helping out of a\njam if you purchased his bargain, has a productioncost that is far below\nthe Canadian cost of producing the same article. And if you were to\ninstitute enquiries with a view to finding out why his production cost was\nso much lower, like as not you would And it was because he was paying\nhis employees rates of wages that were away below the scale paid for\nsimilar work in thiaxcountry. ,\nIn that event, it would be reasonably safe to assume that a much lower\nstandard of living prevails among the workers in his country than prevails here. Possibly he requires his employees to work longer hours than\nis customary in Canada. Possibly the laws of his country ate not as strict\nas they are here regarding the employment of child labour. Possibly he\nis not taxed, as Canadian manufacturers are taxed, to ensure compensation on a reasonable scale being paid his workmen who suffer injury in\nthe course of their employment. Possibly he is not required to maintain\nhis factory at anything like as high standards of ventilation, of sanitation, of heating, of lighting, of protection against fire and accident, as\nare in force in Canada.\nIn all these matters\u2014hours of labour, rates of wages, standards of living,\nfactory inspection, social legislation and industrial betterment work-\nCanada is much more advanced than most of the nations that make\nproducts similar to hers. The result is that Canadian wage earners are\nmore fortunately circumstanced in almost every way, than are the\nwage earners in most other countries. Obviously they can only hope to\nretain those advantages as long as their employers, the manufacturers of\nCanada, are able to overcome in the domestic market the competition of\nforeign-made ^ooda that are produced under longer working hours,\nlower wage scales, and lower standards of living. For should, the time ever\ncome when they can no longer compete, either their Canadian employees\nmust agree to wage reductions and the loss ot decent living conditions,\nor the manufacturers themselves must close up shop.\nYou can see therefore what serious trouble these bargains in foreign'\nmade goods may cause you\u2014what serious trouble any foreign-made\n\/joods may cause you whether they be bargains or not\u2014if you allow\nyourself to be persuaded into buying them. Should you say there is\nnothing harmful in buying them once in a while, you will probably see\nnothing harmful in buying them every chance you get. And it you buy\nthem every chance you get, you cannot blame others for doing the same\nthing. . Once everybody in Canada starts doing it, you know what will\nhappenl\nSo for the sake ot a small immediate saving or merely to satisfy a passing\nwhim, why run the risk of setting in train a movement that in a few years\nmight easily prove your undoing! Wouldn't it be far better for you, and\nyour family, and all your friends, to stand fast by the policy ot buying\n\"Produced-in-Canada,\" as the surest means of protecting Canadian\nrates of wages and Canadian.standards of living?\nVery sincerely yours,\nMinister of Trade and Commerce.\nBENNETT CHATS WITH MacDGNALD\nPhotograph reproduced above shows Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald' (right) of Great Britain, and Prime Minister R. B. Bennett of\nCanada, aa they appeared chatting outside the foreign office ln London   recently.\nyears time only an episcopal ministry ordained by bishops, would be\nIn existence. During that interim\nperiod congregations hitherto Anglican would be ministered to only\nby those who had received episcopal\nordination. In consequence of the\nterms of: union, the ohurch in South\nIndia would have a somewhat irregular character for a brief period\nof time, but, asserted the bishop,,\nthese irregularities were small compared with the Increased influence\nwhich the church \"would possess In\npresenting the faith of Christ to the\nnon-ChristlanV races of that continent.\nIn connection with theso and\nother decisions taken by tho conference, wherever legislative action\nIs called for they will become effective only when adopted hy the\nlegislative authority in each national,\nregional or provincial church, as\nthe Lambeth conference is without\nlegislative authority.. Thus, the general synod of tho Church of England\nln Canada, among other legislative\nbodies of tho Anglican communion,\nwill have its voice In the final determinations.\nREAD BIRTH CONTROL\nWITH   CONTEXT\nBishop Doull stated that another\nvery important report was that\non Christian marriage, but he cautioned that It must be read and\nstudied as a whole. No resolution,\nhe declared, should be taken and\nconsidered hy Itself apart from the\nother resolutions, which dealt with\nthe same subject,\n\"The resolution on birth control,\nwhich admits that though to be\ncondemne-a lor general use it may ha\npermissible undor certain limited\ncircumstances, which resolution ha.*;\nbeen given great prornlncnce, must\nbe taken\", the bishop stated, \"In\nconnection wtlh nil thc resolutions\ndealing with marriage, whose entire\ntenor Is to lilt the whole subject of\nsex and the marriage relation into\na higher and purer atmosphere\nthroughout.\n\"In one of these resolutions, for\nexample, the conference affirmed tho\nduty of parenthood ns the glory of\nmarried life; the benefit of a family as a Joy in itself, as a vital\ncontribution to the -nation's'welfare.\nand as a* means of character building\nfor both parents nnd children; and\nthe privilege of discipline and sacrifice to this end.\"\n\"Throughout- the conference,\" the\nbishop affirmed In conclusion, \"the\nnote of unity amongst the bishops\n.was most marked. Bishops belonging\nto the various schools of thought,\nAnglo-catholic, evangelical and modernist, were present in considerable\nnumbers, and no question was over\ndiscussed from a purely party standpoint, but all co-operated together\nin the slncerc endeavor to bring\nabout results which will benefit\nthe church ' and the world an a\nwhole,\"\nMALE VOICE GLEE\nPARTY OF TRAIL\nPLANS FOR WINTER\nTRAIL. B; C, Oct. 26.\u2014C. H, & S,\nGlee party, Kootenay\"s premier male\nvoice musical organization, has a\nbusy winter ahead\/or it-\nNovember 20 tho party will give\na   cojicert   at   Nelson.\nDecember 1 It will entertain Trail\nCaltedbnlan  society.\nTwo concerts are lined up during the winter, one ln Nelson and\ncmB In Trail. These latter concerts\nwill be sponsored by the Rotary\nclubs   of   the   respective   cities.\nThe party's balance sheet at tho\nond of Its fiscal year showed a\nbalance on hand of 8175.20. and It\nIs roughly estimated that 91000 will\nbe required to cover expenses to\nthe coast ln the spring when the\norganization will take part in the\nB. C, musical festival.\n(Officers elected for the year were\nas   follows:\nHonorary president\u2014S. O. Blaylock.\nPresident\u2014-J. B. Thompson.\nSecretary- treasurer\u2014F. H. Chapman'.\nConductor\u2014Gwllym   -Jones.\nLibrarian\u2014P.  Williams.\nExecutive committee\u2014P, Williams\nand  R.  Eccles.\nnemoiTparty-\nreturn, states\nD. Magllo, Joe 'De Qlrolnmo, Ralph\nDe Glralmo and party have returned\nfrom a motor trip to Sopkane, Portland, and Hot Lake, Oregon, The\nparty reports tho roads In the\nitates to be in splendid condition\njut from Nelway to here they proved   to  be  very poor.\nTEACHERS WILL\nCONVENE, TRAIL,\nFALUF1931\nK.  B. Woodward,  of  Trail,\nWill Be Chairman of\nNext Sessions\nOn Saturday afternoon tho members of thc Kootenay- Boundary\nTeachers' convention met here in\nfinal session and resolved \"not to\nattempt to form an association which\nwould In any sense displace the\npresent local associations, but, we\nshall, each year at our conventions,\nchoose a committee, with power* to\nadd to Its numbers, whose function\nshall be to arrange the convention\nfor the succeeding year.\"\nIn order to form a link with the\nB. C. Teachers' Federation only\nmembers of the B. O. T, F. will\nbe   eligible   for   this   committee.\nIt was also set down that the\nconvention should deefde as to where\nthey wished to hold their convpn\ntlon the following year. Next year\nthe convention will be held- in Trail\nfionm   time  In   October.\nOfficers of next year's convention\nnn elected Saturday were: K. B.\nWoodward. Trail, chairman; E. E.\nPerkins, Rossland, vice-chairman;\nMiss I, M, Savard, Trail, secretary;\nMrs.   L.  j,  Morrlsh,   Trail   treasurer.\nK. B. Woodwar-1 of Trail was\nelected by the convention to represent tho Kootenay Boundary district on the Federation executive.\nAt tho conclusion of the meeting\na vote of thanks was tendered the\nNelson school board for Its kindness and cooperation In the matter\nor staging the Kootenay Boundary\nteachers' convention.\nAnother vote of thanks was extended to H. Charlesworth, secretary of the Teachers' Federation,\nfor making It possible to have outside speakers' travelling expenses\npaid.\nGYRO BALL IS\nHIT, CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, B. O. Oct. 2ft\u2014The\nannual Gyro ball which was- held In\nthe auditorium on Friday evening,\ncame well up to the expectations of\nthose attending, it being ono of the\nJolllcst and best managed dances\ngiven   by  that organization.\nSeldom has the auditorium presented such a handsome setting for\na ball. The decorations were carried\nout In purple and gold, the Gyro\ncolors, a canopy effect being formed\nby a hOOp suspended from the cell-\nIn from which streamers In alternating colors reached the wals, which\nwere also well covered with the\nstreamers.\nPaper hats in great variety were\nsupplied the guests and each lady\nwas presented with a colonial doll\ncane. At the promenade, which occurred at midnight, noise makers\nwere furnished to all present. Supper was served after midnight, the\nsupper committee belnj ln charge of\nMrs. Barber, wife of the president\nof the club. Many comments were\nheard on the excellence of the refreshments.\nThe committee in charge, was R.\nE. Sang, Dr. Mittun, J. Ellis and V.\nEdwards,\nGRAND FORKS, B. C Oct. 26.\u2014\nQuite a successful tea was held by\nthe Boy Scouts and Wolf Cubs\nSaturday afternoon ln Manly and\nMiller's store. It was well attended\nand the boys sorved cake, sandwiches and tea, which were generously donated by their mothers.\nDR. CARL'S DISCOVERY STOPS GAS,\nCONSTIPATION\nIn hla private practice, Dr. Carl\nWeschoke first perfected the simple\nmixture now known as Adlerlka.\nUnlike most remedies, Adlerlka acts\non BOTH upper and lower bowel\nnnd removes old poisons you would\nnever believe wpre in your system.\nStops GAS bloating In 10 mlnutesl\nRelieves ohronlo constipation ln 2\nhoursl Let Adlerlka give your stomach a RBAL cleaning and see how\ngood you feel I It will surprise you I\n\u2014Mann,   Rutherford   Co.,   Druggists.\nRYCKMAN AMAZED AT GREAT TRAD.\nSMELTER PLANT; PRAISES EFFICIENCY\nOF CONSOLIDATED WHILE AT SMELTER\nNot Sorry Esling Persuaded\nHim to Return by Way\nof Interior\nTRAIL,   B.   C.,   Oct.   26\u2014Hon.   E.\nRyckman.   minister   of   national\nrevenue   and   acting   minister   of\nfinance,   with   a   party   of   depart-\nCONSERVATIVES\nAT ELKO TALK\nUNEMPLOYMENT\nWater   Situation   Discussed;\nMiss C. Foisy Is Secretary\nELKO, B. C, Oct. 26.\u2014The Elko\nConservative association held a special meetiuK In. the Elko school-\nhouse on Tuesday evening. T. L.\nArcher presided over the meeting\nand H. H. Perkins, former secretary\nwas acting secretary pending- the\nelection  of   a  new  one.\nTwo resolutions were presented .to\nmembers for their consideration and\npassed unanimously. These were to\nbe presented at a meeting of the\nCentral association at Pernio on\nSaturday evening. October 25. Tlie\nmatter of unemployment came up\nfor discussion as did the water situation In thla town. After a two-\nhour session the meeting adjourned.\nMiss Cellna Folsy was elected as\nsecretary for the remainder of thc\nyear.\nVETERAN MINER IS\nCONFIDENT LE RIO\nWILL MAKE GOOD\nGRAND FORKS, B. C\u201e Oct. 38^-\nJames Copland, veteran mine prospector of the Boundary district, was\nln town recently from Rock Creek.\nMr. Copland brought with hlni\nsome excellent ore which had been\ntaken from the Le Rol mining\nclaim, and was showing It to hts\nfriends, It ran substantially in silver and  gold.\nThere was about 66 feet of sink\ning done In the Le Rol shaft, he\nstated, during the past year by a\ncoast syndicate operating tinder option, and thero is now some litigation under way over tbe payment\nof wages. In spite of his 95 years,\nthe Le Rol owner looks forward to\nthe development of the property\nwith the optimism of a youth.\nSunday School Closes\nat Grand Forks Pays\nHonor to Classmates\nGRAND FORKS. B. C, Oct. 26.\u2014\nSunday school classes of Mrs, A.\nH. Fenoyer and Mrs, Alfred Price\nof th0 Mission met at tho former's\nhome Wednesday afternoon, where\nthey had a very Jolly party In\nhonor of Roy and Howie Bird, who\nare leaving 1n a few days with\ntholr mother and sister for Trail,\nwhere they will make their homo.\nGeorge and Robert, two older sons,\nhave been working in Trail for several months. Masters Roy and Howie\nwere each given a little token of\nlove by the pastor for the Sunday\nschool  on  this  occasion.\nWill Repair Heating\nSystems of Schools\nin Grand Forks\nment officials from Ottawa, Saturday morning inspected the fertilizer\ndevelopments of the Consolidated\nMining &-, Smelting company, under\nconstruction .' at Warfleld, went\nthrough sections of the plant after\nlunch, and early In the afternoon\nleft for Nelson. He' inspected hydroelectric developments of the West\nKootenay Power & Light company\nalong the Kootenay river en route.\nWith the party were J. J. Warren, president of the Consolidated\nS. G, Blaylock, vice-president and\ngeneral manager of the company,\nwho drove the party from Nelson:\nW, K. Esling, M. P. for Kootenay\nWest, who was responsible for the\nminister changing his itinerary to\nreturn east through the southern interior instead of through northern\nB. C, and T..W. Blngay, vice-president in charge of finances for the\nConsolidated.\nMINISTKR   IS    AMAZED\nMr. Ryckman expressed amazement at the size and efficiency of\nthe Consolidated operations ln Trail\nand expressed great pleasure in having seen the plant. He was not\nsorry that Mr. Esling had persuadel\nhim to Jnclude Trail in his itinerary, finding himself keenly Interested  ln  the  industry  here.\nMr. Ryckman and Mr. Warren\nmet as old \"tllllcums,\" having been\nstudents together. Mr. Breadner also\nmet  Mr.  Warren  as an. old friend.\nThe party lunched at the home\nof Mr.. and Mrs. Blaylock ln Tadanac.\nP. R. McDonald, customs and inland revenue collector at Trail, met\nMr. Breadner this morning. While\nthe deputy minister expressed regret\nin being iinable to Inspect the new\ncustoms quarters ln Trail federal\nbuilding, he assured Mr. McDonald\nhe would see that furnishings for\ncompleting equipment of tho office\nwere supplied.\nin (Eanaoa\n\u00bb!. 6\u00abttaur\"a Jlra-ffl\u00abJ'|*oriii\nVen. F. H. Graham, Rector\nTOTBDAY,  OCT.  2BTH\nJf 1. AniWrui'0 milauf? flint\n10:00 a. m.\u2014Holy communion.\nHow to Relieve\nCatarrhal Deafness\nor Head Noises\nIf you have catarrh,\" catarrhnl\ndeafness or head noises caused by\ncatarrh, or If phlegm drops in you*:,\nthroat and has caused catarrh of\nthe stomach or bowels, you will be\nglad to know that these distressing\nsymptoms may be entirely overcome\nIn many Instances by tbe following\ntreatment which you can easily prepare ln your own home at littlo\ncost. Secure from your druggist a 1\noz. bottle of Parmint (Double\nStrength). Take this home and add\nto It Vi pint of hot water and a\nlittle sugar; stir until dissolved-\nTake one tablespoonful four times\na day. An Improvement Is some- 4\ntunes -noted after the first day'a'\ntreatment. Breathing should become\neasy, while the distressing head\nnoises, headaches, dullness, cloudy\nthinking, etc,, should gradually disappear under the tonic, action, of the\ntreatment, Loss of smell, taste, -defective hearing and mucous dropping ln the back of the throat are\nother symptoms which suggest tho\npresence of catarrh and which may\noften be overcome by this efficacious treatment, If nearly ninety\nper cent of all ear troubles are\ncaused by catarrh, there must-be-\nmany rjeople whose hearing may be-\nrestored by this simple home\n\u25a0treatment.\nCoal! Coal!\nDOMESTIC AND FURNACE\nAcme Kleenburn Canmore Briquettes\nDrumheller Ideal \u00a3\u2122W8n\u00abst\nHiUcrest\nGaIt \"Petroleum Coke\nImperial Bellevue\nThe aJove  lire  the   best cosjs  on  the  market.  Let  ns  irappli\nJan.  COAI, Is our  SPECIALTY.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nLife Assurance is\nthe Best Investment\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, Oct, 26. -\nThe Boundary Iron Works was\nawarded the contract for extensive\nrepairs to the heating system of the\nschools by the school board at Its\nmeeting last Wednesday evening.\nA MAN can create an estate for\nhimself of $1,000, $2,500,\n$5,000, $10,000, or mortj-alf\ndependent upon his position,\nincome and prospects. Through\nSun Life assurance he can Be\nsure of reaching this objective\nwithin a specified time, with\nsafety and without loss or impairment of principal.\nIf death should intervene, life\nAssurance will do what no Other\ninvestment can guarantee\u2014it will\nmake the full intended principal\navailable at once for his family\nand will carry through the programme that he had planned for\nthem.\nThe Sun Life of Canada has *\npolicy to cover every need.\nSet one if its RcprcienUtives.\nSUN LIFE ASSURANCE\nCOMPANY OF CANADA\nHEAD  OFFICE\nMONTREAL\n'W'        IK=0\u00abPOnAT10.. :TO*t\u00bb may ihto        JI flw\nOther Branches at Winnipeg. Yorkton,  Saskatoon, Edmonton.\nCalgary, Lethbridge, Vancouver, Kamloops, Vernon and Victoria\nChildren's\nWear\nThe basketball anl gymnasium season is here. We carry a full line\nof gym goods, including bloomers, trunks and  blouses.\nBLOOMERS. Made of fine serge.\nPleated or plain styles. Sizes 7\nto 20 years. Price $1.95 to 83.50\nGood quality Flannel Trunks, with\npockets and belts. Navy only.\nSize 8 to 14. Price   $2.85\nMIDDIES. Made of good quality\nMiddy Jean. Detachable collars\nand cuffs on Navy flannel. Sizes\n8 years to 18 years. Prices $1.50\nto $2.50.\nBLOUSES. Sleeveless or long sleeves\n\u2014In shades of White, Mauve, Orange and Sand. Sizes 34 to 40.\nPrice   $2.25 to $3.05\nBERETS. French flannel and brushed wool. In all shades. Prices\n69**, 95$ and' 98\u00a3.\n\u2014Second Floor\u2014II B C\u2014\nDEY GOODS\nKiddies'Hose Sor\nSchool Wear\nSPECIALS. A heavy union ribbed\nhose in Black only. A strong hose\nfor rough wear. Reduced prices,\nper  pair  .._     49^\nCHILDREN'S MERCERIZED COTTON HOSE. Full knee length.\nCome in all the wanted1 shades.\nSizes YV2 to 9. Per pair 55^ and\n59<S\nMAID'S ART SILK HOSE. Full\nlength. Lovely quality. Will give\nevery satisfaction in wear. All\nsizes, and a full range of colors.\nSpecials ..._   69^\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014H. a c\u2014\nMesa's Pyjamas\nNew stripes and fancy patterns in\nflannelette, twill and broadcloth,\nwith girdles or elastic at waist,\nand silk frogs. $2.75, $3.25 and\n$3.50.\n\u2014Jlaln Floor\u2014H. B. C\u2014\n page wrar\nITHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      MONDAY, OCTOBER p, 1980.\nIlucky girl\nI By HAZEL' LIVINGSTON\nWHAT   HAS   GONE   BEFORE\nt'athrrine raise, elder dauuh-\nfter In a fatherless home, mar-\nirics her wealthy, elderly employer, Alfred Farnsworth. During her mother's long and\n\u25a0serious Illness she fell heavily in\nfjr'ftirnstvorth's debt and marriage with him seems the only\nway out of her financial difficulties.\n\"Is there anyone else, any-\nI one you love?\" he asked her\nI before the wedding, and Cathie\n| said no.   It was true, there was\n one.  for she  could   hardly\ncount her youthful Infatuation\nfor Gordon Moore, a man who\nonce paid lier attention and\nthen forgot all about her.\nCathie's marriage begins auspiciously with tf generous settlement for her Impecunious\nfamily and a gorgeous trousseau\nfor her. But returning from her\nwedding trip she is struck with\nthe gloomy, almost sinister\nquality of Farnsworth's house.\nIt Is a large, pretentious place\nwith Innumerable Chlneae servants under thn supervision of\nnn ancient fat Chinaman named\nCheong and a solitary white\nwoman, Marguerite.\nCHAPTER FOURTEEN\nISo Csthle started back, before, she\nfA   said   any   of   the   things   she\nnted to say, before she wanted to\nMrs.   Hennessy   rapped   on   the\nIndow as she paused  and  wared  a\nparted hand, then vanished -behind\nlace curtains. Cathie knew what.\n\u25a0was  thinking  .   .   ,\"Ha,   C&thle\npige may have a wedding license,\nmy Lillian has her own motor\npr,\"  snd sho  knew  that  Ma  was\nTy that she hadn't, come  In the\n|g blue car, with Everett  driving,\n.     to show old Mrs, Hennessy.\n\u2022Til come In the  car  next, time.\"\nthought  .  .  .\"I'm   glad  I really\n|te Mr. Farnsworth. T mean Alfred\n.because it isn't such fun to be\nJob.  It makes you too lnnely.   .  .\"*\nI That evening a queer thing hap.\nned. She had gone to her room to\nrees. There was a faint, tap at,- the\npof, and then it opened slowly. The\nnan,  Marguerite stood there.  \"I\n|ay   a*  well  help   yon,   since   he's\ntight to get you a proper maid,\"\nBe said suddenly.\nIWhen   oathle   drew   back    Involuntarily,      clutching    her    dressing\nivn  tight, about,  her,  i.he   woman\n\u00abw   nearer  and  pressed   her   Into\n\\kt chair before the \"dressing -table\nwhich   gleamed   the   silver   and\nbottles,    and    thc    turquoise\nfccked brushes and mirrors.\ndown,\"    she    aaid    almost\noujihly. \"I won't hurt you. I can do\nas well as any lady's maid. I did lb\nfor her. . .the first lady,- and ahe\nwas no easy one to please.\"\nWhllo Cathie still hesitated, startled by her strange look and the\ngrowing certainty tbat the woman\nhad been watching her, not only\nnow, but perhaps many times before through the ' keyhole, she\nbrought her white,\" seamed face\nnearer and touched Cathie's bare\nshoulder with a strange, caressing\nmotion. \"You needn't be afraid.\"\nshe said in a whlsepr. \"the Earns-\nworth ladles have all been true blue,\nand I see you're another.\"\nShe picked up the brush and began to brush Cathie's hair with\nlong, rhythmical strokes.\nSomething outside hcself, something that she could not seem to\ncontrol, but the words Into Cathie's\nmouth;\n\"And the Farnsworth men, aren't\nthey true blue  too?\"\n\"Three generations I've known.\"\nthe woman said softly, and one no\nbetter than tho other.\"\n\"Three generations, one no better\nthan the other.\"\n- Cathie thought about It oftencr\nthan she meant to. It was absurd,\nof course, and thc woman, Marguerite was assuredly not quite\nright ln the head.\n\"Is Marguerite responsible?\" she\nasked Mr. Farnsworth one evening\nwhen1 she felt, she just, had to talk\nabout. It to someone.\n\"Responsible? Just what do you\nmoan by that?\" he asked mildly,\nlaying down tho evening paper.\n\"Responsible. Tou know\u2014'mentally,'\"\nHo   smiled     \"I   doubt   it,,   Why,\nhas   she   been   up   to,   any   queer\ntricks?\"\n\"'N\u2014no.\" '\n\"Well, you can get, rtd of her any\ntime you want to. I've only kept\nher this long for sentimental reasons ... um . . . Preferred Commodities Is up again, that's good!\"\nHe had returned to the paper again.\nUnless she pressed tho matter would\nbe dropped.\n\"What, do you mean by sentimental  reasons, Alfred?\"\n\"Oh \u2014 because Alice, Chester's\nmother, you know, took her in.\nHer mother, a Mrs. spinney, was\nhousekeeper here In my father's\ntime. Tlie girl was supposed to be\ndying of tuberculosis when Alice\nfound her. Put her into a, home,\ngave her every care, and grateful?\nNever! Why we even paid her way\nthrough business college,' but she\ncouldn't, or wouldn't; learn. , Just\nsettled down to being maid to\nAlice and alter Alice's death she\nStayer) on as second girl.' Perfectly\nuseless,\" he. g*r*unte.d, .\"trying to\nhelp that class of people.\"\nTo   be   continued..\nAn excellent nail bleaching me.\n(Hum can be made by dipping tho\norange wood stick first ln peroxide\nand then in powdered prepared\nrbaIk. Cleanse the nail eflves, but\nbe careful to dra.w- a. straight, even.\nline. Peroxide chalk and stick combine to lift up the cuticle about\nthe finger nail, to remove any little shadows that may havo gathered\nthere. After this treatment, clip off\nhangnails with pointed scissors,\nbathe hands with soapy water and\na. brush, dry and apply the glimmer.\nA man can like all kinds of\ngirls, fat ones, thin ones, tali ori*s\nand short ones\u2014except those among\nthem whose finger nails aront\nstrictly up to beauty Hoyle. A darkened eave is not to be forgiven;\nAlso, it Is a menace to the health,\nsince germs and germesses and all\ntheir kith and kin gather there to\nspread Infection and disease.\nAutumn is a delightful season for\nlearning to walk. Girls who loll In\nUmousiness P.nd recline on cushiony\ndavenports ftiould take to toddling\nIt 13 a delightful exercise-, but not\npopular. Americans must always' be\ngetting to places in a hurry. Too\nbBd, since walking is the perfect\nexercise.\n\"GAnswers hy Beatrice\n)\u25a0 )Y. \\J 11\n,;,Li-ii\u00b1i~\u00abci.^\nToo Cold for Park\nBench Courting\nI DEAR MISS FAIRFAX:\n\"The way of thc transgressor\nIis  hard.\"  As  I'm beginning   to\nfind but.   Last summer I made\nI 6-\n. the * acquaintance of my first\nboy friend\u2014met his in the business house where we both work.\nWe like each other very much\nand while not really engaged,\ntalk \"about marrying some day.\nNow   here's   my . problem.    My\ni\nFashions !\n    %\nOur fall shipments of eve- gk\nmng gowns prove once mare\nthat new styles n.nd leading\ncreations . come from- Rams-\nden's.\nAll. those exciting new\nfashion points that.Paris has\nlaunched; Grecian, draperies,\nromantic silhouette, cowl\nnecklines, jewel tones and\nother numerous lines are\nshown amongst our displays.\nWe have arranged our en-\nIre stock of coats at .ad\/van-\ntageous prices, offering the\nbest value of the season. Cut\namd iailared to perfection,\nand mill the most luxurious\ntrimmings, our coats cannot\nbe surpassed;\nOur millinery, including\nall. of the advanced I showings, forni themselves into\nthe greatest displays we have\never held.\nRAMSDEN BROS.\n* Smart Shoppe for Smart Women     '\nSomething of the  Utmost ,\nImportance in Cookery\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX    .\n:\" An Authority on Problems of Love and Marriage\nEvery day we judge the food we(\neat In terms of flavor. There le no\nother factor that has so, much influence on our liRes and dislikes\nregarding Yood. For' this reason,\nseasoning is of tho utmost importance in cookery \u25a0 and It behooves every housewife to learn\nto make use of the many spices\nand condiments .that are on the\nmarkets of today. Tastes, differ\nwidely, but, -the essential point to\nkeep in mind when cooking la to\nuse the seasoning that will bring\nout the flavor of tho material,\nused.\nSalting: Is an arc.   The soup tbat\nThe Beauty Box\nBy Helen Follett\nL.\nFew woman worry about wrinkles\nuntil they get them. A little premature worry would be profitable.\nBy keeping the complexion well oiled from girlhood, tissues* are less\nlikely to lose tone, and old Dad-\ndah Time won't be able to cut eo\nmany dashes with his cruel fingers.\nBefore women used cosmetics freely\nand unashamedly, the sisterhood\nstarted ro get turkey tracks at\n30. No doubt thar's gold In them\nth'ar cold cream' jars. Gold? Treasures more than gold. Precious youth,\nor at least tho appearance of It.\nwas salted with \"too heavy a hand\"\n'or the gravy that was slighted prove\nthla. Inadequate salting leaves the\ncooked dish flat add -uninteresting\nDesserts, candles and sweets of' all\nkinds gain in, flavor Jf cleverly\nsalted. A-few grains of^salt' added\nto any concoction containing -mils:\nor cream lmproveo the flavor.\n\"Oaireful seasoning with aiigaVls al-'\nso very effective. -Unless'fresh;\nfrom the garden, oil vegetables need\nsugar to restore their natural sweetness. A bit of sugar\/ rubbed into\nthe roast 'contributes - greatly to Its\nrichness and flavor'. Sugar Is useful in\\ accenting tart flavors. All\ndressings or saltB containing lemon\nJuice; or vinegar require sugar to\nemphasize the acid.\nBoth sugar and salt* are helpful\nln blending several flavors Into a\nsmooth, perfect combination.' Highly\nspiced sauces or baked-stuffs aro\nvery' dependent oh skilful seasoning with salt and' sugar. \"\u25a0>..'\u25a0\nThe strength of spices and salts\nvaries. Those whloh have been' exposed to the air lose.some of their\nsavorlness. Various foodstuffs absorb'\nmore or less salt or sugar or spice.\nPepper is? one of ''the spices, inost\ncommonly used In the average homo\nyet few housekeepers discriminate\n\u25a0between', the varieties when choosing it. White.pepper does not produce a better flavor than black;\nbut, it is a.bit emflet to-digest, and\nis less noticeable In white sauce\nand dishes thaf-at^ not highly colored. As a - seasoning for meats\nand dark sauces, black pepper ' is\nmore effectve, for the real strength\nof the pepper, berry,. Is found ln\nthe outer shells, of whloh black pepper is made. ; Cayenne must be employed very sparingly,., but a deft\nuse of It lends zcet to many a\ndish.\nPaprika is a pleasing splco In both\nflavor and color end deserves a\nprominent place along with salt\nand pepper. In soUps,sauces and\nSalads, or with flsn. meats and vegetables. Its mild sweet * flavor Is\ndesirable. Its delicate flavor and\nvivid color, make it. an excellent\ngarnish also, There are two kinds\nof paprika Hungarian and Spanish.\n.The Spanish paprika Is very mild\nbut the Hungarian Is pungent and\ndecldeiy stimulating .\nAlthough it's far better to err on\nthe side of imder-seasonlng rather\nthan over-seasoning a dish that\nmust be seasoned at the table never\nattains the perfection In flavor\nfound ln one seasoned during the\ncooking.\nEfficient Housekeeping\nHy LAUUA E. HIBKMAJS\nTOMORROW'S MENU\nOmelet\nBreakfast\nGrapes\nCereal\npop overs\nCoffee\nPinner\nCelery -       \u25a0\nRoast   Chicken\nCranberry, Sauce\nSweet Potatoes -   Squash\nIce Cream '        .   *    \u25a0       Coffee\nSupper\nCodfish -Balls\nCorn Muffins\nFruit Gelatine Molds with\n\u25a0Mock Whipped Cream\nCookies Glngerale\nCONTRIBUTED RECIPES\nReaders    of    this    column    have\nkindly contributed the following fine\nrecipes:\n\"Mock Whipped Cream: Beat the\nwhites of two eggs stiff and to them\nadd one banana very thinly sliced.\nContinue to beat the mixture till\nthe banana is dissolved and well\nblended with the fluffy Whites.\nSweeten to taste with powdered\nsugar. This mixture will have a\nrich taste and a creamy color, and\nis an excellent substitute for whipped cream, if used on molded gela\ntine desserts, on baked apples, ctcet-\n$era.   Miss W. W.\"\n\"My Fudge Brownies: Melt threo\ntablespoons of butter and -to it add\none cup of- granulated sugar and one\nunbeaten egg. Next stir in (off the\nstove) two squares of previously\nmelted, unsweetened chocolate, one-\nhalf teaspoon of vanilla extract, one-\nthird cup of cold, sweet milk, one\ncup of flour previously sifted with\n& pinch of salt and one teaspoon of\nbaking powder,. and, last, stir ln\none-half oup of ohopped walnut\nmeats.    Mix  well  before   spreading\nT one-half Inch thick on & greased\nshallow cake pan. Bake in a slow\noven from 20 to.30 minutes and cut\nIn two-lnoh squares before; taklrtg*\nfrom tbe pan.   Mrs. y.\"\n\"Graham CracKer cake: in,a bowl\nstir three egg yolks into one cup of\ngranulated sugar and one-half cup\nof lard, and when well blended add\none scant cup of cold, sweet milk.\nRoll 23 graham crackers finely and\nto them add two teaspoons of baking powder, one-fourth teaspoon of\nsalt, one-half cup of flour and one\ncup of chopped nut meats. Add\nthis mixture, to the first mixture\nalternately with the three stiffly\nbeaten egg whites. Bake in two\nbuttered layer cake pans and put together with this Wiling:   Cream two\ntablespoons of butter, and to thla\nfat add one egg yolk (uncooked),\none-half teaspoon of vanilla, and\n.enough confectioner's sugar to form\na fairly stiff' paste. Spread on tht\nhot cake.   Mrs. I. E. K,\"\nSflveprHaiired Women\nTrue to Old College\nTOR05W).   Ont,   Oot.   ae^-(By.\nThe Canadian Press)\u2014-Silver-haired\nwomen who stormed the iron-bound\ngates of University College nearly\nhalf a century, ago, stood side by\nside with eagep-eyed freshmen In\ninitiation berets and placards as the\ncorner-stone of the new women's\nresidence for University College was\nlaid by Rev. Canon H. J. Oody recently. To the freshmen It was a\nstrangely thrilling moment; perhaps\nnext October they might be calling\none corner of it. \"home\"-tjbut to-\nthose older women it was a moment\nof sacred significance, a culmination\nof all the dreams and hopes of the\nthousands of alumnae who' have\nbrought honor .to their beloved college in all parts of the world...\nDirt  TOU EVER\u2014\nPrepare celery as you would potatoes au era tin with white sauce,\ncheese and breadcrumbs?\nAdd a stiffly-whipped egg white\nto mayonnaise dressing when whipped cream la not available to make\nit light and  delicate?\nDoes a. double chin worrit thou?\nThen pinch it untij it dissolves Into\none. Anoint with a heavy -massage\ncre-am, dip the hands in ice water,\npick up the flesh in small folds and\npinch. Adipose tissue disappears.\nFollow with an ice rub.\nhome Is an utter mess. It\nlooks like a junk shop, maybe\nsome of the old stuff isnt' bad, *\nbut the way things are piled\non top of each other is terrible. ..\nEvery time I .talk about fixing\nup the place my mother throws\na fit. They are her old things\nand she likes them that .way.\nThe boy friend and I have gone\non excursions, to the movies. *\nand cat in parks\u2014now it's too\ncold for the park bench. I've\ntold him some pretty thick lies\nabout never having him to tho\nhouse, but he's getting suspicious and thinks there is something queer\u2014as goodness knows\nthere Is. My married sister who\nhad the same trouble with ma\nasks us to her house sometimes.\nShe suggests i write to you..\nPUZZLED PROVARICATOR.\nLet's be thankful for the married\nsister who has faced your problem\nand is sympathetic. Why not. have\nher take your mother m hand and\ntell her that the way sho .is living\nIs depriving you of your chance of\nmarrying and having a home, ..If\nyour mother will not consent to\nchange the Junk shop look of\nthings, couldn't you make your\nhomo -with your sister ior a little\nwhile. Or if rather of these suggestions is ..practical, why not tell\nthe boy friend Just how things are\nand brave it out, -If ho really cares\nhe will not hold you responsible\nfor conditions which you find impossible to. change. And many old\npeople have the possession complex, Let me add a note of warning: Do not got rid of Ma's old\nStuff without finding if any of-.-it\nis of value. A girl in a similar\nsituation disposed of some old furniture which, proved .to he worth a\ngreat   deal.\nFather Calls Him \"The\nBoarder\"\nDEAR MISS B&IRFAX:\nThere's a young man who\nworks in the.' same business\nhouse as I do. He was always\nvery nice and polite and ons\nholiday I Invited him to our\nhome to dinner. He accepted\nand made himself very agreeable to every ona. Since then\nhe has hinted broadly to. come\nagain and I've always fallen\nand invited him. He seems to\nenjoy himself fine but\u2014he has\nnever suggested anything in tha\nway of return hospitality. T\nknow the amount of his salary\nand as it's over four thousand\na year, don't you think he could\na fford to take mo and. my\nmother\u2014who does oil the cook-\n\u25a0 lng\u2014to at least a movie. My\nfather calls him \"the steady\nboarder\"\u2014I hear he treats othpr\ngirls the same way. What do\nyou  think?\nLTJLA A. B.\nYou a\u00bbk what I think, my .dear\nLula? My opinion of the young\nman's good .taste is not. high. Anyone who constantly accepts hospitality and. never makes a : return\ngesture lays himself open to very\nunpleasant stn-mlses, and I can\nhardly blame your father for* the\nname he's found for the* young\nman who takeB -tha. never -returns.\nWhy not drop him?\nJiytMER SOUP WEEK\nSign in anu Grocers\nis YOUR invitation\nTHIS SEAl\nYOUR\nGUARANTEE\nT~*fflS is \"AYLMER SOUP WEEK\" . . \u2022\nA Watch your Grocer's window for displays\nof the new pack of AYLMER all-Canadian\nSoups.\nFiner Flavor at Less Cost. . . Eight delicious\nCanadian Soups packed for Canadians by\nCanadians . . . Tomato, Vegetable, Green\nPea, Asparagus, Ox-Tail, Consomme, Chicken\nwith Rice ... NOW is the time to select your\nfavorite AYLMER varieties.\nComplete stocks . .. Especially attractive\nprices on dozen and case purchases . . . Fill\nthat cold weather shelf this week.\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,     MONDAY, OGTOBER 27, 1980.\nPage Five\nThe Social Season\nDEMANDS\nEveningSlippers to Match theQown\nWe are prepared to tint yoirf slippers, to match\nany shade.\nThe Pump is back with us again, and its interesting lines are still more alluring when a brilliant\nbuckle is employed.\nR. Andrew & Co.\n\"Leaders in Footfashion\"\nDr.X F-Lobb, D\/S;C-\nFOOT SPECIALIST\nWill Treat Patients in Our Store\nON MONDAY, OCTOBER 27th\nPlease Make Appointments Earl}\nR. Andrew & Co*\nHALLOWEEN BRIDGE\nSTAGED AT TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 26^-The Imperial Order Daughters of the Em-\npile.1 entertained here yesterday at\na Hallowe'en' bridge staged in the\nMemorial hall.- Mrs. J. Morris was\ngeneral convener of a committee of\n1(L. Prize, winners for the afternoon\nwere Mrs. E. J..Provost and Mrs.\nH. El .Allison, first prizes, and Mrs.\nR.  Leonard.,. consolation  prize.\nRushing Work Upon\ni Elko-Fernie Line\nELKO. B. O, Oct. 26\/\u2014The work\nof Using in a. new line from here\nto Fernie for .the. East Kootenay\nPower company is progressing well,\nand the. gang of men are now at\nwork near Morrissey, about six. miles\n.from here, and trie Job may yet be\nfinished before much snow falls to\nhamper the w\u00bbrk.\nJust Arrived and Unloaded\nGar of Mixed Furniture\nDE LUXE CHESTERFIELD SUITES in. mohair and\ntapestry coverings. Latest designs and colorings,\n2 and 3 piece suites.\nODD OCCASIONAL CHAIRS. La-Z-Boy, heavily upholstered in French tapestry.\nSMOKING TABLES AND STANDS.\nEND AND CHESTERFIELD TABLES.\nBED ROOM SUITES.\nDINING ROOM SUITES. Oak and walnut.  \\\nStandard Furniture Co.\nTHE STORE  OF  QUALITY AND SERVICE'\n\"It's Safe Because It's- Pasteurized\"\nA Glass\nof Health\nCurlew Pasteurized Milk contains all the vitamins\nand body building chemicals that growing children\nrequire. For every meal and for that after-echool\nlunch, give them a glass of Curlew. It will\nkeep them well and vigorous.\n'Curfew Creamery Co., Ltd.\nICB  OBEAM BUTTER MUK\nAT.I. , pBKHSCTIiY    PASTEUBIZED    PROIOTOT8\nWindow Glass\nREPAIR YOUR BROKEN AND CRACKED\nWINDOWS NOW and keep YOUR HOME\nConifortable\nWe carry a large stock of window glass in stan-r\ndard size lights.\nOdd size Tights cut to your measurement.\nHipperson Hardware\nCompany* Limited\n\u25a0  Look for the Red 'Hardware Store\nPhone 497       NELSON, B; C.      Box 414\nSociety\nThis column. la conducted by\nMrs. M. J. Vlgneux. All news\not a social nature, Including receptions, private entertainment,.\npersonal (terns, marriages, etc,\nwill appear ln tnls column.\nTelephone Mrs. Vlgneux at her\nhome, 619 silica street..\nBEEN TO\nPALESTINE;\nMr. and Mrs. E. Q. Matthew entertained on Saturday night at a'\nsmall dinner party at their home\non Rosemont; when covers were\nlaid lor 10. their guests Including\nMr. and Mrs. J. O. Bunyan, Mr.\nand Mrs. V. P. Payne, Mf. and Mrs.\n\" . J. Grove and Mr. and Mrs.'\nHarold Lakes.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab-\nMrs. A. P. Smith,' Latimer street.\nIs a patient in. the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral  hospital.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022   .\nMr. and Mrs. Oeorge Motion and\nson, Westman, returned last night\nfrom a week-end spent tn Spokane.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Porter. Kootenay avenue, Falrvlew, had as then-\nhouse ..guests over the week-end\ntheir daughter, Miss Kathleen Porter\nand Miss Annie Marslnek, who teach\nln Grand Forks, and : who were\nhere attending the teachers- convention. \u2022\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRt Rev. A. J. Doull, D. D\u201e Bishop ot Kootenay. has returned to\nhis home ln Vernon after attending\nth8 meeting ot the 'executive committee ot the Diocese ot Kootenay.\n\u2022 \u2022;.*.,\nDavid McBurney, who Is stationed at Salmo, paid a short visit\nto  town  Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Harry H. B. Horton\nhave returned from a week spent\nIn   Grand   Forks  and. Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022  >\u2022\nMrs. B. S. Fowler and her son.\nPat, of Rlondcl, paid a visit to\ntown   yesterday.\n\u2022 '    *    .\nMiss Lenzrflan, who teaches at\nGlade   spent  the  week-end  ln  the\n' Mm. Richard Pollard,1 who has\nbeen the guest of her son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Boy\nPollard, left yesterday morning for\nthe east, where she will visit her\ndaughter. >v-j\nt   \u2022   \u2022\nMlsa Jean Chelmera of Trail, who\nspent Saturday visiting In town, has\nreturned.\n\u00bb   *   \u2022\nC. Malloch of Kaslo was In the\ncity    Saturday    arranging,  for    his\nusage to the old country.\n\u2022 *   *\nMra. Kellly of Cranbrook was.a\nvisitor to -town  Saturday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Shirley North haa left for\nher horn\u00a9 In Vancouver after.spending the peat couple of months at\nthe home of her uncle and' aunt,\nMr. and Mis. C. I. Archibald, Stanley street.\nA. H. Green and George Ferguson\nhave left by motor on a business\ntrip  to  Victoria.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMm.'George Becker left - Saturday\nmorning via the Great Northern\nfor her home in Everett, Wash.,\nafter attending the. funeral of her\nsister. Mrs. G. L. Thompson, Friday.\nW M. Vance of Creston spent the\nweek-end with his family on Rosemont. \u2022\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss Dorothy Hlllam, who has\nbeen the guest of her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. Simpson, Stanley street,\nwhile attending the teachers* convention, has returned to Ingram\nMountain, wber0 she teaches.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss Annie Muraro, Granite road,\nhaa returned from Natal, where, she\nhas spent a fortnight visiting her\nbrother,  Sylvlo.\n. *   *   *\nMrs. E. Ure of Wynndel spent\nthe week-end In the. city.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. B. E. Paget and\nfamily of Procter left Saturday\nnight for Vancouver, where they\nwill make their home.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nJ. C. Tonka, principal of the\nGrand Forks high school, spent the\nweek-end \u25a0 with friends in Nelson.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMm. E. Kline, Anderson street, is\na patient ln the 'Kootenay Lake\nGeneral  hospital.\n,.\u2022   *   *\nMr. and Mrs. A. N. Wlnlaw and\ntheir daughter, Mary, returned last\nevening from a short visit to Spokane.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2666\n.Saturday night at 9 o'clock the\nrectory of the Church of Mary Immaculate the Bev. S. T. Flnnegan\nunited in marriage Thelma Foy of\nMission, formerly of Procter, and\nBoy Bradley. They were attended by\nMiss Lorain Gallas and Boss Bradley. ' Mr. and Mm. Bradley will\nmake their home ln Edgewood. Miss\nB. J. McLean and Swan Peterson\nof Procter also witnessed the ceremony.\n\u2022 *   *    .\nW. C. Murray of Victoria, formerly of Trail, spent the week-end\nin Nelson. Mr. Murray is visiting\nMends  In  Trail.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. P. H. Sheffield. Silica street, have had as their guest\nFraser Hlne, principal of the Grand\nForks  school.\n\u2022 *   *\nMisg Wilkie of Trail spent the\nweek-end In town.\n\u2022 *   \u00bb\nBobert Stevenson of Harrop paid\na visit to the  city  Saturday,\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMra, I, Mclntyre and children of\nSouth Slocan spent Saturday shopping ln Nelson,\n\u2022 *   *\nD. Magllo has returned from Spokane and Hot Lake, Ore., leaving\nhla son, Mario, at the latter place\n\"for treatment.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nCharles Holt, merchant at Balfour, paid a visit to the city* Saturday..\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mre. C. V. Archibald,\nStanley street, had as tfielr weekend * guests their daughter, Miss\nPhyllis \u25a0 Archibald, who teaches at\nValllcan, Miss Gwen-Ferguson, who\nteaches at Willow Point, and Miss\nMargaret Campbell, teacher of Longbeach.\n\u00ab   *   \u2022\nBev. and Mrs. V. Harrison have\nreturned to their home In Cranbrook, after attending the .-meeting\nof the executive committee of the\nDiocese of Kootenay.\n\u2022  *  *\nMrs. J. B. Patterson of Klmberley\narrived in the city Friday night ,and\ni visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Frank\n\"'ordon.\nMAJOR J. H. KING\nTALKS ON WORK\nOF HIGH SCHOOL\nPrincipal of Kitsllano High\nSchool Favors Four\nYear System\nMrs. Irma L, Linghelm, past president of the American Hadassah,\nwho has recently returned from\nPalestine, where she was aiding in\nestablishment of playgrounds under\nGuggenheim fund.\nBUTORAC MEETS\nOLD TRA1LITES\nIN CALIFORNIA\n. Miss Jenny Poole, who taught - In\nIngersoll, Ont., public , schools \u25a0 for\n57 years,  died  recently.\nTrail    Man    Returns From\nSouth; Business ', Looks\nBetter\nTBAIL, B. C, Oct. 26\u2014M. M.\nButorao returned thla week ; from\na trip to California, He was accompanied by his mother. Mrs. S. Butorao, by Mrs. Butorac, his daughter\nOrma Joy, and by Mrs. E. Ellis of\nBossland.\nAt Seattle on the return trip\nMrs. M. M, Butorac was taken seriously Hi, ant* waa rushed to the\nhospital for an operation. She was\npast the danger point before the\nmotoring party left for home.\nMiss Francis Butorao of Los Angeles entertained the party while\nthere.\nAt Los Angeles, Mr.' Butorac renewed acquaintances with Mrs. Sib-\nbald and family, and- Bob-Hall-el-,.\nIn Oakland Frank. Brown was Just,\nmoving into.a fine new sto-re, which\nMr. Butorac.says showed every.sign\nof i progress. Buster Brown was also\nvisiting  Oakland.-.\nFred Noyer greeted the party- at\nLohgylew. Mr. Noyer I has forsaken\nhis old profession, and Is. Jn the\napartment   building   business.-\nIn San Francisco Ernest Wllmes\nsaid hello, to the Trail people and\nsent his .regards-to old friends hern\n' The entire trip was made by, the\nInland route and 4500 miles wer*\ncovered. A visit to Tia Juana was\none of the ht\/h lights, Mr. uutoruc\nsaid. He also reported a general\nupward trend in business anda'feel-\nlng of better times coming,\n\u25a0Major J. H. King, -principal of\nthe Kitsllano high school, speaking\nSaturday mornhig at a discussion\nsession of the teachera\" convention\nhere,- -took up various points of\n\"High School Work.\"\nIn opening. Major King, upheld\nvigorously the new four year high\nschool system. Be said that he would\nhave, no more to do with the three\nyear system if it were at all- possible. This old benighted system\nforced atrocities on the student In\nthe form of study that were well-\nnigh overpowering. It was the duty\nof. all teachers to *pres\u00ab for the universal adoption of the four year\nsystem,  be   thought.\nIn .the matter of curriculum, he\nstated that about 40 per cent of\na basic Grade IX.. class will be\nfound ln Grade XI. He thought\nthat In the face of this.fact more\nof the lower class would be found\nIn the upper grade If the teacher\nwould take the time to study the\nindividual and suggest his* curriculum accordingly.\nThere was another matter where\nthe teacher should through his influence, and that waa in the matter of introducing the terminology\n\"high school\" graduation to supplant matriculation.\nBusiness men, he found, were demanding matriculation students who\nform the very top strata of high\nschool students. What of the other\n75 per cent of the students? The\nsystem was being arranged whereby\nan established number of credits\nwould warrant a high school graduation certificate. Business men, he\nstated, were willing for the most\npart to iccept- this term ln place\nof matriculation. The high; school\ngraduation meant merely having a\ncomplete course without foreign Ian\nguage or mathematics.\nMajor King discussed at. some\nlength on the blackboard the method of arranging thn four year timetable for various types of students.\nBIG HALLOWE'EN\nPROGRAM DRAWN\nUP, GRAND FORKS\nBon Fire and Minstrel Show\nPart of Program; Well\nOrganized\nGBAND FORKS, B. C.. Oct. 26\u2014\nGrand Forks this year Is planning\nmore elaborate Hallowe'en celebration than ever before. Starting\nwith a grand parade through the\ntown, led by the City band at 6:30,\nthe fun will continue until midnight.\nA prize will be offered for the\nbest costume ln the parade.\nA huse bonfire wiifc be built on\nthe vacant lot by the court hoiise,\nand \"hot dogs\" will be * dispensed\nby members of the city council,\n- Hi the Bonthron block, at\neight o'clock, the high and public\nschool pupils will present the minstrel show free of charge to parents other children and all who\nwish to enjoy the fun. This will\nbe in charge or Mr. Allan of the\npublic school and Mr. Sparks of\nthe high school, who will also take\npart.\nMrs. Tonks and the Jeter Pan\norchestra will supply music for the\ndance which will continue, until\nmidnight.\nMRS. MILLER HAS\nTWO NEW RECORDS\nVALLEY STREAM, N. Y., Oct. 36\nTho Australian oviatrlx, Mrs. Keith\nMiller landed at Ciirtlss-Wrlght airport at 3:03 pjn. with the women's\neast-west a-nd west-east transcontinental flight records in her 'posse,,\nsiou. She flew from Los Angeles\nhere in 21 hours. 47 minutes elapsed time. Recently she flew to the\nconst In 25 hours. 44 minutes.\nThe last leg of tho fUgHt was\nfrom Columbus, Ohio, whence she\ndeparted this forenoon at J0:53\no'clock, Iandins here four hours and\nnine m'inutes later.\nShe broke by nearly four hours\nthe west-east \u25a0 record of 25 hours,\n35 minutes, recently set hy Miss\nLaura   Ingalls. '\nMrs. Miller and Mrs.\nFlynn Are Institute\nDelegates '\u25a0 in Forks\n.\u25a0:\u25a0 GRAND PORKS, B. C\u201e Oct. 36\u2014\nMrs. P. J. Millar and Mrs. .W. P.\nFlynn were chosen to represent th*\nSunshine yalley Women'a Institute\nat' the Institute conference ln N\u00bbl-\nson  on November   18,   19,  and 20.\nHuman life Is like a game of\nbridge. Our Innate potentialities are\nthe. cards dealt out to u\u00ab.\u2014-A. E,\nHeath.\nMRS TAHERSALL\nTO BE INSTITUTE\nDEEGATE HERE\nIs  Chosen   by   Slocan   City\nWomen to Represent\nTheir Body\n'   SLOGAN   CITY,   B.   C,   Oct.   26,\nThe regular monthly meeting of the\nSlocan  City Women's  institute was\nheld In. the'city hall with 14 members present.\nMrs.. Popoff presided.\nMrs. Tattersall was elected delegate to attend the conference - ln\nNelson.\nMre. Blackbourne and Mm. Morley\nwere appointed conveners for plays.\nIt was decided to make provision\nfor * a library for the winter. A\nminting bee will be held at the\nhome of Mrs. Popoff in November.\nTea was served by Mrs. Hicks and\nMrs,   Russell.\nFoisy of Elko Is to\n, Run Pile-Driver in the\nVicinity Bull River\nELKO, B. C, Oct. 26,\u2014A. E. Ingham motored to town Thursday\nfrom Sbeep Mountain ranch and\naccompanied by Mrs, ,T, A. Sheridan\nand Mrs, C. D. Ingham, proceeded\non to Pernie. On their return to\nElko they wer\u00a9 also accompanied by\nMiss Viola Sheridan, who has been\na patient ln the Pernie hospital\nfor the past month and a half.\nW. L. Foley, who has been employed as mechanic in Fernie on\ngovernment trucks for a time, has\nleft for a point above Bull River,\nwhere he will rdfi the plledrlver\nIn   the   building  of  a  new  bridge.\n\u2022W. Winaon. Jr., who has been\nemployed near Corbln for the East\nKootenay Power company for several weeks, Is now at his homB\nhere, and Is working on the new\nline being erected east of town.\nMrs. W. L. Folsy and daughter,\nCellna, and Miss Florence Cherldan\nwere the guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nH. H. Perkins on Thursday evening\nat   their   home.\nJ. H. Angell and daughter, accompanied by Miss. Marlon Freck. motored to Cranbrook on Wednesday\nto visit Mrs. Angell, who Is a patient at the  hospital  there,\nArthur Jerferles was a visitor in\ntown from Caithness 6n Wednesday.\nW. Wood has been ' a business\nvisitor In Fernie for the past few\ndays.\nTIES AND PROPS TO\nBE CUT AT CAMP IN\nVICINITY OF ELKO\nELK*>. B. a, Oct.- 20.\u2014A Blairmore man controlling some timber\nllmlti near Brewer's South Fork\nranch some five miles .southeast of\nhere has decided to take out props,\nties, etc., and to that end is having\nthe road from the Elk river bridge\nndar here widened two feet for\nhauling of the timber.\nFour men, two supplied \u25a0 by the\ngovernment, are doing the work, and\nexpect the work will last two weeks\nor more longer. f\noJMea\u00a7hers^0\nPhone 200 607 Baker St.\nStore News\nNew Fall Sweaters\n\u2022 i\nImported sweaters in\npull-on or coat styles. Solid\ncolors or fancy mixtures.\nAll new and snappy. Sizes\n34 to 42.\nEACH $4.5*)  S5.00 TO\n86.50.\nSilk and\nHOSE\nFull fashioned hose in\nsilk and wool in all the\nbest Fall colors. Sizes 8V2\nto 10.\nTHE PAIR 81.25, $1.45\nTO $1.65.\nNew gowns, new slips, pyjamas,\nvests, combinations, bloomers, step-\nins and dance sets, in all the wanted\ncolors. Plain tailored or lace\ntrimmed. Many with novelty embroidery. All wanted sizes, and in\na splendid quality silk.\nREASONABLY PRICED, AT,\nEACH  $1.00 TO $7.50\nim All the\nNew Fall Colors\nHoleproof, Supersilk and Orient\nhose in every wanted color. Service,\nchiffon and Grenatex hose with\npointed or the new French heel.\nFull fashioned.\nTHE- PAIR $1.25, $1.50 TO\n$1.95. j \\\nSocial Events\n-of Trail City\nTRAIL,  B.  C, Oct.   28\u2014Frank   B.\nLund of FemJo Is spending \u25a0 a fe*w\nday*  in   Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nH. Williamson, of Chilllwack, arrived In Rossland yesterday and will\nmanage the theater-there, Mr^ Williamson made the trip by motor,\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nD. A. Cltra of Pernio arrived Friday\nto spend' a few days In the city.\nHarry Hope and Steve Walley returned from Kelowna Thursday evening after a successful hunting trip.\nThey brought back 13 pheasants\nand five Hungarian partridges.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. M. L. Brothers entertained\nrecently at a bridge party in honor\nof Mrs. George McCabe of Grand\nForks. First prize was won by Mrs.\nW, W. McKay, escond by Mrs.\nGeorge Wlnterbottom and consolation wee awarded to Mrs. Harold\nTugwood. Those present were Mrs.\nMcCabe, Mrs. Tugwood, Mrs. McKay,\nMrs. Wlnterbottom, Mrs, Carl Spence,\nMrs. C. H- Hall, Mrs. J. Morrison,\nand Miss L. McCormack.\nMrs. A. EJ. Cummlngs was a charming dinner hostess Friday night\nwhen she entertained in honor of\nMr. and Mrs. J. Willis of Grand\nForks and Mrs. F, Lewis of Halifax,\nN. S. Besides the honored guests\nthere \"were present Mr, and Mrs. G.\nG. Gumming, Mrs. M. L. Brothers,\nMrs. George McCabe a nd Thurlow\nCumming,\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs- H. Lightfoot to Grand Forks\nIs visiting here, the guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Gibson.\nMrs, John Graham of Grand Porks\nIs the guest of her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs, Davis Milne,\nfor a few days.\n\u2022\u25a0.\".*'.*\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Bennett motored to Nelson Saturday to spend\nthe  week  end   visiting   friends.\nMiss Nora Smith was a visitor to\nRossland last evening.\nMrs. John Lundie of Nelson was\nvisiting friends  here  Friday.\n\u00ab \u25a0 *   *\nMr. and, Mrs. D. W. Forteath entertained a number of their friends\nat a delightful ,\"500 party last eve.\nntng. Autumn flowers with their\nmany colors were used in decoration.\nThe first prizes were won by Mr.\nsnd Mrs. H. W. Hankin, and the\nconsolation by Mr, and Mrs. F, WU-\nby, Mrs. Forteath. assisted by Mrs.\nP. Phillips, served dainty refreshments. The guests were Mrs. M.\nBarnes, Mrs. E. Wakelfn, Mr. and\nMrs. Frank Wilby, Mr. and Mrs. o.\nMidway Will Be S<#ne\nConservative Gathering\nGRAND FORKS,' B. C, Oct. 26.\u2014\nConservatives of the Grand- Forks-\nGreenwood district. will hold their\nannual meeting ln the. Farmers' hall\nat - Midway on Saturday evening,\nNovember 1, for the election of officers and dealing.with party matters. Former meetings have usually\nbeen held in Greenwood, hut for\nthe convenience of j those in \u25a0 the\nwestern part of the riding the meeting is being held in Midway for\nthis  Occasion.\nSLIPS OP PUNTS\nWhen growing .of vinos or plants\nIndoors, place them in a glass vase\nor mason jar bo the sun ean get\nat their Toots and nourish them.\nRelievi\nDODD'S\nfKID(\u00abEY\nkp,lls-\nA. Buxton, Mr. and Mrs. W. Spooner,\nMr. and Mrs. I, Minion, Mr. and\nMrs. P. Phillips and Mr. and Mrs.\nH.  W.  Hankin.\n- Ernest Carter, who has been\nspending the past week here, left\nFriday  for  Rowland. >\n* \u25a0   \u2022\nMra. Thomas H. Long of Nelson,\nwas visiting her daughter-in-law,\nMrs. Gerald Long, j^t Trail, Friday.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nThomas Choate of Nelson was a\nbusiness   visitor   here-   Friday.\n* *    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. H. Allen and Mrs,\nAllen's mother, Mrs. C- Cherrlngton.\nof Creston, w\u00abe visitors in Rossland   Friday.\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL HOUSES AND LOTS. IN-\nsurance. Notary. J. D, Anderson. Trail. (2075)\nWhen prepsing woolens and using\na damp rag be sure to wring the\nrag out of warm water, not cold.\nCold water will only cool the iron\nmore quickly and make a longer\nJob   of   It.\nDr. E, S. clysdale, of Alviriston, <&tm\nhas been appointed a cOTooer ta$ **l\nLambton county to succeed jjr. 3, -><|\nC.   Axford.\nELECTRICAL\nSUPPLIES\nWe carry in stooi a ful]\nline of supplies\u2014-wlro, sockets, lights, fixtures, Bhades,\netc.\nIf you aro planning oft\nmodernizing your premlsas,\nor your home, PHONSI 69fi\nand we will assist you ln\nchoosing the right materlftl\nand give you an estimate\non   the  Job.\nBOUDOIR LAMPS\nAll   Bleefl  and   styles. Z\nColumbia Electric Ltd^\nAgents   Neon   Signs 1\nWesternCaitada's\nfavorite for nearly\nHalf a Century\n Page six\nTHE NELSON BAILY NEWS  ;   MONPAi', OCTOBJ5K 2T, X3S0.\n\u00aeIp> Jfetait lailg Jfotms\nAUNT HEX\nPublication every morning except Sunday by The News Publl&h-\ning   Company,   Limited   Nelson,   B,   0.\nBusiness letters should be addressed and checks and money\norders made payable to The News Publishing Company, Limited,\nand 'In no case  to  individual  members  of  the  staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A. B. c. statements of circulation\nmailed on request, or may be seen at the office of any advertising\nagency   recognized   by   the   Canadian   Dally   Newspapers   Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy  mall   (country)   per   month  ......\nPer   year\nBy \u25a0 mall   (city),  per  year  \t\nOutside  Canada, \u25a0 per   month\nPer  year   _.  \t\nDelivered, per week _\u2014...\u2014\t\nPer   year _  \u201e..\u201e.,.\n.   6.00\n. 13.00\n.     .75\n,   7.60\n;   .25\n, 13.00\nPayable In advance.\nMember  Audit  Bureau  of   Circulation,\nMONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1980.\nSmelter an Eye Opener for\nMinister\nHon. E. B. Ryckman, minister of national revenue\nand customs, and acting minister of finance, spent Saturday inspecting the monster smelter of the Consolidated at Trail, the power plants of the West Kootenay\nPower and Light company along Kootenay river, and in\nNelson met numerous people and discussed business of\ninterest to his department at Ottawa.\nMr. Ryckman at Trail expressed amazement at the\nsize and efficiency of the Consolidated operations in\nTrail. He declared he was not sorry he had made the\ntrip into the southern interior as Mr. Esling, West\nKootenay\"s member had suggested.\nMr. Ryckman's visit to the Kootenay was a welcome one. He came here with an enviable reputation\nas a statesman of high calibre and as one of the strong\nmen of the Bennett government\nHe saw ii) this district what no district in any\nother part of Canada can show him \u2014 a mining industry such as that exemplified in the great smelter at\nTrail, and an embryo industry, the new fertilizer plant\nof the company which has such termendous national potential importance because of the effect it will have\nupon the agricultural production of Canada. There is\nno other new industry in the Dominion which can approach the fertilizer industry in the effect it will have\nin bringing about a i-apid increase in the output of the\ngreatest basic industry in the country\u2014that of agriculture.\nMr. Ryckman, while his trip was brief, also had at-\n. tention called to the sound condition of industry and\nbusiness in this part of British Columbia, a condition\nwhich is in happy contrast to that of some of the less\nfortunate districts in Canada.\nTrip Has Bearing on Tariff\nChanges\n'I never Jcnowed until we got our\nminiature golf course how many\nwomen mere waa ln thla town tnat\ncouldn't count above four.\"\nThe Lighter\nSide\nNOTHING\nStudent (leaving college)\u2014'\n\"Goodbye, sir. I want to tnank\nyou for all I have learned from\nyou-\"\nProfessor\u2014\"Don't   mention   it\nit's    nothing    at    alL\"   Legion\nWeekly.\nAnother problem for the baseball\nclubs Is what to do' with all these J\nunused rain-checks.\nSurgeon's   Pencil\nThe   pencil   salesman   took   out   a [\npencil and wrote his name ln bold\nblack letters on the skin of the back |\nof  his  hand.\n\"This  Is  a  surgeon's  pencil,\"  he |\nsaid.\n\"Surgeons when about to operate,\nus,\u00bb it to mark out certain sections I\non a patient's skin.   Of course, It's |\na special pencil. *\n\"I can show you pencils for price-\nmarking polished metal, porcelain, J\nyea, and even patent leather.\"\nWhen president Hindenburg of\nGermany goes fishing, he probably\ntakes along a flunkey to bait the\nHindenburg   line.\nNothing Doing \u2022\n\"Didn't you get your life insured?\"\n\"No, I couldn't. The agent\nfound out I was a pedestrian.\"\nThai Body of Yours\n'  W JAS.  W. BABION, U. V.\nA\u00abJ T\u00ab! YOUR LIVER, SO i'ib0T\u00bb. .nantionea,,   i\u00ab   getting   Its\nAa IB   IUUXV uivjji\u00bb, \"w fBarmfuI.  products-poison   from-.bad\nfood poison, from wastes oi lntes-\nARE YOU\nI have written so often about t|ie\nliver; sometimes two or three' times\na month\u2014that I find myself keeping away from it wheri r would\ngreatly like to say more about thla\n\"king\" of the organs. \u25a0 ' '>\n. You recognize the Importance of\nthe heart because It has long been\nknown as' the force that keeps the\nblood circulating, and life continues, just as long as the1 heart continues to jj^imp blood, and no longer:\nAnd yets the liver, in a way is\nequally as Important because your\ndegree of health, your enjoyment of\n^lfe, your ability to work or play, depends to a great extent upon liver.\nNow this la not only because the\nliver stores up sugar, manufactures\nbile and does other work, but because of its Job of taking harmful\nthings out of the food ,we eat and\nafter making part of them useful\nto the body, renders the other part\nharmless.\nThe liver is the largest organ in\nthe body and holds one quarter\nor your blood at one time.   \u25a0\nJust think what this means. One\nquarter of all your blood in the 11\/.\ner, all the time, having various\nthings done to it during its stay.\nAnd not the least important, as\n(itiJrf'\nCustomer\u2014\"What do you recommend for chapped knees?\"\nThe1 Skeptic\u2014\"But are they chapped?\"\ntine or elaewjiere removed from It.\nNo wonder the liver lias been called  the washwoman\" of the Wood.\nNature made the liver large to do\nall this work but often from unwise\neating or dflnking, from' infection\nfrom various parts of the body, from\naccumulation of too much waste\nmatter ln intestine, constipation,\nthe liver begins to fall m its work; '\nWhat. happens?\nJust as olothes that do not receive\nthe amount of boiling,' rubbing, and\nsoaping show It, so also does the\nblood.\nIn testing the liver's ability, \u00bb,'\nsubstance ,la injected Into the blood -\nwhich should be removed by the\nliver; the liver should wash It out I\nor remove If from the blood. If the\nliver falls to do so. It Is ample evidence that the liver Is not doing Its\nwork properly and the trouble\nshould - be Investigated.\nThe thought then Is that constipation, which means a tremendous\namount.of extra work put on the\nliver ln removing poisons from the\nlarge Intestine, Is one of the main\ncauses of the failure of the liver to,',\nclean the blood; and keep you free\nfrom Illness. '\"' j\nSo either by proper food or exer- ,\nelse, try and -avoid constipation.\nHitler, Socialist Leader,, Has\nStirred Germany? An Austrian\nThe tour of Hon. Mr. Ryckman through tho west\nwas undertaken to secure first-hand inform&ion on\nindustrial .and agricultural conditions. His trip will give\nhim facts which will be useful in' determining: the government's tariff legislation at the next session in\nOttawa.\nWhile tariff changes were made at the special session of parliament recently they were purely emergent\nand designed to meet special conditions.\nIt is s-enerallty understood that a more elaborate\ntariff program will be submitted in the future. The\nvisit of Mr. Ryckman to the west will make available\nfor the government much information about conditions\nin western Canada, and the minister of national revenue\nwill likely play an important role when the revisions\nare being discussed.\nGermany Seeks to Grab Indiaau Trade\nProposals of 200 German capitalists to start Indian\nindustries, to be financed partially by Indians themselves, have been greeted enthusiastically by thc National Congress party in Bombay.\nMembers of tlie party see in the scheme a chance to\nstrike at British industries.\nThe Germans propose to establish, with the help of\nIndian capitalists, various industries, and in time assisting the country to meet her own demands.\nGerman manufacturers sent agents to India last\nJanuary. A trust has been formed known as the Ex-\nport-Dienst of India, Ltd., and the plan i? to capture\nthe Indian market for German goods of every conceivable variety.\nAt the same thrue, in co-operation with swadeshi, or\nhome industy, capital, there would be endeavors to develop Indian industries.\nThe head of the organization is Theodore Kicker, of\nBerlin.\nAnother lovely Venug has been exhumed in Italy\nand this one seems to have fared rather badly. She has\nno arms at all and in fact there Is very little left of the\nlady except the torso.The old boys must have treated\ntheir Venuses rather shabbily. Tt's a wonder that the\ncoroner doesn't suspect foul play. Somebody ought to\nspeak to Mussolini p1   \u25a0 t it.\nN. A. Wallinger, (.n.nbrook, hit the nail on the head\nwhen he suggests bringing the \"old grtib-stake\" law\nback into the interior to aid finding of new mines. It\nworked before and it brought the country to'the fore\nas a mining.territory. There are lots of mines yet to be\nunearthed in the Kootenay district.\nNelson's ferry was off again a few days ago for\na machinery overhaul. The motorists did not suffer so\nmuch as a tug propelled the craft across the river to\nkeep traffic moving. How many more overhauls before the new bridge will be built?\nFrom Victoria comes the news that the government\nwill shortly take steps to improve beer parlors throughout the province. It was not generally known there has\n\u201ebeen a kick against the parlors. Someone has stated at\nthe coast that the beer was what needed improvement.\nWell; shipping Errol Boyd home by steamer will\nassure him of a lengthier but safer and more comfortable trip over the Atlantic than his last one by air. The\nColumbia, at that has about done its duty.\nAn idle dollar is no more value than an idle man.\nIn trench and dugout during tli-o\nlong years of war men. whlled away\nmonotonous hours speculating upon\ntho aspect of the world when peace\ncame and. how they would help\nto shape a new and happier clvUlza-\ntlon. One such dreamer' among thB\nmillions of young men who had\nilocked to Germany's standards in\n1014 waa a Vlnnese workl*ngman. A\npapprbanger by trade, he had two\nyears before arrived In Munich to\nfind employment as a Mraughtsmau\nin an architect's office. He retained\nhis Austrian nationality, and so enlisted ns a volunteer and -fought\nbravely, tt would seem, with the\n16th Bavarian Infantry Reserve In\nthe dreaded Ypres section against\nBritish and Canadian troops. He\nwaa woimdei once and gased another time and ultimately found\nhimself demobilized with tho rank\nof sergeant, -and wearing the Iron\nCross.\nA   DEMORALIZED   GERMANY\nA stout fellow, one would cay, to\nwin the Iron Cross, essentially an\nofficer's perquisite, and sparingly\ndished out to the rank and file.\nA man of character, he had stubbornly refused a commission. At\nthe age of 20 he found himseir\nwithout a .lob in the bedlam Into\nwhich the war had transformed his\nsecond fatherland\u2014-five years after\nit had been one of the best ad-\nmlnlsterpd. most prosperous and\nmost contented countries on the\nface   of   the   globe.\nThe man who suffered these vicissitudes was Adolf Hitler, who\nis today Germany's new untried\nforce and the latest mystery on\nthe world stage. Very tired, a little\ndizzy, like all ex-combatants from\nthe front line, he found himself\nconfronted by a spectacle of horror\nscarcely outmatched hy the grim\nsight* of the battle zone. He saw\na nation of serfs bowing tho head\nto the arrogant Invader, a people\nracked with hunger and disease,\nhojoelewi In defeat, a prey to profiteer! ng harpies. He saw a former\ngrf-iat people torn asunder by civil\nwar and given over to lawlessness\nand violence which tho new and\nj yet tottering government of the\nnew republic was powerless to check,\nHitler became a seventh member\nof the new faction founded at\nMunich under the name of the\nGerman Workers' party. So writes\nValentine Williams In the London\nGraphic.\nFRITZ FAR  FROM STOLID\nIt had no definite policy. Today\nits successor the German National\nSocialists (Fascists) with a total\nmembership of 6.600.000, still has\nnone. E*even years ago, when this\nquiet Austrian, who was such a\nmixture of extreme reserve and fiery\nviolence, helped t<j form this party\nit was merely a group of seven\npeople with no fixed aims, no program; only the desire to struggle\nout of the muddle of those days,\"\nsays  he  himself.\nThe National Socialists have Issued, with their 25 .theses, a vigorous confession of faith. But their\nprogram for fche purposes of practical politics remains their leader'B\nsecret. He is of the secretive stuff\nof which dictators are made. To\nunderstand the secret of Hitler's\nrise to power, states an English\nwriter, and the astounding success\nof his party, the \"Nazis\", at the\npoiln, one must forego the-.British\nIdea that Germans are as a nation\nennv-golng, stolid and stable-minded,\nOFRMAN8   LIKE   A   BOSS\n\"I have no hesitation In saying,\"\ndeclares this writer, who has known\nthe Germans intimately over a long\nperiod of years, \"that thsy are one\nof the most eatable races In the\nworld, nervous, highly strung, and\napt, on ths slightest pretext, to\nbe swept Into gusts of extreme violence. As a nation they are extremely litigious, not to say quarrelsome, hot-headed and* unbelievably\nstubborn\u2014a combination ot qualities that renders a German mob &3\ndangerous  as  a mad bull,\n\"Yet,\" says this critic, \"the German responds readily to the crack\nof the whip. He loves a master,\neven   a   \\*Xh   and   plaster  one   like\n. ....a\u2014thudding tramp of brown\n\u2022su.rDed escort In darkened hall and\nsudden flood of light as he stands\nforward\u2014his swastika ban ners an d\nfrothy rhetoric\u2014knows his fellow-\nGerman. And his meteoric rise to\nthe key position ln German politics will bring hundreds of thousands flocking to the standard\u2014\nmake no mistake about that.\"\nHITLER   WOULD   REFUSB   TO   PAY\nThe establishment of tho German\nrepublic, sweeping away four kingdoms, six grand duchies, seven principalities, and three free towns,\nwas one of tho greatest innovations\nln government the world has ever\nknown. Defeat accomplished what\neven Bismarck, the man of blood\nand Iron, had not been able to\naccomplish when, following the triumph of Prussia in 1870, he dragooned several petty German states\nInto yielding a grudging allegiance\nto  the   German   overlord.\nBirth of the republic ln 1018 saw\nthe rule of jackboot and sabre\nbroken and liberalism no longer a\nbar to advancement. A man' might\nhe a Socialist without being treated\nas an outcast. Reaction from kais- -\nerdom In Germany was J ust as\nsweeping as had been reaction from\nrevolution In Prance when a full\nturn of the wheel brought lu Napoleon  and  the  empire.\nIf words mean anything, Adolf\nHitler and hts Naals are committeo\nto such revolutionary measures as\nthe revision of the Versailles treaty,\nthe repudiation of tho Young plan,\nconfiscatory measures against certain Jews and foreigners In German, and a general challenge to\nthe former Allied world. But it remains to be seen If Adolf Hitler\nIs to be the spearhead -of the new\nevolution of the new Germany.\nWOULD   PEOPLE   ALLOW   IT?\nHeckled by Hitler's Fascists on\nthe one side and by Communists\non the other, tho German government today is fighting for its very\nlife ln a boisterous Reichstag. At\nany moment news may come of it3\ndefeat.   What   then?\nLately the Nationalist Socialists\n(Fascists) have Increased their seats\nfrom 12 to 107 and the Commiui-\nlstfl from 54 to 78. Tho government,\nwhich numbers among its supporting groups the Catholic party under Chancellor Brunlng, boasts a\nbare working majority. Nevertheless,\nIt if. dlflcult to believe that the\nmass of German public opinion,\nwhich worked so devotedly for the\ncause of reconciliation under the\nguidance of that great statesman,\nDr, Streeeman, will allow Germany\nto repudiate all \u201eher treaties and\nturn mad dog.\nHanding Over\nBy   GERALD   S.   BEES\n\"Up-the English Channel\"\n( . (Ottawa Citizen)\nAfter the turbulence of an Atlantic crossing, the 'flashing beam of\nlight off Land's End Is a cheery welcome to the shores of England. The\nsea In tbe English '> Channel may be running no less heavily than further\nout on the western waste, but the sunlight's play on white combers\nwill give a touch of friendliness to the channel gale. There is nothing\nsullen Or melancholy about the Bparkling blue and white of the Inward\npath to Southampton. The chalk cliffs of the Isle of Wight are framed\nalso ln the marvelous green of a <\u2022>:\u25a0\npleasant land.\nThe gateway to England up the\nSouthampton, water haa a wonderful charm for the ocean traveler.\nThere is no finer way to approach\nthe British Isles for the first time\non a passenger liner. So many lines\nare met on the way in, outward-,\nbound to many distant lands,. the\nwhole world's ocean paths of commerce seem to radiate from the\nEnglish Channel, within the harbor\nat Southampton, other great liners\nadd to this Impression.\nProm Southampton up to London,\nthe train Journey ts made through\na veritable land of gardens, irteadows,\ncharming cottages, hamlets and picturesque towns. The appearance of\nrepose -and stability over the south\nof England has been well earned.\nIt has taken many centuries of labor,\nand valiant defence \"to bring the\nEnglish meadows to such a state of\ntrlmness.\nThe sea-birds and plovers were\nfollowing the ploughman over Sing-\nlands' fertile fields in the days,\nlong \u25a0 centuries ago, when English\nmariners fought off the envious\nLatin invaders. Before the coming\nof William of Normandy, before\nHBngest and Horea, even before Caesar's standard bearer led the Roman\nlegions ashore, the homes of Eng- i\nland were being fashioned. They\nwill eurvlve, too, long after the\nworld has emerged from this present,\ndisturbed dream of murky industrial-\nism and blasting imperialism.\n\"A man who has reformed himself\nhas contributed his full share toward the reformation of his neighbors,\"\u2014Norman  Douglas.\nEquality of opportunity Is the t\nof democracy.\"\u2014Will Durant.\nTEN YEARS AGO\nI has recently been suggested by American friend, and his 100 per\n^cerit Robotlsm, may it not be eaid\nchat America has about all she can\ndo now to handle herself? Her unemployment problem Is equally severe as other lees favored countries.\nShe has a huge task on' her hands\nto integrate her vast population, and\nestablish a universal norm and law\nand order, and to create for Its support a vigilant publo opinion:\nOne- may suggest that two other\nof her problems aro to stabilize her\nfamily life, and the question of over\nproduction.\nThe standard of living ln\nU. S. A. Is the highest in the world,\nand It takes a lot of maintaining;\nto keep it at its present level, the\nworking man must be kept busy\ntho year round; to keep him busy\nthe year around there must be wld-er\nand still wider markets, for in these\ndays of mass production, the home\nmarket is  presently saturated.\nBeforo she sends over her 59 super\ngiants to London (presumably to\ndraw a satisfactory remuneration\nwhile engaged on their herculean\ntask) she might direct their attention to her own farmer problem, and\nsave the continual knocking on her\ntreasury door. The American farmer\nhas no problem substantially different from those of the tillers of\nthe soil In every land.\n\"RAH-RAH   FOR   AMERICA\"\nAmericans are the keenest gamblers in the world; the exercise of\nchance Is in thejr blood end spirit,\nreasonably so, for the making of\nAmerica was a fine adventure, In\nwhich the moment was always great,\ner than the morrow; she has never\ndoubted her future, lives adventurously, dangerously, one may say,\ntaking risks and chance, but never\ndenying herself any good thing.\nShe owes much to the melting pot,\nthough Borne of Its contents, refusing to coalesce stalsfactorlly causes\nconsiderable trouble and. gunfire!\nThe genius of Amerlclan Invention\nand material advancement finds itself in her great admixture of races;\nshe draws on ah, nations, civilized or\notherwise, for Idea,that find expression ln her marvellous accomplishments.\nBut, admitting all this, one .ques-\ntion.s whether they are ln any way\nfitted to \"take over\" as a going\nconcern the British Empire.\nShall wo not therefore respectfully\nbut quite firmly decline the Proposal, and remain \"your very sincerely\nJohn Bull.\"\nAhd with it all, consider the.\njesting of our mutual ldosync'racles,\namusing or otherwise, as entirely\nsuperficial     without     any     malice\nan American gentleman\u2014 you may1*\nhave read the blurb\u2014that the economic salvation of Britain and\nbcr. Empire can now only be achieved by a direct and wholesale Importation of the best brains of Am-\n.rlcan industry: Originally 40 \"rulers\" were named as comprising the\nemigration party for the accomplishment of this stellar performance\u2014\n\"Give the forty men who rule the\nU. S. A. 10 years for the development of this industrial empire (The\nBritish Empire) and no country on\nthis earth could then approach it In\nper capita wealth. I! we should be\nsitting on toPj of the world with all\nthe clouds swept away. Later, after\nmore reflection, this saviour of the\nEmpire, by proxy, added 10 names\nto the list, making 59 ln all: the\nnames of the rulers are not mentioned, but presumably the appendix\nIncludes some of those New York\nand Chicago gentry who thrive, ln\ngangster land and control the racket-\nerring privileges of these two world\nfamous emporla.l\nIt is to noted with gratitude that\ninternal feuds among the gangsters\nand rackeeers tend to have the effect\nof lessening their total number by\nwell placed massed gunfire; this Js\nal) to the good, though it, has unkindly been suggested that the only\nfault Is that It Is not cxpcndltlour.\nenough I\nCHECK   AND   DOUBLE   CHECK\nIf this American gentleman has\nhis way, at the end of the 10 years,\none would harldly be ablo to hear\nthe scream of the American eagle\nfor the full* throated roar of tbe\nBritish lion.\nBut, seriously, it is quite a good\njoke, is it not? What Innate modesty, what shrinking violets? Mind,\nyou, America might be able to do\nwhat she claims, but I do not think\nthc Briton, at home or overseas\ndcslren to bfi made on a \"cash and\ncarry\" basis.\nAmerica Is trying a great experiment herself; it may eventually result in tho richest, fullest and the\nmost beautiful civilization the world\nhas ever seen-or In failure this experiment is based on mass production, concentration of business and\non a highly mechanized mode of\nlife. Material efficiency has become\nwith them a national mania, but it\nromains to be seen how long the\npursuance of a Robot Ideal as ah\nend ln itself, or solely for material\ngain, will satisfy the inherent longing fof-. an expre*w!on of ideals on\na higher plane.\n\"ET-TU  BRUTUS!\"\nH$faelhn#m$\nis exceptionally good this year.\nPrices as low as $1.50 for\nWith   all   due   deference   to   our  aforethought.\nTOLD IN RIME\n(From The Dally  News  of'October\n27, 1920)\nT. B. DeVeber, manager of the\nBank or Montreal here, returned\nlast night from a visit to his\nbrother Senator L, G, DeVeber at\nLethbridge which was ln the nature\nof a duck hifntlng trip, He brought\nback  a  large  bag.\n\u2022   *   *\nUnknown robbers entered the\nhome of Dr. fl. C. Williams at\nRosiand on Sunday, October 24,\nbut weer scared away by \"Pr. Williams and Mrs. Williams' mother,\nMrs. Kerr, before anything was\nstolen.\nWar on the proposed luxury tax\nstamp which the merchants are\nrequired to use from November,\nwas declared last night by the Nelson branch of Retail Merchant's\nAssociation of Canada, The taxes\nwill still be collected but stamps\n\u25a0refused.\nThe new tug \"Columbia\" which\nIs being built, by' teh C. P. R. for\nthe lower river Bervice this winter\nIs' being pushed to completion by\na  large number  of workmen.\nmy\n\"I do not believe that any person\nin the world is big enough for the\ntho   ex-Kalaer.   Adolf   Hitler,   with  acclaim of many thousand of earn\nhis  elaborately-staged  platform  ap-   est   people. \u2014Mary   Plckford.\nTHE    BLIND    SOLDIER\nA Picture of joy and Sorrow\n\"My    daddy's   turn   com     to\nmummy an' me;\nHe's  been  such a long time  away!\nPor he's been  to de wor rite away\nc>oss de sea,\nAnd he only turn back 'esterday.\nEvrry night, foa a long time, a year,\nmebbo  two,\nMy    mammy    an*   me   pwayed    at\nnight,\nDat de Lord would ]et daddy  turn\nback fum de wor,\nDen we twas an' 'lm would be yite.\nSo   I   saved   up  my   pwesents,   my\nptcters an' toys,,\nSanta  Cloos  bwout at Kllemas  for\nme,\nCoss   my   daddy   an*   me   likes   de\nSmlffs'lcky   boys\nAfter  schoo'   to turn  an*  'eve  tea.\nDen we all plays to gevver, an' we\ndoes  'ave sum fun!\nAn'   my   mammy   buys   sweets   an'\nnice   takes;\nAn* de Smlffs' boys dey sing, when\nde toyses are don-e, \u2022\nAn' I do like <iR noises dey makes 1\nBut my mammy Is twouhled, an1 I\nsaw dat she klled,\nAn' I \"erd daddy say, 'Never mind,\nIt  might o'   been   worse,  lovey,  if\nI had died,\nAn*  I'll  still  be  content,   tho'   I'm\n.   blind.\"\nSo I foat dat was why my mammy\nwas sad,\nAn'  daddy  had  not seen my  toys,\nAn' aldo he was laughing he didn't\nseem  glad,\nAn'   he   'adn't   asked   Smlffs'   Icky\nboys. ^\nSo dls mawnln' I dot, my best dolly\nan'   cwept\nRito up- to my daddy, so still,\nDat,  aldo he  was lookln'  so  sllen'\nhe   kept,\nDen   I  saw  his  poo  eyses  wor   ill.\nDen   I   does   to   my   mammy   an*\ntuddles oo's knee,\nAn'  I tola oo  'ow solly I am,\nCon;!   daddys   bwynd   eysea  us   two\ndoesn't see,\nMy mammy, an' mammy's pet lamb.\n1   G-    H.    WILLOUGHBV\nSouth   Slocan\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(\"From The Dally News of\nOctober 27,   1910)\nThis year the Bulkley valley produced 3S00 tons of hay.\n*   *   t\nPred Fowler of Pleasant Vanoy\nrecently shot a wild goose weighing\n27  pounds.,\nThe' Treadwell, group, of mineral\nclaims, the Treadwell, Pacific, Gold\nRock and Meal Fraction, owned by\nWilliam Kennedy of1 Salmo, Edward\nPeters of Ymir and Annie R. Peters,\ni was yesterday sold to Roy W. Daw-\nsob of Vanoou*ver. .\n. There is great variety and there is a wide range of\nprices.\n' for TWO Dozen\n$1.50, $2.00, $2.50 to $7.50 '\nRemember: These prices-are for TWO dozen and\ninclude printing.\nWe ai-e able to.sell at these prices because of the fact\nthat we sell-in. TWO dozen units and thus have no\nwaste through odd lots of cards being left over. And\nthere is no danger of one customer sending the same\ncards as* anyone else.\nWhether you buy two dozen or four dozen or six\ndozen\u2014one lot, two lots or three lots\u2014each lot is complete in itself and without duplicate.\nSend for Samples\nWo will gladly send you samples, to your home if you\nlive in Nelson, or by mail if you live outside the city.\nAll we ask is that you return the samples, as we have\nonly one sample for each set of two dozen.\nPHONE 144\nluh Senartnumt\nNELSON, B. C\nRoof ing Paper\nNow is the time when you want to check over\nyour roof and make repairs before the snow\nstarts.\nWe have a full stock of 1, 2, 3-ply Roofing\nPaper, Tar Paper, Sheathing Paper, Rosin-\nsized Paper, Tarred Felt, Blue Plaster Board,\nSpruce Paper, Carpet Felt, Hexagon Shingles,\nall shades; Roofing Tar, Pitch and Elastgum\n.\u2014just the thing for fixing your oldKroof.       ' '\nORDER NOW, PRICES RIGHT\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale\u2014Retail Quality Hardware      Nelson, B. C\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS      MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1930.\nntM WADES THROUGH MOD ABOUT\nITWO INCHES DEEP TO HAND NELSON\n'1-0 DEFEAT IN LAST RUGBY GAME\nCamera Ready to\nAnnex Title\niin Pours Down Steadily;\nIs Fourth Straight\nVictory\n<s=-^\nJT&AIL, B. C., Oct. 20. -r\"- Trail\nllgby stalwarts took enough time\nHit -from sliding, on their faces in\nJiud two inches deep to score four\n|>uohdowna and one convert and\n|tke their, fourth victory over Nel-\nIin la the West Kootenay league\nIlls season, this time by a 21-0\nl;ore on. a rain-soaked field here\nKMlay. The game had no bearing on\nKie league championship, that hav-\nIig been decided when Trail won\nla third straight game at Nelson\nlist Sunday.\nj Fumbles galore marked today's\n\u25a0amo, hut even at that the number\nIras small considering the condition\nIf the field. Bain bad fallen practically all during the night, and\nlontlnued all through the game.\n1 Barron, \"Windy\" Williams, Curtis\nInd J. Burjowa were outstanding\nIsr Trail .while Shugg \u25a0 and cotton\nTere about the whole Nelson team.\nT Trail got one touchdown In each\nurlod.\nTin the first period Nelson at-\nlimpted a forward pass from Mcleod to Shugg,  and Evans  caught\n' on the fly. With the whole Nel-\n\u2022n team trailing him, Evans made\n_, 40-yard run for. a touchdown.\nRoTier failed to convert. Nelson\nJtd attempted a forward pass on\n|ie same combination Just prevlous-\nand succeeded, and a few mln-\ni after the score gamed 40 yards\nhen a forward pass from McLeod\nVance was successful.\nJ'S   SECOND   SCORE\n|In the second quarter play milled\nUt on Nelson's 35-yard line, con-\n\u25a0hulng   a   march   that   started   In\npe first period. Trail's opportiinity\nwhen Tyo dropped Cotton af-\n* Trail's lost kick on third dawn.\nadvanced steadily until Evans\n|cnt   Into  tbe   line   to   make   the\n\"essary one yard to score a touch-\nMcTIer   converted   to   make\nfte score H-o.\nI Cotton   ml ski eked   In   the   third\np llod  and  Shugg  was called  of f-\n'de   on   the   Nelson   35}-yard   line.\n'all took the ball < to ,-withln five\nof the Nelson line. McTier\n\u25a0*ok It for another four yards and\nTlester gained the other yard* for\nI touchdown. Young failed to \"oon-\npnrt, Nelson came near scoring when\ngcTier was forced behind his own,\nel line on Nelson's klclt on third\nHe handed . tbe ball to\njyilllams, who went three yards\n\u25a0ver the line Into the field. Mc-\niKer kicked, Cotton missed the\nlatch, and Chandler beat Vance to\nlie ball, putting the ball back\nfitcs. Nelspn  territory.      When   the\niree-quarter whistle blew Trail was\nIi Nelson's 35-yard line.\nI ball's final score came In the\nperiod. Continuing the play\nthe third quarter, Trail bat-\nIted slowly forward to within three\nTards of the Nelson lino. Cotton\ntlmost got away with an offside\nFlck but \"Windy\" Williams caught\nlllm about 20 yards out. Trail made\n\u25a0uoccsslve downs to within three\nfjords of the line. A line buck made\ntwo yards and  Williams  carried\nfee   ball   over   for  the   last   score.\nIfcTler  failed   to  convert.\nt'HE   TEAMS,   OFFICIALS\nI The teams:\nft Nelson\u2014Banks, Buchanan, quar-\nKfej Cotton, Harper, McLellan,\nl,\"alves; Shugg, Dolphin, ends; Vance,\nllartln, flying wing; Wood, Kirby,\n\u25a0nap; Peterson, Anglin, inside; Fan-\nTing,  McLeod.  middle.\n\u25a0 Trail\u2014McTier, quarter; Williams,\niTvans, Lauder, halves; Astrowskl,\nKtUles,. Young, Hawkshaw, ends; Sam-\nEgons, Curtl3, Tye, flying wing; Bur-\nRows, snap; Zuk, Plester, Dccem-\nTMnl, inside; Chandler, Barron, Frailer, middle.\n|{ Officials\u2014-F. C. T. Ourren, Trail,\nIHamle\" Forbes. Nelson, time kecp-\n\u25a0hs; W. Masterson, R, Dockerlll,\nKTrail, linesmen; Dr. J. T. Mulr,\nliead linesman; Lloyd Hallam ref-\n|>rae.\nARSENAL STILL\nLEADS ENGLISH\n<?an Sharkey\nOR STRlBUN-S\nHolds West Ham United to\n1-1 Draw; Liverpool\n; Beats Blackpool\nLONDON, Oct. 26.\u2014(C. P. cable)\u2014\nSixty thousand people turned out\nfor the soccer match between Arsenal and West Ham United at\nHighbury on Saturday and saw the\ntwo strong London clubs battle to\na one-all draw. Arsenal were able\nto hold their lead ln the championship table of the first division of\ntbe English league. The match, was\nreally for the \"London championship\" as West Ham have already\nbeaten ChelBea.\nThe Hammers were not at full\nstrength, being unable to .field\neither their brtlllatit amateur, Glb-\nbins, or Wataon, both of whom are\non the Injured list.\nLive\/pool triumphed over Blackpool after a keen game ln which\nSmith did the hat trick for the\nformer, getting all their goals. Benton had Blackpool's goal.\nLeicester's opportunism accounted\nfor their fine win over Aston Villa.\nSmith, reserve Inside left, and Hlne\nscored for Leicester In the first\nhalf. Hlne completed his hat trick\nby netting twice In the second half,\nwhile Warning goaled for the villa.\nManchester United-are still unable\nto record a win tnis season. Yesterday they were beaten by Portsmouth by four goals to one. Easson\nhat tricked ln the first half. Despite Gallacher's fifth minute goal\nBirmingham proved more than a\nmatch for Chelsea's expensive forwards.\nLINDRUM FAILS\nIN SECOND GAME\nLIVERPOOL, England, Oct. 26\u2014\n(C. P. cable).\u2014With the second\nmatch of the International professional billiards tournament over,\nTom Newman stands the victor ,over\nWalter Lindrum, the Australian expert, while Joe Davis, English champion, beat his Australian .opponent,\nClarke McConachy.\nNewman ran up a total of 24,086\npoints, as against. 23,006 pulnts for\nLindrum. Newman's total, however,\nincludes the 7000 points' which the\ngreat Australian player gave each\nof his three opponents. Newman's\nvictory was by 1080 points.\nDavis, with 28,210 points, scored\nan easy wlij, over McConochy, who\nhad 23,737, giving the English\nplayer a margin of 4842 points.\nIn th\u00a9 first of the serlea Lindrum gave his opponents 7000\npoints each as a handicap aud\novertook them all before play had\nclosed,\nROUGH RIDERS TAKE\n15-5 WIN, MAROONS\nMOOSE JAW, Sask., Oct. 26\u2014(CP).\nA sensational spurt by the Maroons\nwhich carried tthe ball from their\nown goal-line 'for a touch in the\nlast minute of piny was the feature\nof tho final same of the Saskatchewan Senior league schedule on\nSaturday afternoon when the Regina Roughrlders took a 15-5 verdict from tho locals. It was' the\nfirst touchdown scored against Regina  by'a western  team this fall.\nsZ&ggzfza&g,*\nUNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA IS\nBEATEN 18 TO 3 BY SASKATCHEWAN\nFOR INTERCOLLEGIATE RUGBY TITLE\n\u25a0\u2022-\nHardy Trophy Goes Back to\nPrairies; IL B. C. Is\nOutclassed\nSASKATOON, Sask., Oct. 26\u2014Utilizing a diversified attack behind\nthe clever kicking of their star,\nHarry Dempster, the University ol\nSaskatchewan rugby team defeated\nthe University of British Columbia\ngridders 18 to 3 at Cairn's field,\nhere, Saturday afternoon In a game\nthat decided the. inter-coll-eglate*\nchampionship- for' the season and\nbrought the Hardy trophy back to\nthe   prairies.\nThe match, which was the fourth\nstraight victory of the season for\nKent Phillip's green and white\nsquad was playing umder ideal conditions before one of the largest,\nfootball crowds of the season.\nDempster's kicking was the deciding factor that sent the 1629 champions down to defeat. It was his\neducated boot that figured In all\nthe   Saskatchewan   points.    He   ac\ncounted- for 10 of the IB points\nhimself with* three field goals and\nft kick to the deadline, while the\nother counters were the result of\nhis lengthy punts Into the coast\nteam's territory.\nB.C.   FUMtiLE   costly\nThe lone major point of the game\nwas scored by Mickey MdNab, Saskatchewan end, who was qulcte to\ncash ln on, a fumble near, the coast\n.goal line by Moore, the British Cq<-\nlumbla  backflelder.\nOnly in the first quarter did the\ncoast invaders show any of the form\nthat carried them to the lntcr-col-\nleglate championship last fall.\nThrough bone-crashing plunges by\nGavin Dirom, the blue and gold waa\nable to carry the ball] Into position\nfor Latta to kick a field goal which\nwas their only'point of the game.\nNear the end of the first quarter,\nDirom was carried from the field\nsuffering from a dislocated shoulder which forced his retirement for\nthe rest of tne game. Handicapped\nby his loss, British Columbia was\nnever able to get Into position for\nanother counter.\nBRITISH FOOTBALL\nBy   AL   DEMAREE\n(Former Pitcher, New York Giants)\nWhen will Prlmo Carnera be\nmatched with Young Strlbllng, Jack\nSharkey or Max Schmelllng.\nPersonally I do not believe\nSchmeljlng could, beat Prlmo and if\nhe gets the match Carnera will be\nthe next technical world's heavyweight  champion,\nMax Is too small and too light a\nhitter to ever drop the big Italian.\nI don't think he.could knock out\nCarnera If they fought a marathon.\nAs for Strlbllng he demonstrated\nhe could floor big Prlmo ln their\ntwo matches In Paris. The latter Is\na much improved lighter-.' Yet tbero\nis still so much doubt about his\nability in the minds of the average\nfight fan that it'would clear up tho\natmosphere If he were tossed into\nthe ring with a man like Sharkey or\nStrlbllng.\nIf wo could only bring bock Plrpo,\n\"the wild bull\", ln the shape ho was\nin his Dempsey fight to tangle with\nCamera,, what a fight it would be.\nOr Jess Wlllard. There would be\na battle of super-giants.\nIRONSIDES, THE\nSHAMROCK AND\nHIGH TEAMS WIN\nOpen Games Played \u25a0 in  the\nNatal Basketball\nSeries\nThe per capita expenditure for\nradlo3 and radio equipment in the\nUnited States is estimated at $3.59\na  year. ,\nEASTERN CANADA RUGBY   STANDING\n_   Vancouver   A.   G.   1,   Vancouver,;\nf Moral omaa  4.\nNew Westminster 13, Victoria 20.\nWestern Intercollegiate final:\nSaskatchewan 19, U. B. C. 3. \u25a0\nSt. John's 29, Winnipeg 0.\nManitoba  Junior   title:\ni    Wlnunipeg  Native  Sorfe  8,   Wln-\nll-hlpeg  Canoe  club  1.\nVarsity 6, Queens 1. \u2022 .  ,\nWestern  University 5, McGili  1.\nInterprovlnclal:\nToronto* Argos 20, Ottawa 2.\n,    Hamilton 6, Montreal A,.- A. A. 5\n| (tie).\nJf   Senior O. R. P. U.:\nHt   Varsity   Orphans  30,   Camp  Bor-\nl(den  12.\nHamilton  Cubs  14,  Sarnla  9.\n_.   Windsor 10, Kitchener-Waterloo' 7,\n\u00a7 INTERCOLLEGIATE\n[ WTLPts.\n\u25a0Univeerslty of Toronto 3 0 0 0\n{.'Queen's University ....;....:.. 2 ' 0 1 4\n[[Western University  10   2   2\nijMcOUl   University     0   0   3   0\nNext  Saturday's  schedule:\nToronto   at   McGili   and   Western\nat  Queen's.\nHamilton Tigers  \u25a0  2    10   5\nMontreal A. A. A. ...;  2    115\nToronto Argonauts   2   0   14\nOttawa Senators   0   0   4   0\nNext Saturday's schedule:\nMontreal. at Argonauts and Hamilton at Ottawa:\nONTARIO   RUGBY\nFOOTBALL   UNION\nWestern Group\nHamilton        3   0   16\nSornla-i     _  \u20222-0   2   4\nKitchener  _* 2   0   2   4\nWindsor  \u201e  10   3   2\nEastern   Group\nBalmy Beach  .- 2   0   0   4\nVarsity Orphans   2   0   14\nCamp Borden    0   0   3   0\nNext Saturday's schedule:  ;\nKitchener at  Sornla;   Windsor  at\nHarrillton;   Balmy  Beach   at   Varsity\nOrphans..\nUNITED STATES FOOTBALL RESULTS\n(   Navy 31,  Princeton  0.   . <\n\\   Dartmouth 7, Harvard 2.\nI   Penn. 40, Lehigh 0i\n!   Columbia  3,  Williams 0.\n(   Syracuse 34, Bt. Lawrence 6.\nNotre Dame 3a, Pittsburgh  19.\nFordbam 7, New York University 0\nBrown, 13, Holy Cross o.\n'   Rutgers   40,   Delaware  0. \u25a0\nNorthern   15,  Center 7.\nKansas 2     Iowa State 6.\nOklahoma 7, Kansas Aggies 0.\n|   Amherst .19, Wesleyan. 19.\nColgate 40, Penn Stato 0.\nj   Springfield 20, Boston 7.\nI, Purdue 7, Wisconsin 6.\n\u25a0[' Michigan. 15, Illinois 7.\nI   Northwestern 45, Center 7.\n|   Chicago 0, Mississippi 0.\n!   Nebraska 53, Montana State 7.\ni   Michigan State 45, Case 0.    '.\nJ  North  Dakota   14,  North   Dakota\n{State   7.\n;|   South   Dakota   State   13,   South\nIfDakota University 6,\n:i   Georgia   89,  Auburn  %.\nU.  8. C. 42,  Stanford  12!\nWashington 13, California 0.\nMICHEL, B; C Oct. 26 \u2014 Natal\nbasket ball league opened Wednesday when three games combined on\none card were played, The Shamrocks -eliminated thn Unlteds In\nthe opening by a score of 27-7. The\nsccdh^game resulted a 9-7 win for\nthe Mgh school against tho ex-\nhlgh and thc Iron-Sides trimmed\ntho public school 30-18 in the last\nencounter.\nIn the i first game the - \"giant\nCharles Fisher\" who stands six feet\nfour inches, gathered in many points\nand foiled the attempt of the opposing men to score by nearly covering his basket -with his hands.\nIf it had not been for him, it might\nhave been a different matter.\nThe second game was evenly\nmatched the score beira 7-7 until\nthe High School scored two points\nln an overtime tilt.\nIn the lost game the Ironsides\nproved to he far tho superiors scoring 16 of their 30 points in tho\nopening. The Public school gained\nIts eight points in tho last canto.\nTEAMS   WERE\nShamrocks\u2014Fish, S, Androllc. T.\nAndrolic,  Brand Ice,  Krall,  chola.\nUnlteds\u2014Lyne, Besurk, P. Chola,\nO. Chola; Hammond, Cotwell, Hampton.\nIronsides\u2014TC KallJ R. Taylor, A.\nTaylor, B. Wright, F. Vcnzlo, J.\nCampbell.\nPublic school\u2014B. Zerattl, P, Zer-\nattl, R. Taylor, B. Lyne. B. Brown,\nK. Owen, J. Thompson, M. Farano.\nTHE ENGLISH LEAGUE\nFirst  Division\nArsenal   1,   Westham   1.\n- Birmingham  6.   Chelsea  2.\nBlackburn 2, Bolton 2.\nBlackpool    1,   Liverpool   3.\nDerby  2,  Sheffield Wednesday 3.\nLeeds   7,  Mlddlesborough  0.\nLeicester  4,  Aston Villa  1.\nManchester City 1, Grimsby 0.\nPortsmouth 4, Manchester United 1\nSheffield United 3, Newcastle 1.\nBunderland 4, Huddersfield 2.\nSecond Division\nBarnsley   2,   Mlllwall   3.\nBradford 0, Bradford City 4.\nBristol City 1, Oldham 0.\nBury 3, Preston 0.\nCardiff    1,    Nottingham    1.\nCharlton 1. Stoke 2.\nEverton   4,   Totenhani   2.\nPlymouth   1,   Burnley   3.\nPort Vale 0, Wolverhampton 1,\nSwansea 0, Southampton 1.\nWest Bromwlch  l, Reading 0.\nThird Dlvlslorir\u2014Southern\nBournemouth 4, Bristol 0.\nClapton    2,   Exeter   3,\nCoventry   3,   Crystal  Pa.lace  0,\nFulham. 1, Southend 0.\nNorwich 3, Torguay 0.\nNobte   2,   GUllngham   1.\n\u25a0Queens Park 0, Northampton 2.\nSwindon   0.  Jetton   0.\nThames   0, 2^\u00a3hton   0.\nWalsall   1,   bientford   4.\nWatford    6,   New   Port   2.\nThird  Division\u2014Northern\nDarlington  1, Rochdale 1.\nDoncaster 0, York 2.\nGateshead 1, Carlisle 0.\nHalifax 4,  Crewe 0.\nHartlcpools  2,  Barrow  a.\nHull   2,   Rotherhnm   2,\nLincoln  1, Chesterfield 1.\nNelson   4,   Accrlngfcon   2.\nStockport  1, Tranmere  1.\nNew Brighton  1, Wrexham 1.\nWlganborough 1, Southport 0.\nDOMINION SKI\nEVENTS TO BE\nAT REVELSTOKE\nVANCOUVER. B. C, Oct. 26.\u2014Official information has been received\nby -wire from Montreal by R. J.\nVerne, president of tho western\nbranch of the Canadian Amateur\nSki association, that the. 1930-31\nDominion championships have been\nawarded the Revelstoke Ski club.\nTADANAC WINS IN\nTRAIL BASKETBALL\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct, 26.\u2014Tadanac\ntook a 34-30 victory. over the Arrow\nBoat club in a senior city league\nbasketball game here Saturday, Har-\nrod scored 19 points for Tadanac,\nwhile Westwood got 10 for the\nA. B. C. Wcstwood was chased for\npersonals. \u25a0 Mr. Pople was referee.\nIn an. intermediate fixture Trail\nTimes swamped the Scouts hy 20\nto 8. Groves netted i0 points for\nthe Times, while the Scouts' points\nwere divided equally . between J.\nBaldry and Hood.\nV. A. C. DROPS OUT\nOF PICTURE IN\nCOAST FOOTBALL\nVANCOUVER, B. C. Oct. 26\u2014\nVancouver A. C, pre-season favorites\nto cop titular honors ln the provincial \"big four\" football league,\npassed out of tlie championship\npicture Saturday when they dropped\na four to one decision to their\nlntra-clty rival, Meralomas. It was\nmeralomas' fourth victory ln as\nmany starts and the Athletic club's\nthird loss ln five games.\nIn the other \"big four\" game of\nyesterday's schedule, New Westminsters bowed to Victoria at the\ncapital, 20 to 13, in a wide open\ngame. It was Victoria's first win\nor the season, and New Westminster's fourth straight los-s. The\ncapitals went -Into an early lead and\nstayed their, successfully checking\na late rally staged by the visiting\nWildcats.\nJ. D. Russell, who at one time was\na Union Bank manager in southern\nAlberta, died at Kamloops.\nMissouri   university   nt   Columbus,\nMo.,  has  3,882  Btudents.\nBADMINTON WILL\nSTART SATURDAY\nAT WILLOW POINT\nWILLOW POINT, B. C, Oot. 28^\u2014\nAt the annual meeting ot the Willow Point Badminton club held recently ln Crystal hall, It waa decided to start playing on Horom-\nber  I.\nMra. P. Hobson was elect\u00bbd president; Mlsa O, Taylor, secretary;\nRex Taylor, vice-president, and Mlsa\nM. Campbell and W. P. Dixon oom-\nmlttee members. The president, aeo-\nretary and Mrs. A. N. Taylor were\nnominated to th\u00ab match oomrolttM.\nHOLLYWOOD   WINS\nBY 22-4\nLOS ANGELES, Oot. 26>-After\nhammering four Los Angeles pitchers for 23 hits Hollywood won its\nthird game of the Pacific. Ooart\nleague chajnptc^ahlp series yesterday, swamping the Angell under a\nstream of runs 22-4.\nPour homers were sprinkled in\nthe wild affair.\nR   H   E\nLos   Angeles    \u201e     4   121\nHollywood     \u2014 22 23   0\nBacht, Yerkes, Walsh. Oabler and,\nHannah, Skiff;  Turner and Bassler.\nTHE  SCOTTISH LEAGUE\nFirst  Division\nAberdeen 3, Queens Park  1.\nAyr  United  1,  Hearts  1.\nClyde    1,   Morton   0.\nCowdenbeath 0, Partick 3;\nFalkirk 4. Kilmarnock 2.\nHibernians 2, East Fife 1.\nLelth 0, Alrdrleonlans 1.\nMotherwell 3.  Celtic 3.\nHangers-Hamilton   Academicals not\nplayed.\nSt. Mirren 3, Dundee  1.\nSecond Division\nAlbion   Rovers \"ft,  Brechin  CHy  0\nALloa  2,  Armadale 0.\nArbroath   3.   Dumbarton   1.\nBo'ncss  1, Dunfermline 2.\nClydebank. I. East Stirlingshire 4.-\nDundee United 5, Queen of South 2\nForfar   0,   Montrose   1.\nFaith 5. stenhousemulr 2.\nThird  Lanark 2.  St.  Johnstone 0,\nKings Park  3. Bernards 1.\nPARTICK THISTLE\nLEADS SCOTTISH\nBeats    Cowdenbeath    While\nMotherwell and Celtic\nPlay to Draw\nNATIVE SONS WIN\n'WINNIPEG, Man,, Oct. 26.\u2014(CP)\n\u2014Manitoba's Junior rugby title today reste ln the hands of the Winnipeg Native Sons squad. The sons\nbattered their way to an eight to\none win over Winnipeg Canoe club\nSaturday in a match that was\nmarked by continual mid-field play\nand by capable defensive taotlcs on\nthe part of both teams.\nNAMED  MANAGER\nMINNEAPOLIS. MLnn., Oct. 26.\u2014\nKenny McKenzle of Edmonton, Alta.,\nwho has '\u2022 coached and managed\nhockey teams In western Canada,\nhas been signed as coach of the\nnew Minneapolis team of the American Hockey league. This 'wasr..-announced tonight hy Rev. R. V.\nHuth of Minneapolis, owner of the\nclub, i\nFEW SEE WALES,\nSCOTLAND MATCH\nGLASGOW, Scotland. Oct. 28\u2014\n(C P cable)\u2014Owing to the ban\nplaced by the English Football\nleague ori soccer players engaging\nIn the international matches except where England is concerned\ntho game between Wales and Scotland Saturday was played ln a\nfarclal atmosphere. Instead of the\nusual 'crowd of 100,000 only 16.000\nattended and saw the two countries draw with a score of one-all\nat   Hampden   park.\nNeither of the teams was representative, Wales playing nine now\ninternationals, Including three amateurs. Six of the men toured Canada two y^ars ago with the Welsh\nteam. Scotland \"capped\" six new\nInternationals. The fiasco will probably have .the effect of ventilating\nthe injustice of the English league's\nstand.\nALBERTA   WINS\nEDMONTON, Alta., Oct. 26.\u2014University of Alberta broke their losing\nstreak In tho western Canada intercollegiate rugby union, at the expense of Manitoba's representatives\nwhen they scored1 a 7-2 victory at\nthe Varsity grid here Saturday afternoon. The contest, played ln (deal\n'Weather,, before a fair-sized crowd of\nfans, was not a particularly good\nexhibition of the fall pastime, hoth'\nteams being guilty of numerous\n-tumbles.\nGLASGOW, Scotland, Oct. 26--\n(C P cable)\u2014Getting a fine Win\nover Cowd-enbeath by three goals\nto nil, while Motherwell and Celtic\nwere deadlocked nnd divided the\npoints, Partick Thistle took the lead\nin the championship race after Saturday's Scottish league, first division, fixtures. Scorers for Partick\nwere Simpson, Miller and Hunter.\nMotherwell had goals through Mur-\nfockn two, and Perrier, while Cel-\ntloe's ^Marsmen were: Scraff, Mc-\nGrory,   and   A.   Thomson.\nClyde , nosed out Morton i when\nKing goaled In tho last minute of\nthe match. Skinner, making his\nfirst appearance In league football\nthis season had the goal which gave\nAirdrie the major points over Leith-\ner Athletic. For Aberdeen Ymrston,\ntwo, and McDcrmld beat Queens\nwho scored through McAlpinc on a\npenalty kick. Ayre and Hearts\nstaged a fine draw, Fleming, through\nhis own goal, scoring for the latter\nand McCall for Ayr.\nSt. Mirren had an easy task with\nDundee, winning by thrco goals to\none. Rellly and McCrae, two scored,\nfor tho winners and Ritchie for\nDundee. Ham 111, center forward,\ndid the hattrlck for Falklck against\nKilmarnock. Gallagher also netted\nfor Falkirk, while Maxwell had two\nfor Kilmarnock. Hlbernains got the\nodd goaj oUt \u00b0* three against East\nFife, their scorers being Bron and\nBradley. McCurlcy goaled lor East\nFife.\nCALGARY WINS\nALBERTA TITLE\nCALGARY. Alta., Oct. 26\u2014In a\nfast, hard fought game, in which\ntha Calgary Tigers were forced to\ncome -from behind in the final\nquarter, tho local Bengal squad\nretained the Alberta senior championship by out-scoring Edmonton\nEskimos 24 to 11 at Hlllhurst park\nSaturday   afternoon.\nThe victory was the fourth out of\nfive starts for the Tigers thla fall\nand qualified them for the prairie\nfinal here November io against the\nwinner of tho Winnipeg St. John-\nRejtna Roughrlder semi-final to be\nstaged at the Saskatchewan capital\non   Saturday,   November   1.\nENGLISH   RUGBY,   EAST\nTORONTO. Oct. 26.\u2014Results of\nEnglish rugby games Saturday.\nUniversity of Toronto 3, McGili 3.\nBritish Public schools 10, Toronto\nWelch   3.\nToronto  Club  6. Camp Borden 0.\nHamilton  3,  Lansdowne 3.\nToronto Scottish 20, Bank of Commerce   0.'\nToronto. Canadians 26, Bank \u25a0 of\nMontreal   o.\nDELAYED PENALTY\nIS EXPLAINED AT\nRULES MEETING\nMONTREAL, Que., Oct. 26.--Representatives of six clubs, eight referees and several coaches and other\nhockey officials gathered hero today\nfor the annual \"explanation of\nrules\" of the National hockey league\nby   President   Frank   Calder.\nThe greatest Innovation In this\nyear's rules, the \"delayed penalty\"\nsection, was carefully gone over hy\nthe meeting. Thc rule states: \"If a\nthird player of any team shfl.ll be\npenalized while two players of tho\nsame team are serving penalties, the\npenalty time of the third player\nshall not commence lintll the penalty tlmo of one of the players already penalized shall have elapsed.\nNevertheless, the third player penalized must at once proceed to the\npenalty bench, but may be replaced\nby a substitute until such time\nas tho penalty of the penalized\npL-iyers   shall   commence.\"\nSCOTLAND, WALES\nPLAY TO A DRAW\nGLASGOW, Oct. 26~8cotland and\nWales played a ono-all draw tn on\nInternational football match Saturday. Both goals were scored In the\nfirst half. ,\nTeams    were,*\nWALLS\nGoal\u2014Len Evans, Cardiff; R. back\n\u2014Dewey, Corinthians; L. back \u2014\nCrompton, Wrexham; R. half\u2014Rodg-\nlers, Wrexham; 0. half\u2014 Keenor,\nCardiff: L. half\u2014Ells, Nunheader.\nOutside;\u2014Collna, Llanelly; R. inside\n\u2014Noal, Colwyn Bay;center\u2014Bamford,\nWrexham; L. Inside\u2014Robbing, Cardiff; L. outside\u2014ThomaB, Now Port.\nSCOTLAND\nGoal\u2014Thomson, Celtic; R. back\u2014\nBlair, Clyde; L. back\u2014Gilmour, Dundee; R. half\u2014MoNab, Dundee; C.\nhalf\u2014Gillespie. Queen's Park; L.\nhalf\u2014Hlli, Aberdeen; R. outside\u2014\nMcRorle, Morton; R. inslde^\u2014Bron,\nRrangers; center\u2014Battle. Hearts; L.\nInsitie\u2014Stevanson, Mtotherwell; L;\noutside\u2014Morton,   Rangers.\nEIGHT TEAMS IN\nNEW AMERICAN\nHOCKEY LEAGUE\nCanivla spent more than $81,00.0,-\n000 last year on radio apparatus,\ntwo-thirds of It being, manufactured\nin  the Dominion.\nCHICAGO, Oct. 26\u2014Directors of\nthe American Hockey league, meeting yesterday, granted a league\nfranchise to the' New York American Hockey Club, Inc., thUB expanding the league to an clght-club\ncircuit.\nGeorge McNamara, Toronto, Ont.,\nIs president and F. Harland1 Rohn,\nChicago. Is secretary of the club,\nwhich, it was announced, will ploy\nl* the New York coliseum in tho\nBronx.\nIt was also announced that Thomas J, Shaughnessy, president of the\nShamrocks of Chicago, had sold his\nMinneapolis franchise to R. V.\nHuth  and associates of Minneapolis.\nA cheap sliver cleaner consists of\na paste! of baking sod** nnd warm\nwater. Apply with a blush,, rinse m\nclear water and polLsh with a dry\nCloth,\nSOMETHING NEW i v>\nUNDER THE      V\nSUN\nBUCKINGHAM\nCIGARETTES\nSun-lrealed\u2014Mild\n*\/#\/~\/and Mellow\/\"\/\nTRULY a new thing under fhe sun . . .\nCanada's mosf popular blended cigarette\n. . now flooded wifh sunshine ... the perfectly blended fobaccos passed under giant sun\nlamps .-.. bathed in mellowing ultra-violet rays.\nHere is salisfying richness ... refreshing coolness ....\ndeep mellowness... a newlhrill added to Buckingham\nenjoymenl ... a ripe perfection unrivalled and unprecedented.   Buckinghams now . . . more than ever ... are\nfhe quality cigarette.... leading in fiavor... in richness . .\u00bb>\nin mellow purify ... with a thrill in every pufj.\nN O COUPONS\nALL QUALITY\n Page Eight\n'IHfi NELSON DAILY NEWS      MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1980.\n'as'SSaWant M Wri%& tit\na*10 ^*&m\u00a3Mi  afl\nBARNES WANTS\nAUDITORIUM OF\nDOUBLE PURPOSE\nNew City Hall Needed; Put\nCity  Facilities\nOne Roof\nGREAT ECONOMIES\nALL DIRECTIONS\nSound Proposition  But Not\nat Price of Only an\nAuditorium\nLEGAL NOTICES\n\"POUND DISTRICT ACT\"\n\"Should Nelson's community auditorium pure and simple, serving\nonly the purpose of a large plaoe of\nassembly and tho uses strictly related to that, or should the new\nstructure be made to embrace municipal purposes as' well?\" asked\nMayor R, d. Barnes conversationally\nyesterday, when opening an analysis\nof the auditorium question.\nThe mayor declared himself emphatically in favor of the broad\nscheme aa adopted by tho city council; which, though obviously very\nmaterially increasing the cost over\nthe figure that a simple auditorium,\nwhich is what New Westminster has\nprovided, could be built for, would,\nhe \u25a0 claimed, be sound business, on\nHccount of thc ultimate economy of\nthe project. -\nCITY   BUSINESS  CRAMPED\n\"Perhaps those who are ln touch\nI with the city's business realize the\nsituation better than the citizens at\nlarge,\" remarked he mayor, \"but\nthere is no question as to the\n\u25a0facta.\n\"The city hal Is entirely too small\nfor the1-** purposes It is used for.\nThis will lie easily understood If wo\ncompare our needs today with what\nthey were when the building was\ntaken over. The business done Is\nfour or five times what it was then.\n\"Under present conditions we are\novercrowded and hampered, and are\nnot provided with the working space\nrequired. The space originally occupied by the city clerk's office\nwas taken over eight or nine years\nago for the vault, and, a city clerk's\noffice was built out by filling an\nangle of the building with what is\npractically a bay window or lean-to.\nThe city health department is\nwithout an office. Existing offices\nare cramped for the purposes for\nwhich they nro used, particularly\nthe general office, and that of thc\nelectrical engineers'.\n\"Our existing city hall is old. It\nis a frame structure already added\nto once, it is cold and therefore\ncostly to heat, and It is on the rall-\n% way track, to the disturbance of all\npublic meetings held there. It la\nentirely inadequate, and a new civic\nhome is a need that ln any case\nwould have to ho dealt with soon,\nMONEY SAVING\nPROPOSITION\n\"When we have the auditorium\nproposition up, surely it is good\nbusiness to combine the two objects, on account of the great economies to be gained. The outstanding economy would be in building\ncost, but a very important one also\nwould be In operating cost, which\nincludes heating and caretaking.\n\"When we are building an auditorium, I am of opinion we should\nseize this opportunity to bring all\ntbe activities connected with the\nmunicipality under one roof\u2014those,\nI mean, that are not tied down to\nplants. The library, now in rented\npremises, ir one of these the market\nis another. Housing the market\nin the auditorium building would\nmean a renta--, of $500 a year\u2014$480\nto  be   exact\u2014on   the   present   basis.\n\"It Is advantageous to have the\nactual auditorium at tho street\nlevel for innumerable reasons\u2014for\nauto shows direct entrance from\nthe street woxild be imperative\u2014\nand consequently a basement Is desirable, the cost of which would be\nlessened by tho fact that the site\nis so low that little or no excavation Is needed. By combining the\nauditorium and city hall propositions\nthe full utll*featlon of the basement\nIs already clearly in sight\u2014heating\nplant, police cells, market, chamber\nthat can be utilized for banquet\nroom ln connection with conventions or other big gatherings In the\nauditorium, shower rooms In connection with the athletic sports\nthat will yield rental for floor use,\nand perhaps also the library.\nFOR   PERMANENCE 0\n\"Expert opinion is that in view of\nthe clay site, it is advisable to utilize the double-deck grandstand of\nthe  Recreation  grounds \u2014  double-\nWhereos under the provisions of\nthis Act application has been made\nto the Lieutenant-Governor in\nCouncil to constitute all that tract\nof land ln the Creston Electoral\nDistrict and more particularly de-\ncrlbed as follows:\nCommencing at the S- E.\ncorner of Lot 8245, Kootenay\n\u2022 District, being a point on\nH. W. M. of tbe west side of\nKootenay Lake; thence west\nalong the south boundary of\nsaid Lot 8425 to the S. W.\ncorner of same; thence north\nalong the west' boundary of\nsaid Lot to the N. W. corner of\nsame; thence east along the\nnorth boundary of said Log\n8245 to the S. W. corner of Lot\n12075; thence north and east,\nfollowing the west boundary of\nsaid Lot 12075 to the N- W.\ncorner of same; thence west\nalong the south boundary of\nLot 6899 to the S. W. corner of\nsame; thence north along the\nwest boundaries of Lots 6899\nand 6894 to the N. W. corner\nof Lot 6894; thence east along\nthe north boundary of said Lot\n6804 to the S. W. corner of\nLot 8500; thence north along\nthe west boundary of eaid Lot\n8500 to the N. W. corner of\nsame; thence east along the\nnorth boundaries of Lots 8500\nand 6896 to the N. E. corner or\nLot 6896, being a point on the\nwest boundary of Lot 6594;\nthence north along the west\nboundary of the said Lot 6694\nto the N. W. corner of same;\nthence east along the north\nboundary of said Lot 6594 to\nthe N. E. corner of same, being\na point on the west boundary\nof Lot 7627; thence north along\nthe west boundary of said Lot '\n7627 to the N. W. corner of\nsame; thence east along the\nnorth boundary of said Lot 7627\nto the N. E. corner of same;\nthence south along the east\nboundary of said lot 7627 to the\nN. W, corner of Lot 8227; thence\neast along the north boundary\nof said Lot 8127 to the N. E.\ncorner of same; being a 'point\non H. W. M.; thence southerly\nfollowing high water mark to\npoint of commencement,\na pound district.\nNotice is hereby given that, thirty\ndays after the publication of this\nnotice, the Lieutenant-Governor. in\nCouncil will proceed to comply with\nthe application, unless within the\nsaid time objection is made by\nolght proprietors within such proposed pound district, in Form 2\nof the schedule to the said Act, to\nthe   undersigned.\nJ.  B.  MUNRO,\nFor Minister of Agriculture.\nDepartment   of   Agriculture,\nVictoria,   B.   O.,\nSept. 24th,   1930. (1990;\ndeck so as not to project on to\nthe grounds further than the late\none\u2014to be a substantial buttress\nto the site and building, which\ncould be best accomplished by making it in part of a massive construction, utilizing considerable concrete.\nWhile this would cost a Uttle more,\nIt would give a permanent and indestructible facility.\nIt seems very clear to me that\nit is very wise to go beyond the\nmore auditorium, with stage adjuncts, which we need {or great\nassemblies, for the fair, for shows,\nand for carnival gatherings, and to\nmake provision for all our public\nneeds at once, in this one building.\nWORTH   EVERY   DOLLAR\n'It is also very obvious that if we\nare to gain these economies, and\nhave these community enlarging facilities, we must he prepared to go\nbeyond the cost figures hitherto\ndiscussed, and consider what two\nentirely separate structures of permanent character would cost\u2014I say\npermanent, for surely we are beyond\nthe stage of frame construction for\nNelson public facilities^ The New\nWestminster audl-wfTum Just completed, an auditorium alone and\nnothing else, was built at a cost of\n$75,000. The oombln-ed auditorium\ncivic home, and community center\nplans for which have been called\nfor by the city council, will not be\npossible, I feel sure, for, any such\nfigure as that, but it will be worth\nln civic efficiency, In cost and oper-\natlng economl-Es, in public facilities\nfor the people of Nelson, and In\ncommunity building power every dollar it will  cost.\"\nWANT  AND -CLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nOne Insertion 10 cents a line\nSix insertions 40 cents a lint\nOne month $1.30 a line.\nMinimum two lines\nNo extra charge If cnargea.   ,\nBirth notices free of charge.\nDeaths,    marriages    and    cards   of\nthanks 20 cents per line.\nFuneral flowers 15 cents per line\nNews   of  the  Day   items  20  cents\nper line.\nNO EXTRA COST IF CHARGED\nMrs. Pyra Is Bridge\nHostess, Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Oct. 26\u2014Mrs.\nBricker of Detroit is visiting ln the\ncity, the guest of her sister, Mrs.\nJ. Ellis, tars. Bricker has been tor\nsome time visiting her parents ln\nNew Westminster end la stopping\noff In the city on her homeward\nroute.\nMrs. F. Pym was a bridge hostess\non Thursday afternoon when Mra\nA. Harrison and Mrs. Cummlngs\ncaptured the prizes. After tea a\nnovel competition called 'Fish Pond\nwas enjoyed, when Dr. Norrington\n-vugnii tan most ilsh. The guests\nwere Mrs. MacPherson, Mrs. Cummlngs, Mrs. Spreull, Mrs. Fergie,\nMrs. Maclnrot, Mrs. D. Wilson, Mrs.\nR. Harrison, Mrs. Brackets, Mrs.\nueWolf, Mrs. Worden, Br, Norrlng-\nion and Miss  Woodland.\nMrs. A. Ashworth of Invermere was\na guest of Mrs. F. Dezall for a few\ndays of this week, leaving for her\nnome by motor on Friday. On\n-nursday afternoon Mrs.\" Dezall was\na tea hostess in her honor, about\na dozen guests being present,\nMrs. G, W. Patmore left on Friday\n.or calltornia. wnere she will spend\nthe winter In the hope of her\nhealth, which haa not been good\nior a year or more, will be benefitted. Mrs, Patmore has a brother\nresiding there with whom sho will\nvisit.\nMrs. Brackctt was tea hostess at\nthe Woman's Badminton club on\nFriday   afternoon.\nMr. and Mrs, S. Taylor of Flagstone were ln the city on Thursday,\ntne giust of Mr. and Mrs, F, h.\nDezall.\nPeople of almost every nation\noriginally used the human foot as\na   unit   of  linear  measurement.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n\u25a0.Continued)    (\nMINERAL ACT\n,     (Form F)\nCertificate or  Improvements\nNOTICE\nPRINCE and MONARCH Mineral\nClaims, situate In the Nelson Mining   Division   of  Kootenay  District.\nWhere located;\u2014 \u25a0\nBetween Hell Roaring and Goat\nRiver.\nTAKE NOTICE that\nI, E, -G. Montgomery,\nFree Miner's Certificate No. 18035-D\nIntend, sixty days from the date\nhereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for. a Certificate of Improvements, for the purpose of obtaining\na Crown Grant of tbe above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 85, must be\ncommenced before the Issuance of\nsuch Certificate of Improvements.\nDated this Sth day of October,\nA.D.   1930. . v2189)\nLAND   REGISTRY   OFFICE\nSection   160\niN THE MATTER OF\nParcel  \"A\" of. Lot 6684,\nParcel \"3\" and.\nParcel \"4\" of Lot 3266,\nKootenay District.\nProof having been, filed in my\noffice of the less of Certificate of\nTitle No, 24857-1 to the above\nmentioned lands In. the name of\nJOSHUA MARSDEN and bearing date\nthe 13th December,. 1927, I HEREBY\nGIVE NOTICE of my intention at\nexpiration of one. calendar month\nfrom tbe first publication hereof\nto issue to the said Joshua Mersaen\na Provisional Certificate of Title ln\nlieu of such lost Certificate. Any\nperson having any Information with\nreference to such lost Certificate of\nTitle is requested to communicate\nwith the undersigned.\nDATED at Nelson, B. C.,. this 20th\nday  of  September,   1930,\nA. W.  IDIENS,\nREGISTRAR,\n,   DATE of first  publication\nSeptember 21, 1930. (1878)\nHELP WANTED\n(W)\nWANTED \u2014 EXPERIENCED COOK-\ngeneral for small adult family.\nWrite Box 36 Creston. (2463)\n(1)   POULTRY   AND   EGGB--(Cont)\nGENERO^-To Mr. and Mrs. James\nGenero at the Kootenay Lake General hospital, October 25, a daughter.\nDAVIDSON \u2014 To Constable and\nMrs. W. H. Davidson, formerly of\nNelson, at Grand Forks hospital,\nOctober 26, a .daughter.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n(11)\nYOUNG MAN FROM ALBERTA\nwants Job on dairy farm. Box\n2426  Dally  News. .    (2426)\nCANADIAN WIDOW WOULD LIKE\nposition as housekeeper for widower or couple. Good plain cook.\nGood home preferred to hjgh\nwages.     Mtb.   Bond,    509    Cede\nwages.\nSt., Nelson.\n,(2429)\nAGENTS   WANTED\n(12)\nAGENTS WANTED FOR MELSON\nand district for fast-selling automobile accessory, tbe magnetic\nemergency lamp BRITE-LITE. No\ncapital required, price' low. Any\nautomobile owner will buy on\nsight. Write for full particulars\nto British Columbia Sales Company, Victory Block, Vancouver.\n(2451)\nFURNISHED  ROOMS  For  Rent   (15)\nBEDROOMS FOR RENT.    CENTRAL.\nPhone   79I.R. (2360)\nFOR     RENT\u2014FURNISHED     SUITE.\nMrs.  Cove,  607 Corbomabe St.\n.    v2396)\nNEWLY FURNISHED HOUSEKEEP-\nlng rooms close In. Phone\n798L1. (2412)\nPOULTRY AND.EGGJ-*\n(26)\nWE STILL HAVE FOR BALE A\nfew dozen May hatched Leghorn\npullets at one fifty each. Apple-\nton Bros.. R. R. No,  1, Nelson,\n(2322)\nFOR SALE\u2014LARGE ENGLISH LEG-\nhorn hens, one and two years\nold, 60 and 85 cents each. J. M.\nArmstrong, P. O. Box 284 or\nphone   249.X.2. (2441)\nWOMEN   WANTED\nTO SEW FOR US AT HOME. SEW-\nlng machine necessary. Send\nstamp for reply. Dept. 16, Ontario\nNeckwear Co.. 366 West Adelaide.\nToronto. (2378)\nWANTED\u2014TO TALK TO YOUNG\nman who is desirous of entering\nthe Automotive and Aviation Industry as a nr\u00ab career. Experience unnecessary, but must be\nwilling to devote some spare time\nto practical instruction under\nAmerica's foremost engineers. For\npersonal Interview applv giving\nage, occupation and telephone\nnumber.   Box*W447 Dally Newa.\n(2447)\nFOR SALE\u2014PURE BRED BUFF OR-\nplngton pullets and cockerels; also\nJersey Black Giant pullets and\ncockerels. Mrs. A. G. Watson,\nAppledale, B. C. (2448)\nINDIVIDUALLY PEDIGREED WHITE\nLeghorn Cockerels of wonderful\nquality backed by high production\nand large egg ancestry at moderate prices. We are also booking\norders now for 1931 chicks, pullets and hatching eggs.\nAPPLEBY'S POULTRY FARM,\nMission  City,  B.   C.\n(2343)\nA shipment of 40,000 pounds of\npancreas was recently made from a\npacking plant In Buenos Aires, Argentina, to Indianapolis, Ind. From\nthese glands insulin, used In the\nt-spstment   of  diabetes,   is   obtained\nFOR SALE\u2014TEN ROOK \" PULLETS,\nhatched the end of April. $1-60\neach.    Box 782, Nelson.        (2410)\nFOR   SALE\u2014TWELVE   RHODE   IS-\n.  lahd Red pullets.    G. H. Fraser,\nNelson. '(2444)\nHOUSES   WANTED\n120)\nWANTED\u2014FOUR OR FIVE ROOMED\nfurnished house by 1st of month.\nBox  103  City. (2382)\nFOR RENT \u25a0\u2014 LARGE\" SITTING\nroom. Bedroom and * Bathroom\u2014\nHouston\" Block. Apply Hamilton.\nWragge   &   Hamilton; (2409)\n(glj\nHOUSES FOR RENT   ^\nFOR    RENT\u2014FURNISHED HOUSE,\nfully   modern* .'centrally located.\nBox 2404. Dally News. <2404)\nMIBCELLANEUtJS   WANTED       _jg.fr\nWANTED\u2014SECOND   HAND    RANGE\nIn good condition.   Apply Box 781.\n(2436)\nWANTED\u2014GOOD PEDIGREED- AN-\ngora Wooler- Rabbits, state number and prices enclosing specimen of wool, also Pedigree. Ages\nbetween 6 and  15  months,    Re-\nEly   to   Woolsey   Rabbltry,   3482\nethune Ave., victoria, B,  O.\n(3430)\nMISCELLANEOUS   FOR> SALE     (27)\nFOR SALE\u2014WILLIAMS PIANO, $225.\nLouis  Parent,   Castlegar,   B.   C.\n(2380)\nFOR SALE\u2014 BARftELS, KJEGO, SUB-\nlap Jacks, white sugar sacks, Mao-\nDonald jam Co.   i i2074)\nUSED   PIANO,    SPLENDID    CONDI-\ntlon.    Walnut finish.    $220, cash\nor terms.    Mason & Risen, City.\n-.2446)\nSECOND HAND PIPES AND FTT-\ntings for sale. When you are ln\nneed of used Pipes and Fittings\nany size Black or Galvanized,\nwrite to Swartz Pipe Yard, 220\nFirst Ave. East, Vancouver, B. C,\nThe largest exclusive dealers in\nReconditioned Pipes and* Fittings.\n(2340)\n| Coal*Coal<CoaJ I\nfrom n\nI   WILLIAMS   1\nI  TRANSFER   I\n1 '\u25a0\"-   '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0';\u2022'\"'\"\u25a0 I\n|       Will  Guarantee        I\n| Satisfaction\nPHONE 106\nI     ' (2439)  I\nilllillll\u00bb\u00ablpm\u00ab\u2122'l![llllBl!!ll!l!IIII!lll!II!llllBIIIIllllllll|[|||[|IIIIll\nMISCELLANEOUS FOB 8AU\u2014(Co\u00b0>\nHOB    SAIiB '\u2014 CAHAMBS,    GOOD\nsingers. M nets.   Itaaies $1.80.\n. T. H. Qrondln, top of Stan.\nMre,\t\nley  Bt..  Nelson.\nPBOFEKTC   FOB  BALE\n(3440)\n(34)\nPOR SALE\u2014TWO LOTS ON NELSON\nAve., each 30 ft. frontage, No.\n10 and 30. Aspiy J. A. Irving,\nNelson,  B. O. (3867)\nBAKER STBEET PROPERT* BE-\ncently occupied by Ideal Cash\nGrocery. Apply W. W.. Ferguson,\nNelson, B. 0. (3881)\nPOR BALE\u20141600 ACRES SLOCAN\nValley consisting of Improved\ndairy or stock farms. Small\ntracts for fruit and poultry, and\ntimber land prices. reasonable,\nterms to suit purchaser. John\nGraham, Ferry Siding. (3028)\nFOR SALE\u2014BUNGALOW. EXCEL-\nlent location. Three bedrooms,\nhall, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, living room, fireplace, with\nbuilt In fixtures,, furnace, gas.\nEverything In perfect condition.\nApply Corner Stanley, Observatory.\nPhone   807JL. ,    .     *  (2353)\n\u2022jTOBINgW  OPFORIPWITIKH       (1\nFARM PBOPEBTY-Fm H.W'\nFOR SALE-CHOlCB tOTJHO\nby .the quarter; firnfifcT&t\n.   carrots,    cabbage   aST w\nJohn,. Graham,   Perry   \u00a3\nFOB DALE OB EXCBAjagii\nFOR SALE OR EXDHANGE^rwm\nty acres neej KootenayT25'1\nMilton. Mirror Late, b. 0\nFARM AND  PAIR*; MjODPCKii\\\n\u25a0SALMON ABtirtAT AND ALFAm\nWrlto for current prices to al\nwest,   Kaslo.   B.    c.   Knot\nagent for SALMON ARblvi\nESS1   EXCHANGE.     ^^ m\nNUBSEBY FRODUCTB\nRIVERSIDE     NURSERIES.     OS\nFORES, are giving better eaS\ntlon than ever.   Prloe lists\nG.   A.   West.   KaaTor c\nKootenay Lake District.\nJBUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIKECTOBY\nAccounting  Engineers\nCHAS. F. HUNTER\nPubllo Accounting  and Auditor\nMcDonald Jam Bide, Nelson\n(2050)\nArchitects\nCHAS.    MOORE,    C.    B^-ArcLitect,\nLand Surveyor, Revelstoke.   (2060)\nE W. Wlddowson, Bon AU08, Nelson,\nB. C.   Standard western charges.\nAUCTIONEER\nMercantile   auctioneer,   A.   Raymer,\n518'A Hall St.   Bon 1175.      (2298)\nBeauty Parlors\nSociety Beauty Shop.   Gilker Block.\nMra. E. Haigh. Phone 171.    (2061)\nChiropractors\nDR. GRAY, GILKER BLK., NELSON.\n12063)\nDR. MITTUN..-X-RAY, CRANBROOK\n(2062)\nDentists\nDR.   G.   A.   C   WALLEY \u2014 Griffin\nBlock.   X-r\u00bby.   Nelson,   B.   o.\n(2064)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR W. DAWSON \u2014Real Estate. Insurance, Rentals-Next Hlpp*rson\nHardware. Baker St. (2085)\nH. D. DAWSON-iAND 80)1*\nMining and oiva EngfieS,\nA. H. GREEN CO.\u2014CON\nFormerly    Green   Bn\nNelson.   Civil and m\u00b1ui,\neers, B. o.. Alberta and\nLand  Surveyors.\n_PJwtographers\nGEORGE   A.    MEL.\u2122. -\u2122\n?hotographer,   716  Bates\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'  TRANSi\nBAGGAGE, COAL AJJD Woon\nPhone 106 (3s\n^\"L601?    TRANSFER-Coal'\nWood.   Long distance haSir\nWood Working factor;\nLAWSON\u2014Baker St., Carpenter\"-\nJoiner,    sash  and  Hardwood.T.\n  (30|\nFlorists\nGrlzzelle's Greenhouse, Nelson,\nflowers and floral designs.\nNELSON   FLOWER   SHOPPE\nline   cut   flowers   at   all   tln\u00bb\nfloral designs.    Phone 233.  (331\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSE\u2014S3\n342. Cut nowers. Potted Plal\nand Floral Emblems. (anf\n'THE   GUMPS-BROKEN HEARTED\nPOOR  ONO.E-\nME ABSOLUTELY REFUSES\nTO COME To BREAK FAST\nYHIS    MORNING-\nIY WAS, OKE   M1TTINC\nHIM   VMl-TH A M.EC.&E-\nMA\/^AAER.    WHEN\nME  SAW   MER\nV-tVrtRbAY \u2014\nBright Vlormet reds, rust reds In\nslightly deeper cast, ruby Shades\n(blush or rose casta) and the gay\nParay reds are exceedingly good this\n\"Uncle Tom\" Kemp, aged 103, of\nHunting, Tenn., won first prise ln\nfiddling contest.\nCanadian\nWorld's Greatest Travel System\nRound Trip\nExcursion Rates\nUNITED STATES DESTINATIONS\nMinneapolis\n$69.00\nChicago\n$88.10\nSt.  Paul\n60.50\nOmaha\n70.03\nDuluth\n70.00\nNt.  Louis\n06.10\nMilwaukee\n34.60\nKansas City\n85.05\nDesMdnes\n81.50\nSioux  City\n76.18\nTICKETS ON SALE\nNot.  1,  II,  15, 22, 24, 20\nDee.  6,  13, 18, 19, 20\nCANADIAN POINTS\nToronto\nHamilton\nLondon\nOttawa\n|     $123.50      |       Montreal |    $146.50\nI      123.50      !      Quebec I      157.80\n123.50       |       Bt. John, N. a 180.90\nI       140.50       j       Moncton |       180.90\nHalifax  189.20\nTICKETS   ON   BALE   Nov.   1.   8,   18,   22, 24,   29\t\nReturn Limits February 28, Liberal Stop Overs\nTickets,   Sleepers,   Reservations   from   any   Can.   Pac.   Hj.   Agent\nor  write\nJ. S. Carter, Disk Passr. Agent\nNelson, B. C.\n.TILLIE THE TOILER\n^H'S must be im -the Mail\n&\/ tvuo O'CLOCK. - yoo'\/u. Ham?\no aiVE up_youra lunch\nHOUR   fOB ONCE'\nOH, I CAN'T eo\n\"TO  LUNCH   \\M\\TH\nyou, BUD- \"THE\nBO'S* IS  -Bope\nBECAUSE I    U)EMT\nOUT     -~\"~  ~\t\nDURING\n6USIMES\nHoutiS\n4 By Westo-v\nriL.ue    C\/MM'T <SO T0  LUNCH\n \\iM\nTHE NELSOiV DAILY NEWS   , MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1930.\nPagre \"Nine\nMining News\nIANADA-BRITISH\nTRADE FOSTERED\nIfficial Representing    Port\nytiit London Tours Canada\nStimulating Interest\n\u25a0ttALIFAX, n. 3., Oct. 26\u2014Canada\nIs an opportunity or increasing the\nlie of many or her products in\nle London market, ln the oplu-\nli of students of conditions there,\n\u25a0bordlna to a. E. Wildey, Public Re-\n\u25a0jlona Officer of the Port of Lon-\n\u25a0n Authority, who arrived here in\nlo course of a lecture tour in-\nIidlng all the Principal -cities of\nle Dominion as well as St.-John's\nptffoundland.\nj'Tho Port of London Authority\nla sent me here to stimulate the\n\u25a0terest of .Canada in the great\nlarket served hy the Port of Lon-\nIn,\" aald Mr. Wildey. Explaining\n\u25a0unada'a opportunity for greater\nlies In London, he said the popula-\n|>n .there of 8.000,000 who annually\nTught vast quantities of products\nlorn all parts of the world, was\nIsadily Increasing- hecause industry\nlia concentrating more and more\nfound the Loudon: area. Within re-\n[nt years, more than 3,000 factor-\nhad been erected in southern.\nInland, largely served by the port\nLondon, which Mr. Wildey des-\nllbed as the \"World's sales room\nId the commercial stronghold of\nle' British Empire.\nl\"Last year overseas products to\n\u25a0e value of nearly .500,000,000\n\u25a0Unds sterling were sold lii the\nIrt of London. This represents\n|uly 30,000,000 tons of merchand-\nof all descriptions from every\npi; of.the globe. No other city in\nI-j world makes such vast pur-\nl.-isea of overseas products. London\nplies not only in its own local\nIjulation but a large part of the\nIcon's needs. In many cqmmod-\nts, and is also a great ihterna-\n|*nol market' where buyers at-\nto purchase various classes\nJ merchandise In wholesale qiiah-\n|\u00bbe\u00ab. '\nEST POET\n1'Por the handling of this vast\nIde the British Empire can boast\n|i nnest port in the world\u2014London\nport that has helped to build\n!-> Empire and conversely, the port\nlit the Empire was helped to\n\u25a0lid. Last year, ships aggregating\nIr 58,000,000 net registered tons\n\u25a0\u2022ered and left the port.\"\nKondon is also tho financial centre\nT the world. Mr. Wildey said and\nlb year cleared 93 per cent of the\nl896.000.ooo pounds sterling that\n|ised through the Bankers' Clear-\nHouse of Great Britain, He de\nclared that business \u2022 could bo financed more cheaply in London than\nelsewhere and that tnauranoa, rates\ngenerally   were  lower1. there.\n. \"My visit to Canada is aomethlrig\nmoro than just a move to increase\ntrade,\" said 'Mr.'Wildey. \"It is- a.\nmanifestation of good-will from one\nof the most important publlo bodies in the TTnlted Kingdom and sym-\u00ab\nbongos the true Empire spirit- of\nthe Old Country.\" ;,. '\u25a0 z \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0\nLondon' was not Reeling the general' trade depression, aa much \"as\nother cities. \"Relatively, there are\nfewer unemployed ir\u00bb .London than'\nin other parts of England. Although\nIt is possible that bottom has not\nbeen reached in the depression, there\nis confidence . in \u25a0 London that an\nupward trend of affairs is not-far\naway. Iritemational trade never\nslackens, its pace for venMong spells.'\nMoreover, the demands of the in-*\ndividual the world over are greater and keener today thah ever before and wnere there is demand,\nsupply is certain to follow sooner or\nlater.\". ,\nVANCOUVER LIST\nMINES\nBayvlew\t\nBig   Missouri   ..\nCork  Province\nGeorge Copper\nGeorgia River ..\nGrandvlew\nIndependence   .j\t\nInt O. 40. ..._\t\nMorton wollesy \t\nNational   Sliver  \t\nNoble   Five    .\t\nOregon Copper -...\nPremier  ....\t\nPend   Oreille  -..\nPorter  Idaho   . ....\nBeeves McDonald  ....\nOILS\nA. P. Consolidated :..-\nAssociated,  ask  \u2014\nc* and E. Lands \u2014\nCommonwealth   j\u2014\t\nDalhousie    .......\t\nDeveulsh   \u2014\u2014:\t\nBast Crest \u2014\nFabyan  ..._.-\u2014: ..\u00ab\u00ab\nFreehold   : ^\u2014\nHargal'    \t\nHome   OU   Lx.\n.02\n.04%\n.12\n.oate\n.07\n.76\n.70 \u2022\n.10\n.25\nIllinois Alberta .....\t\nMcDougall  Segur  ex   .\nMcDougall Segur now .\nMercury \u2014--\u2022\t\nMcLeod    \t\nMill City  \t\nMayland\t\nOkalta  new  \u00ab...\u2014-\u2014\nRegent     :\t\nRoyallte, ask.j^.\t\nSterling Pacific \t\nVulcan   \u2014;.: \t\nAsk\n.01\n.43\n.0HA\n1.00\n\u202202'A\n.08\n.03\n.04\n.03\n.05 ,\n\u25a007K\n.80\n.73\n.11\n.      .37\n.33\n.     .66. \u25a0\n.     .17\n.:.  .56\n.05\n.\u25a0' .76\n.     .03\n.   ..19\n.     .12 %\n.   2.60\n\u25a0      .08'A\n.,    .12\n.  .'..12\n. I 2i%\n.     .05\n. 1.02\n. .44\n. .05\n.21.00\n. .11\n.     .15\nLieutenant Theodore osterkamp,\none of Germany's, war aces, arrived\nin TJ. S. to study airplane develop-\nnients.\nB. C. Alberta\nOils\nB. C. Alberta Oils, Limits. N.P.L., expect to\nstart drilling in the Frase. Valley before long,\nnear Abbotsford, B. C, wnere they have over\n.5000 AgjefS selected oil leases.\nIhia tWin, which Jieg partly in -Washington\nwid partly in British Columbia, is fast beaming the scene of great activity, already\nsome-seven or eight wells are drilling or,get-\n\u25a0ting ready to drill and it is quite possible there\n'.will be: twice as many wells drilling in the\nnearfirture. .'\u25a0-.'\n,.    ~ .       ... i\nGas-has Deen struck at a very shallow depth\nin different parts of the field and oil should\nbe-reached around 2000 to 2500 feet.\nWe will #ell a limited number of shares in\n\"B. C. ALBERTA OILS\"\nAT HALF CENT PER SHARE\n($5,00 per 1000 shares)\n$10 Buys 2000 Shaves ,\n$25 Buys 5000 Shaves\n$50 Buys 10,000 Shaves\nSend for map and report on field\nTRANSJCANADA HNANCES, LTD.\n227-228 Standard Bank Building\nPhone Sey. 2025 Vancouver, B. C.\nBuilding\nMttterirtl  JohnBurns&Son\nLet us figure your bills on\nBuilding Material.   Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nAPPLE PRIZES\nVICXOliU. B. 0., Oct. 26.-rHigh\nhonors In the Iinperlal' f*rUifc; show\nIn London, have been won by British\nColumbia apples, exhibited by the\nAssociated Growers of the. Okan-\nagiui .valley in competition with\nfruit from all' over Canada, according to cable advices received, by ths\ndepartment. of agriculture today.\nThe British Columbia fruit-' has\nbeen \u25a0 awarded the cup ,presented; by\nthe, agent-general of all Canadian\nprovince-j in London, for the finest\nall-round. exhibit. This trophy was\nwon by Nova Scotia last year.\nThe award Is based on. the total\nmarks received by all classes 'of\nfruit shown by an exhibitor.\nNOitSlUMPS\n60 AT TORONTO\n1 TORONTO, Ont., Oct. 26.\u2014Price\nmovement on the Standard mining\nexchange during'the two-hour Saturday session was firmer than for\nsomo months pest. International\nNickel fell 60c to $18.00, while\nNordon, Manitoba Basin and Abana\neach dropped a point.\nNoranda was well featured in,\ntrading and showed a good price\ngain, moving' up 60c to $15.35,\nWalt*.- Ackerman - Montgomery ao>\nvanoed 10 points to $2.23, and, Falconbrldge .a like amount to $1.45,\nwhile Sherrit Gordon recovered eight\npoints to close at 08c.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nBank   of   Commerce   ,..._., 236\nDominion   Bank     225\nImperial  Bank  :  232\nBank  ot  Montreal\nBank   of   Nova 'Scotia  ....\nRoyal   Bank   -...' ~. \u2014\nBank of Toronto  \u201e..'.._\nAbitlbl Power & Paper ....\nAsbestos'  Corporation \t\nAtlantic  Sugar  \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian  T L & Power\nBrit.   American   Oil \t\nBromptorp.  Paper  ......._ _\nCanada Bronze\n.... 317\n... 287\n.... 235\n....     U4\n....       %\n....      5\n..    147%\n....    28%\n....    XW\n....    10\n.34\n14\nCan.' car  &  Foundry   t-,..\nCan.    Cement    .....\" ~\u2014\t\nCan. Cement, pfd    92\nCan.   Converters    ,  .   64\nCan.   Industrial   Alcohol       2Vi\nCan.    cottons    \u201e_    50\nOan.  Power         6%\nCan.    Steamship   Lines    .\u00a3.....     8*%\nCons.  Mining  and  Smelting    134\nDominion    Bridge        56^\nDominion Glass     100^\nDom Bteel' Corp \t\n>>m.    Textile    -^;\n\u25a0A.  P.  Grain   \t\nHlUcrest  Colliers \t\n,ake of the Woods ....\nMassey Harris\t\nMontreal   Power\nMont.  Telegraph\n35\n75\n60\n26 %\n13 M,\n56\n48\nMontreal Tramways    175\nNational    Breweries        26&\nNational  Steel Car     33\nOgilvle Milling   _ 230\nOntario Steel Products     18,\nOttawa L. H. & Power     08'\nPenmans,  Ltd  \t\nPower   Corp.   .. . \t\nPrice   Bros.    \u201e__.\t\nQuebec   Power    \u2014\t\nShawlnijgan    \t\nSo.  Canada  Power \t\nSteel  of  Canada  \t\nSt. Lawrence Flour Mills\nWabasso Cotton\t\nWestern   Grocers    \t\nWestern   Grocers   _..\nWinnipeg   Railway\n53%\n45\n47\u00bbA\n63\n3ft\n36\nIB\n18\n20\nWinnipeg Railway pfd    95\nAPPLE INDUSTRY SURVEY\nAn economic survey of conditions\nin the apple industry throughout\nthe Dominion has been commenced at the request of the fruit growers' associations of Nova Scotia,\nQuebeo, Ontario, and British Columbia, as w-ell as that of the Horticultural Council. The survey, will Include a complete _study of orchard\nmanagement, marketing methods,\nconsumer demand, and other related factors affecting the industry.\nIts purpose is to provide reliable\ninformation, and to Indicate means\nfor a general improvement of the Industry.\nLOGAN & BRYAN\nGRAIN\nSTOCKS,  BONDS,   COTTON\nMEMBERS:\nNew York, Montreal and Vancouver\nSf.w'k   Excrmnge.s  Chicago   Board  of\nTrade,   Winnipeg  Grain   Exchange\nand   other   trading  exchanges.\nPRIVATE WIRE\nOFFICES:\nVancouver, Spokane and Seattle\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Co. oE Canada, Ltd.\nOffice, smelting end rteflntag Department\n' TRAlli,. BRITISH COLOMBIA\nSMELTERS and REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ore\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAC, TRAIL\nPETTER\nVertical    Stationary\nEngine\nThis engine as Illustrated\nis now on display In our\nshow room**, and we Invite you to come ln and\nInspect It.\nDistributors for a  C.\nBJC..E90IPMENT-\nGO, LTD.\nB\u00abl nowe St,      814 Baker St.\nVancouver Nelion\nFREE FREIGHT\nP6LICYT0AID\nCATTLE RAISER\nRADISHES AND\nYOUNG ONIONS\nSEI1_L0CALLY\nMeat in Large Quantities at\n,   Saturday Market; Eggs\n.     40c and 60c\nMajor\": the' feonouratole Robert}\nftjfelg,- Federal -Minister of Agriculture, has authorised a free freight\npolicy which is expected to do much.\nto build up- 'the beef industry In\nWestern; Canada.   .\nUnder' the new policy, which'Is-\neffective from October 15, heifers\nnot over 24 months old and of approved type and quality win. be returned from stccKyarde west ol\nPort, William to country points In\nthe same area frcs of freight charge\nes to farmers or their properly authorized agents, where such stock Is\nto be-'used for breeding purposes. .\nUp- to the present time 26 per\n.cent of the freight charges on such\nstocj^ has been-absorbed by the railway companies. Under the new policy the Live Stock Branch wid absorb the other .75 per cenx of\nfreight charges,\nFarmers and. livestock men desiring to benefit under the policy ere\nrequired to make application to\nthe authorized representative of the\nDominion Live Stock Branch at the\nnearest stockyard. They will.also be\nrequired 'to mako a declaration to\nthe effect that the stock will be\nused Tor breeding purposes  only.\nShipments must comprise carlots\nof hot less thiah, 20 heifers under\n24' months of age and, as far as\npracticable, all heifers included in a\ncarlot' must be of the same type\nand breed. .\nEach shipment' Is subject to inspection by the authorized agent of\nthe Dominion Live Stock ^ranch ot\nthe stockyard from which It Is\nmade, who will Issue a certificate\nonly to;shlpmente which qualify as\nto desirability of type and quality,\nThS' certificate of the Federal\nLive Stock agent will finable the\nshlppef to bill out his car free of\nall freight charges, and automatically entitle him to the 25 per\ncent railway rebate, and Is the railways authority for collecting the re-\nrnaipder of the \u25a0 frieght 'duvet from\nthe Dominion Live Stock Branch.\nC. PR. GAINS ON\nTORONTO MARKET\nTORONTO, Ont, Oct. 26.\u2014By In-\ndulglng In a session of very slow\ntrading, -with only 56 Issues coming\nout In a volume of 11,880 shares,\nthe Toronto stock exchange avoided\nrecessions.\nBrazilian Traction led with an advance of }i to close at 2814. Power\nIssues and C. P. R. alone went up\nln the utility groupi however.\nO. P. R. gained !4 to 43, Canada\nPower lii to 7 and Power Corporation 1 to 34. Bell Telephone was\noff H to 147 and Union Natural\nQas lost 1,4  to 21Vi.\nOils continued slowly upward.\nBritish American was up Hi to 151,4\nnnd Imperial gained Y* to 17. International Petroleum was down\nVi to 15.\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nHigh Low Close\nAllegheny        12% 11% 13\nAllied Chemical  218% 213 213VS\nAndes    ._    16 15% 16\nAm  Can    131% 118 118K\nAm   For   Power    44 42% 4254\nAm   Smelt   Ref     54% 64 54\nAm .Telephone    200V4 190 199\nAm   Tobacco  .... 117% 115 115V4\ncAnadonda        35% 34 34\nAtchison     203% 109 199\nBaldwin        26% 26 26\nB Is O     82% 8114 8214\nBen   Aviation   ..   18% 1814 18%\nBeth Steel      31% 30 31%\nO   P        43% 43% 42%\nOerro  de  Pasco    32% 31% 31%\nChes    &    Ohio     4414 4314 43%\nChrysler       17% 17% 1714\nCon   Gas   N   Y     99% 97% 98\nCorn   products     81% 8014 80%\nC   Wright   pfd    \u2014 \u2014 6\nDupoijfc        98% 96 96%\nEast   Kodak   .... 19214 189 180\nErie        36 32% 33%\nFord English ....   \u2014 \u2014 16%\nFoid  of  Canada \u2014 \u2014 20 Vi\nFirst Nat Stores   43% 42% 42%\nFreeport   Texas    36% 35% 35%\nQen   Motors   ....   37% 36% 36%\nOn   Elec       54% 52% 5314\nOen    Foods    ....   5214 51% 52\nGold   Dust   ......   34% 33% 33%\nOranby    12% \u2014 12%\nO   W  Sugar   .... ,16 \u2014 16\nHowe   Sound   ...-. '24 \u2014 24\nHudson   Motor     22% 23% 22%\nIns   Copper    ...     0          8 8\nInter   R   Trans    \u2014 '\u2014 2014\nInter   Nickel   ....   18% 17% 18%\nInter   Tel   Tel     31% 30 30%\nKelly   Spring           2 \u2014 2%\nKen   Copper   ....   26% 25% 25%\nKrocgg   Ss   Toll    '25 24% 24%\nMack   Truck   ....   45 44% 45\nNat Dairy Prod    44% 44% 44%\nNash  Motors  ....   30 2914 29%\ntt P Ss L     \u2014 \u2014 35%\nPacific  G   &   L    60 li 60% 50%\nPack  Motors  ....     9%       9% 0%\nPenn  R R      66% 6614 66%\nPhillips   Pete   ..   23% 22% 22%\nRadio   Corp    ....   23% 22% 22%\nRadio K Orp  ..   23% 21% i 22\nRem   Rand       19% 10 19\nR   I     73i 78V4 72%\nSafeway   stores    55% 60% 50%\ntt- I   ft   S   P     72% 72% 72V4\nhell union OU    10% 10% 10%\nam. con     14% H 14\n8  Cal  Edison  ..   51 61 51\n8   P     104% \u2014 , 104%\nStand   Oil   Cal     53% 61% 61%\nStand   Oil   Ind   \u2014 \u2014    ... 40\nStand  Oil  N J    55% \u25a0 54 65\nStew   Warner....    31 1914 19%\nStudebaker     22 21% 31\nTexas   Corp   .. ..   40% 4014 40%\nTexas   G   Sul...     54% 68% 63%\nUnion   Carbide     65% 63% 64%\nUnion   OU   Cal    29% 28% 39%\nTJ  P     196% -i- 196%\nUnion   Aircraft    \u2014 \u2014 36%\nU S Rubber ....   1314 13% 13%\nU   S  Steol     163% 150% 151%\nWest Eleo     Ill 107% 108%\nYellow Truck....    11% 11 11%\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Oct. 36.\u2014\nFlour unchanged. Shipments 42,252.\nBran unchanged.\nWheat: No. 1 northern 77% to\nS3%- No. 1. red durum 69% to 70%;\nttooumlx-r 74%; March 77%: May\n79%.'    \u25a0\nCorn:    Mo. 3 yellow 75 to 76.\nOats;    No. 3 white 32 to 32%.\nFlax!    No.  J   1.70 to  1.76.\nA   plpestem   cleaner   will   remove\nall the sediment from the Iced tea\nslppers.\nFresh vegetables which were off\nthe Nelson market list a week ago,\nwere back osi the list Saturday in\nsmall quantities -and the producers\nstated that they were grown ln the\nopen. Radishes selling at five cents\na.bunch, young onions five cents a\nbunch and ' spinach at 10 centa a\nbunch were offered. .\n\u00bbMeat -was m the same large\nquantity and variety as on the previous week. Rabbit was off the\nlist,' but pork heads sold at 35\nand 30 cents.\nIn . the flower line asters were\nback on the list selling at 16 cents\na dozen. Cyclamen, begonias, as-\nphodelus plants and hyacinth bulbs\nwere offered for the first time.\nPrices were:\nVEGETABLES\nCarrots, per 6 lbs.  25\nCabbage,  per lb.      ,05\nCelery, per bunch \u2014,     .10\nBeets, per lb  .06\nParsnips, per lb. .\u00ab    .ofl\nPotatoes, per 8 lbs. \u2014 .28\nParsley, per bunch .ofi\nPeppers,   green         .15\nPeppers, red, three for     .10\nPumpkin,' per, lb .\u201e     .04\nOnions, per lb.      .00\nOnions, per bunch ,05\nLettuce, per.head t' .10\nSage, per bunch ^..    .06\nEgg plant,  each -_.    .10\nTomatoes,' hot house, per lb.     .15\nVegetable marrow, per ib.      .04.\nSquash,   per   lb       .04\nLeek,  per bunoh ...      .06\nSplnsch,   per   bunch      .10\nEndives, per head : ..10\nRadishes, per bunch  .-.      .05\nFRUITS\nApples,   Alexanders       1.00\nApples, Gravensteln   '1.60\nApples,   Macintosh        1.2s\nApples,   Ribston        1.60\nApples, Jonathan  _.,...._...   1.75\nApples,   Snow    ...-     1.25\nPrimes, Italian, per basket ..     .25\nCitron,   per   lb.   ~ 04\nDried prunes, per lb 10\nGrapes,  par lb.    .-   .ifl\nPOULTRY,   AND   EGGS\nEggs,   firsts     \u201e..     .40\nEggs,   extras     60\nChicken, per lb.   .25 end     .30\nCUT FLOWERS, POT PLANTS\nAND BULBS\nChrysanthemums    - 30\nChristmas Cherry, potted, up\nfrom   .-.._   \u2014    .75\nPrimulas, potted, up from -..     .60\nFerns   ... .60 -to   1.75\nDaffodil  bulbs, per  doz.  ....   1.00\nHyacinth   bulbs,   each    \u201e     ,20\nBegonias, potted, from  26\nCyclamen, from     1,00\nAsphodelus, potted, from ....   1.26\nAsters, per doz. ......  18\nMEATS\nLiver, beefs, per lb.       .20\nLiver, veal, per lb.       .30\nPork, per Ib \u2014  .25 to     .30\nBeef,  per lb.     .16 to     JO\nLamb, per lb. ...- 26 to     JO\nHam, per lb __ .26 and     .36\nMeat loaf, per lb       .25\nPork head, per lb  .25 and     .30\nAPIARY   PRODUCTS\nHdney, per Jar   JO and     .80\nWINNIPEG WHEAT\nCLOSES LOWER\nWINrilPEO. Oct. 28\u2014After five\nday's of dull trading, the wheat market in the first how*, Saturday displayed signs of moving upward but\nthe threatened advance waa quickly\nchecked and prices ended the day\n% cent to 1\\4 cents lower. Export\nbuying was the best for some time\nbut hedging sales entered the pit In\nthe final hour and easiness at Chicago combined to weaken valu*a.\nCash wheat and coarse grains\nwere dull and except for some export buying ln barley there, markets were practically neglected\nthroughout, with prices unchanged.\nClosing figures in the wheat futures\nwere: October 71%; December 72*^\nand  May   78   cents.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAbana   \t\nAJax       .\nAmulet    \t\nA.  P.  Consolidated ..-\t\nAssociated     ,\t\nBaltic   011    \t\nBedford    ...- \t\nBarry Holllnger \t\nBig   Missouri   \t\nC. and E. Lands  \u2014\t\nDome    \u2014  .-\t\nDalhousie      -....'\u2014\nFalconbrldge   Nickel -..   1.40\nHome   Oil -    2.45\nHowey         .19\nHolllnger    - _    6.75\nHudson   Bay    -     5.00\nInternational   Nickel     17.75\nLake    Show     - 21.75\n1.52\n.28\n.37\n.25\n.13\n.12\n\u2022081',\n. 41\n.63\n3.35\nJS1\nKlrkland   Lake   \t\nKootenay   Florence\nMacassa    -\t\nMandy    - \t\nMalartic     \u2014\nMcDougall    \t\nMclntyle\nMining Corporation\nMayland     t.\t\nNewbec  \t\nNew Imperial OU -..\nNlplsslng    \u2014\nNoranda  \t\nPend   Oreille     -.\nPremier   Gold    \t\nSherrit Gordon  -\nSudbury Basin \t\nSterling   Paclflo   .\u2014\nSlscoe    \t\nStadacona\n.43\n\u202201%\n.06\n. .12\n.02\n.12\n18.00\n     1.03\n       .05\n 16.90\n    1.00\n\u2014  16.00\n -     .60\n.73\n.05\n.30\n.02%\nThompson Oadallao  02\nVlpond     \u2014- -       -93\nVentures    ,      .38\nWright   Hargreaves       1.75\nNOvTlcOTIA COMES IN\nIn conformity with ths expressed\nrequest of the Nova Scotia Fruit\nGrowers Association the Export Fruit\nRegulations of the Dominion Fruit\nAct are operative in Nova Scotia\nthis year-for the first time. The\nDominion Fruit Branch lost no time\nIn organizing the apple producing\ndistricts of the province Into Inspection districts and ln placing a corps\nof competent Inspectors , on the\nground for the servicing of the re\nqulrementa of the export trade with\nrespect to Inspection. All apples go-\nIng into the export market, from\nNova Scotia this yoar will be gov'\nornment Inspected,'and wlli go forward with the certlflcat\" of the fed'\neral inspection service. The Bame In\nBPectlon service Ib ' available to buy\nera or BhlppeTS ln the domestic\nmarket where lnap--\"\u2014i Is \u00ab\u25a0\nquested. yt\nNEW WOODEN DOOR\nEXHALES ITS OWN\nFIRE RESISTANCE\nChemical   Preparation   Producing on the Skin of\nthe Wood '\nNEW YOKE, Oot. 20,\u2014A safety\nwood which ~ exhales Its own fire\nextinguisher was exhibited here recently by Professor Albin H. Beyer\nof the Columbia university testing\nlaboratories.\nA two-Inch thick door of the\nwood held book smofee and flames\nsix times as long as did a metal-\noovered door. The protective moisture is a secret chemical preparation, Dr. Beyer explained,, which \\a\nproduced right on the skin of the\nwood. It is like glue and Is made\nby the touch of the flames combining with chemicals soaked Into the\nwood. \u25a0    -.    \u25a0'   \u25a0\nThe wet akin retards fire; which,\nhowever, eats it off slowly, leaving\na charred black film. As soon as\nthis top akin Is eaten through, a\nnew layer forms underneath because the chemicals lmptregnate\nthe wood completely. Only the\ntopmost layers of molecules, said\nProfessor Beyer, are affected at any\none moment. They explode at\ntouch of the flares, throwing out\ntiny sprays.\nMETAL  GOES  FIRST\nThe test was conducted for Honry\nKlein, manufacturer, who Invented\nthe. process. Tlie metal-covered\nand the wooden' doors wen*).,set In the\nsides of a large furnace, the flames\nlicking their interior faces.\nThe metal-covered door quickly\nbecame untouchably hot, passing\n100 degrees ln about three minutes\nand passing tha boiling -point of\nwater in about 16 minutes. The\nwooden dodr's exterior reached 100\ndegrees after 30 minutes and 160\ndegrees at about 46 minutes. It\ndid not rise much above 200 until\nnear the moment of burning\nthrough. In the metal covered\ndoor after 10 minutes Bmoke poured\nthrough the Joints ln heavy clouds\nand flames appeared. The wooden\ndoor held back both smoke and\nflames for a full hour after it was\nless than one-eighth of an inch\nInch thick.\nProfessor Beyer said the duration\nof fire resistance depends partly\non the amount of chemical absorbed, and that within one to two\nhours, resistance to flames may be\nfixed quite accurately in advance\nby gauging the amount. He said\nthe door used today came from\nwood processed for about four and\na half months, first, by air drying, then kiln drying, soaking and\nfinally air drying.\nMR. AND MRS. CAMERON NOW RETURN\nTO CRANBROOK AFTER MOTOR TRIP TO\nOLD HOMES IN NOVA SCOTIA, ONTARIO\nOttawa Organizes\nBig Test Shipment\nof Western Cattle\nThe Dccolnlon Department of Ag-\nrleuVture through Its livestock\nbranch has completed arrangements\nfor a test shipment of Western\nrange  cattle  direct   to   the  British\nThe shipment has been organized\nwith -representative ranchers '.and\nbreeders In Western Canada for the\npurpose of determining tlie suitability of range cattle for tlie British\nmarket n tho ship load of 380 head\nwill be an approximately equal\nnumber of two-year-old, three-year-\nold and four-year-old beef cattle,\nand both fat and store cattle types\nwill be Included.\nThe cattle will go forward from\nMontreal on or about October 30.\non the SS \"Manchester Citizen\" to\nManchester, and arrangements have\nbeen made for tt well-known firm\nof auctioneers to handle the shipment on arrival. At the same time\nspecial attention is being given to\nensuing the attendance at the Manchester auction of aa many buyers\nof both flit ana store cattle as\nmay be possible.\nSpecial care Is being taken to\nIdentify the cattle going forward In\nthis shipment, and each animal\nwill bear a letter \"C\" branded on\nthe left cheek before embarkation.\nA veterinary Inspector will travel\nwith the Cattle, and It Is expected\nthat somo of the ranchers who supply the cattle may accompany the\nshipment. This will afford then an\nopportunity of becoming thoroughly\nacquainted with transportation\nmethods, and the requirementa and\noperations of one of the leading\nBritish cattle markets.\nTlie organization of tills test shipment has already Induced definite\nInquiries from ao-me of the larger\nstockmen of the West, who may follow tills shipment with substantial\nshipments on their own responsibility before the close of the shipping season. ,,\nFor many years the outlet for\nWestern beef and range cattle hits\nbeen southward to the United\nStates, but with the outlet now\nclosed tho western stockmen have\nto find a new outlet.\nThis Is the first occasion on which\nwestern range cattle have been whipped direct to the British market,\nand it will provide an opportunity\nto determine their relative worth\nalongside of Irish and other cattle\ncoming onto that market, it will\nalso determine the suitability of the\nvarious types and age groups for\nthe British fat cattle and store cattle market.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Men., Oct. 2a.\u2014Grain\nquotations:\nOpen High Low Cloeo\nWheat:\nOct    13 73 Vi 71U     71%\nNot;       73'       73 '4 71 Vi     71%\nD\u00ab    73 73 Vi 73 Ij,      72%\nMay        70 7BVi 77%     78\nOats:\nOct.        33%     33% 31%     33\nDec   8IV4     81',4 81 31 Vi\nMay         35 35 3414      34%\nBarley:\nOct.      '37%     27% ' 38 281\/,\nDec'       28V,      28% 37 37%\nMay    ......   33%     33% 33Vi     33\n! Flas:\nOct  126 126 125% 125%\nDec.   \u2014.. 125% 125% 124 124\nMay    ..._ 133 133 130 130   '\n***'\u25a0\nOot.   '    \u2014        \u2014    '   \u2014        38\nDeo.   ......   38%      88%      87%      37',f,\nMay       44  '     44%     43%      48%\nCash prices:\nWheat: No. 1 hanl 71%; No. 1\nnorthern 71%; No. 2 northern 68%;\nNo. ,3 northern 66%; No. 4. 60%;\nNo. 5 69%; NO. 6 40%; feed 30%;\ntnirlr 7wfil ^creentnps ref ton 82.\n' \u2022   METAL SiARKETS\nNEW YORK, Oct. 36\u2014Metals nominally  unchanged.\nAt London: Metals nominally\nunchanged. ,\nCOAST DAIRIES IN\n$5,000,000 MERGER\nVANCOUVER, B. C Oct. 26.\u2014The\nVancouver Sun publishes the following story ln lte news columns:\n\"A 9fi,000,o6o merger of dairy\ninterests on the lower mainland,\nto be' known as Associated Dairies\nUd., has been completed, It Is understood, and agreement signed by\nthe principals yesterday..\n\"Companies entering the merger,\nit is understood, -include Fraser\nValley Milk Producers' association,\nwhich controls'80 per-cent of the\nmilk buslneea in Greater Vancouver, Steves Dairy, Royal Dairy,\nCity Dairy, Meadow Dairy, United\nDairy and several other dairies.\n\"A five-year agreement haa been\nentered into by all signatories to\nthe document not to raise the price\nof milk during that period, it is\nunderstood.\n\"The Idea of the merger Is to\nkeep down the cost of distribution\nof milk to householders.\"\nWHITING PULLET\nLAYS HER 351st.\nEGG AT AGASSIZ\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNEW YOBK Oct. aOz-Sterltog exchange irregular at SiM 11-18 for\n60-\u00abtay hills end at 84.86 18-16 for\ndemand, .\nForeign bar silver\u2014\u00ab8%c.\n, Canadian dollar*\u2014\u00bb-64c premium.\nInVMM\u20143.93%c.\nMarks\u201433430.\nKronen\u201426.83 V4o.\nLire\u2014i.23%c.\nNelson approximate sterling exchange mto\u2014W.87 18-16.\nWHEAT CLOSES AT\nDAY'S LOW MARK\nVANCOUVER. B. 0., Oct. I2fi.\u2014\nBritish poul'trynwn Iialled another\nworld champion yesterday when\nWhite Leghorn pullet number five,\nowned by W. Whiting of Port Kells,\nlaid her BSIflt egg in 350 days.!\nWith six days to go to complete j\nthe full 365 days she may se^t a!\nyear's record that may not be\nbeaten for a decade.\nA. Pennington of Agasslz is awaiting another record for heavy birds,\nhis Barred Rock pullet number six\nhaving laid 329 eggs in 359 days.\nThe birds are completing a year's\ntest    under    trap    nesting    regula-\n-.By John P. Boughan)\n(Associated Press -market editor)\nCHICAGO. Oct. 26^-Porecaats of\na huge enlargement of wheat production this season in Argentina\nand Australia pulled grain values\ndownward yesterday regardless of\nArgentine report* of rust. Late\ndespatches from Roearlo, Argentine,\ntold of rust threatening the wheat\ncrop ln the province of Cordoba,\nbut omitted any assertion ot actual\ndamage ye*. On the other hand,\ntentative eettmates were ctureirt\nthat Argentina and Australia together soon would havo a combined\nexportable wheat surplus of 28o,000>\n000 bushels, an increase of 145,000,-\n000 bushels over the part aeaeon'a\nshipments.\nClosing quotations on wheart were\nweak at virtually the day's bottom\nlevel, Y4 to 1-Ho a bushel lower than\nyesterday's finish., Corn ol-^iedJJJ-\nto l&o down, oats H to Ho on.\nand    provisions    v \\  \u2022:   ,iVo*n    \u2022\"->\n-setback to a rise of 50,\nCRACKED PLASTEE\nBefore giving the kitchen -walli\ntheir fall coat of paint, be \u25a0\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\nthat every crack and crevice \u00bb\nfilled smoothly with plaster. Tbei*\nis a mending plaster on the xnarlDrt\nnow for these small Jobs, not unlike plaster of parla. except it take*\nh,\u201e.    unun    .,\u25a0\u25a0,  -   longsr to harden  and  Is therefor.\ntiona at Agaaslz experimental iarm.more easily applied by the amawur.^\nCovered 11,000  Miles in 10\nWeeks Jaunt  Across\nContinent\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Oct. 26\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. W. F. Cameron returned\non Thursday evening from tho\nlongest trip ever taken by a citizen of Cranbrook. the Jaunt occupying somo ten weeks and covering\n11,000 mllea. The long\u00abat stays on\nthe trip wero ln Minneapolis, whero\n\\wo weeks was spent, ln Boston\nwhere they remained for two wseks\nand ln Nova Scotia from which\nprovince Mr. Cameron came to British  Columbia  at an early age.\nMr. Cameron found his natlvo\nprovlnco strangely shrunken. After\nthe distances motorists of Cranbrook\ndrive for pleasure\u201480 miles to Fairmont for a swim, 200 miles to Spokane for a show\u2014It seemed, ho\nstated, that It took only a few\nminutes to drive across his native\nNova Scotia.\nCO   MILES   BY   BOAT\nOn the way east they reached\nMinneapolis by way of tho Roosevelt\nhighway, visiting Haver, Devils Lake,\nFargo and Great Falls. From Minneapolis they proceeded to St, Michigan    where    they    took    the    boat\nacross Lake Michigan, a distance of\n60 miles. They entered Canada hy,\nway of Barnla, visiting London and\nattending the Empire games in Hamilton. From Hamilton they visited\nNiagara and crossed again into the\nUnited States. Rochester, Syracuse.\nAlbany and Boston were then visited\nand the entry made Into the marl-\ntlmcs after a visit to Portland.\nSalt Springs, Novft Scotia, Mr.\nCameron's native town was visited\nalso Halifax and every county of\nthe province. On the return trip\nthey came hy way of St. Johns\nto Quebec and from there on to\nMontreal. Brockvlllc and Toronto,\nwhere a few days were spent. Several of the bly fairs in the environs\nof Toronto wore visited and a trip\nmade to Owen Sound and the\nGeorgian  Bay  regions.\nMTS. Cameron's birthplace Morpeth, Ont., was visited, also Mr.\nMartin, father of Mrs. C. Thompson,\nMies Martin, and the Martin brothers of this city. A day or eo was\nalso spent with the parents of C.\nThompson and with the parents of\nW. Paterson, Mr. and Mrs. Cameron's\nson-in-lnw.\nThe return trip across the western\nprairies was made via the bide trail,\ncoming into Canada and home via\nLethbridge aud Crow's Neat.\nmFChrislm^s\nCANADIAN PACIFIC STEAMSHIP'S'\nSAILINGS\nFROM MONTREAL-QUEBEC\nNov, 26  -  Duchess of Bedford\n'To'aififiylow-Belfast-Llverpool\nN0y\\ 28   .._  \u25a0\u2014 Montcalm\nTo  Cherbourg-Southampton\nFROM SAINT JOHN\ntec. 6     Duclieas ot  York\nTo   Glasclow-Blcfaat-Llverpool\nDec. 12 _ _  Duchess of Richmond\nTo GlaBBOw-EolIaat-Llvcrpool\nDec, 13   .._       Montclare\nTo Chprboure-SouUiampton\nDec, is   _ \u201e :  Duohes c.t Atholl\nTo GltifiKow-Belfast-Llverpool\nREDUCED ROUND.TRIP RATES\nCABIN, TOURIST, THIRD CLASS\nBerth reservations can now bo made. Ask for\npassport information and through rates of fare,\none way or return. Details and literature from any\nagent,  or write:\nJ. S. CARTER\nDISTRICT PASSENGER AGENT\nNelson, B. C.\nLoose Leaf\nLedgers\nAre you in need of Loose Leaf Ledgers? If\nso, let us know your want? ... we can fill them\nimmediately.\nWe carry in stock all the standard sizes. II'\nyour size is hot in stock we can make them, as\nwith our up-to-date bindery we are able to manufacture any kind or size of ledger.\nGive us a call, or, if out of town, write us.\nThe Nelson Daily Nev*\/s\nJob Department\nPHONE 144 NELSON, B. C.\n Page Ten\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS    * MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1930.\nfor a Snappy, Rappy\nHallowe'en\nOur   masks,   nolsemoiera,   paper\ncostumes and hats will help\n,<\u2022 supply   the   fun,\nMann-RutherEord\nCo.\nI Hunter Electric\n& Plumbing\nPlumbing, Sewer Pipes,\nFittings and Fixtures.\nElectric'Conduit, Fitting, Wire and\nFixtures.\nPhone 530\nPERSONAL\nAPPEARANCE\nA frowning expression ' Is a\nbad business asset, and the first\nimpressions are usually lasting.\nIf your mirror reveals the fact\nthat you are cultivating wrinkles,\nyou may be able to trace tbe\noause to your close work, whloh\nprobably  demands great  eye\nconcentration.\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nOptometrist   and   Optician\nExpert Optical Service\nVIC.   GRAVES\nMaster Plumber\n18   Years   Practical   Experience\nNELSON,   B.   C.\nP. O. Box 217   Phone 315\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Laughton R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST    and    OPTICIAN\nRoom 3 \u2014 Griffin Block\nModern Equipment Makes Flat Rate Possible\nYOUR\nProtection\nIf your car is repaired in our shop you are\ninformed of the exact cost of the work before it\nis undertaken. This system eliminates many misunderstandings over labor charges after the work\nis completed.\nOur mechanics are paid a fair percentage of the\nlabor charge and are required to personally guarantee\ntheir work.\nThis system Is therefore an advantage to both mechanic and customer. A good workman can make more\nmoney at his work and the customer' is assured that\nno Incompetent man is charging up hours against\nhis Job.\nFlat rate gives you a guaranteed Job in the shortest\ntlme possible, coupled with first class material and a\nservice  policy   which   you   will   appreciate.\nNELSON TRANSFER CO.\nPHONE 35\nIRVING'S\nYeast-Vite Tonic Tablets\nTHE LIGHTNING PICK-ME-UP\nA new and\nwonderful\ntreatment of\nPURE YEAST\nVITAMINS,\n' ETC.\nMADE   IN\nENGLAND\nRelieves\nHeadaches,\nNeuralgia,\nIndigestion\nAcidity,\nDepression\nColds, Etc.\nPRICE 50c  (20 TABLETS)\nSpecial Agents\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's Dispensing,Chemists\nVoters'- List Closes\nOctober 31st\nAT 5 P. M. ,\nThe Voters' List for householders and licensees\nfor the City of Nelson closes on Friday, Oriober\n31st. In order to accommodate citizens I will be\nat my office on the evening of October 30th, from\n7 to 9 p. m., for the purpose of receiving the\ndeclarations of those who are entitled to be put on\nthe civic Voters' List for the year 1931.\nW.B. WASSON\nCity Ckrk\n, 9m\nAre Your Floors Ready\ntor Winter!\nWe Have a Full Line of Floor Finishing\nSupplies.\nD. B. Lusta Wax Johnson's  Dancing Wax\nDustbane Floor Johnson's Wood Filler\nJohnson^Floor Wax       Johnson's Kleen Floor\n(Liquid and Paste) Assorted Mops, Etc.\nWe Also Have a Johi.30n's Electric Polisher\nand Sander for Rent at Reasonable Rates.\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCO., LTD.\nWHOLESALE   - Nelson, B. C. -   RETAIL\nMASTERY THEORY\nOF TEACHING IS'\nTOLD TEACHERS\nCHOSEN\nPrincipal King of Vancouver\nElucidates Morrison\nFormula\nSAYS ITS INFLUENCE\nWILL   BE   PROFOUND\nAims at    Pupil    Mastering\nFundamental, Not\nGetting Marks\nA new . formula of teaching for\nedmnced grades waa presented at\nthe Kootenay Boundary teachers*\nconvention here Saturday morning,\nwhen Major J. H. King, principal\nof the Kitsllano high and junior\nschools. In an address that was one\nof tho outstanding features of the\nentire convention, elucidated \"The\nMastery Concept in Secondary Education,\"\nThis theory was first presented to\nthe world five years ago by Prof.\nMorrison of the University of Chicago, but already. Principal King\ndeclared. It had profoundly Influenced teaching ln all parts of the\nUnited States, and It was bound to\nhave a similar Influence ln Canada.\nIn Brlttsh Columbia, now that\nthere was a four-year high school\ncourse, It would be ' possible to\nabandon some of the old methods\nof drive and cram that were Inseparable from the system that\nsought to prepare youth to undertake thfl problem of life within\nthree years of leaving the public\nschool. The idea hitherto had been\nto \"get the pupil through.\"\nBEHAVIOR   ALTERS '\nLearning, according to Prof. Mor-\nlson's definition, consisted of \"a\nseries of adaptations.\" After learning something, one's subsequent behavior was affected. Principal King\nillustrated this point with the case\nof a person who learned to swim.\nAfter learning how to swim, one\nbehaved differently In that environment, and the art of swimming,\nonce learned, could not be forgotten. But there was a stage when\nthe learner only floundered, and\nhad to give his swimming his concentrated attention. At a later stage.\nwhen he was a swimmer, he could\nthink of other things while swimming. Another familiar case was\nthat of the car driver learning to\nshift gears\u2014after a time, the action\nwas automatic and required no\nattention to the details.\nIN   PRIMARY   SCHOOLS\nIn primary education, the speaker\npointed out, the objectives were\ndefinite and four ln number. There\nwas a read lng objective, and the\nchild learning to read was obliged\nat first to give his whole attention\nto the mechanics of reading\u2014what\nthis letter was, or that word. At a\nlater stage, the mechanics mastered,\nhis mind gave Itself to the thought\nconveyed by the text. The writing\nobjective, the arithmetical or computing objective, and the social .or\ncharacter-build lng objective rounded\nout the  scope   In   the  early  grades.\nAt the \\iniverslty stage, the student used reference books and employed laboratory methods, and was\ncapable of Independent intellectual\nthought.\nBetween the two was a secondary\nstage, ln which the pupil could use\nthe tools but was'not yet Intellectually independent, and this was where\nph.\u00ab TAXI\n35\nThe   Best  of   Service\nCareful.   Courteous\nDrivers\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nO.K.\nApples\nFor Quality and\nFlavour\nSupport Our Local\nGrowers by Ordering 0. K. Apples\nFrom Your Dealer \"\nAssociated Growers of\nB. C, Ltd.\nNelson\n\u25a0 Kc*'\nIfe\nHi i\nnil\n\\:\u00ab';;V'               \\j\nOr. William Elliott,' 67-year-old\nphysician, of Wolseley, Sask., and\nnative of Ontario, being born at\nMitlchell in 1863, who is the reported choice as new lieutenant-\ngovernor of Saskatchewan.\nthe new theory propounded by Prof.\nMorrison was . applicable to the\nschools. Principal King expressed the\nwish that as many teachers as\npossible should begin . the study of\nthis new conception, because It\nwas \"going to be very prevalent in\nthe province.\" Already, ^ie said, the\ntheory was being presented to teachers in Vancouver in lectures, and\nln Nelson Principal. H. ' McArthur\nof the Junior high school had been\ndiscussing it.\nSTUDY   OF   HISTORY\nDiscussing the study of history in\nthe Ifcht of the new theory, Principal King* said while one object\nwas to get \"the content of history\"\nand to get factual material, moro\nfundamental than that was the attainment of \"attitudes, special abilities, and skills.\" The attitudes resulted from the development of\nunderstanding and appreciation\u2014understanding of the great fundamental principles. Among the special\nabilities to - be attained would bo\nsuch as** a special ability ln reading.\nAs a result of development on these\nlines, there would be an adaptation\nor modification of behavior. He Illustrated his points here with a\nreference to the period of Roman\nhistory before Italy had been unified. There existed Rome, and subject Italy, the latter consisting of\nLatin, colonies, prefectures, and subject* states. Knowledge of these facts\nby rote would leave no permanent\neffect.\nWhat was there to learn from\nthat situation, the speaker asked,\nWell, the Romans employed tho\nprinciple of divided rule, under\nwhich all the different peoples'were\nkept separate, and the Italy of\nthat period was an absolute Illustration of that principle, by which\nRome governed. It was as .much a\nRoman principle as that which\nf.plpez.hfvowhlld- _\nguided Roman road-building, under\nwhich \"all roads led to Rome.\" In\nthis was something to be grasped,\nan understanding to bo attained.\nCAN'T   BE   FORGOTTEN\nOne of'the tests of learning was\nthat concepts and behavior would\nbe altered. Also, if one learned a\nfundamental principle, It would be\nretained permanently. Now the long\nline of Roman emperors after Augustus always vanished from his\nmemory. Principal King confessed.\nln years that he was not teaching\nthat subject, and the reason was\nthat there was nothing there to\ngrasp. Prom this illustration he\ndrew a distinction between fundamental facts and assimilative material.\n\"Lesson learning\" was one of the\nweaknesses of the present system\nof teaching. Principal King said.\nThere was the pupil who might, for\ninstance, get up a foreign language\nlesson with various helps open to\nhim, so as to be able to recite in\nit very glibly, but on being asked\nto do some sight translation would\nflounder helplessly, while (mother\npupil, whose recitation on the lesson was far below that of the first\none, would do well on tlie sight\ntranslation. Thc second pupil was\nof the transfer type, which had the\nability to apply knowledge gained\nto new situations, while the first\ntype concentrated on making a\nshowing. On the lesson only.\n\"LESSON-LEARNER\"\n\"Our whole system of marking\ntends to emphasize the lesson learner type,\" avowed Principal King regretfully, \"We set 40 points as a\npass mark. If the lesson learner\npasses, he Is quite happy. From this\narises another perversion of learning\u2014the get-by attitude, or half-\nlearning.\"\nOne might have 75 per cent of\nthe assimilative material on respon\nslble government, but thero was no\nsuch thing as 75 per cent of tho\nmastery  of this  subject.\nUnfortunately the schools were at\npresent organized toward' per cents\nand  marks. But progress  ought  to\nbe *expreBsed in the mastery of\nunits 'into which the curriculum\nought to  be divided.\nHe gave Professor MorrlBon's formula- for  ap-piylng   to   mastery . concept ln  actual. teaching. ,,\nFORMULA FOR  TEACHING     \\\nFirst there should be a pre-test,\nin order, td\/diapover 'what;, the pupil\nalready knew, and thus: the- poln*^\nfrom, which, a Btaft should be made.\nThe subject should then be taught\nin a broad, outline, In an endeavor\nto establish, a. ^fundamental' understanding, the * pupils making $ab\nnotes, but \"aware a test, la to follow\nImmediately. .        't        \".-,-.'\njj Then comes the test,' which 'really*\ntests the teacher, as its . object *-ls*.\nto discover, where the presentation\n\u25a0Was weak or lnadeq*uate.     \u25a0\nWith these- -weaknesses revealed,\nthe teacher should adapt procedure\nto these circumstances.\nRe-teaching should  follow.\n\u2022Then therfl should be re-testing\nto the point of actual  mastery. *\nDiscussing, the teaching of the\nunit as a whole, Principal .King\nsaid the . teacher, when he found\nsome of the class approaching mastery of the subject, should,test for\nthat. Those that did not\" show\nmastery should be taken over the\nground again, or over the parts on\nwhich there was difficulty, while\nthose previously showing\" mastery\nshould be put at special work on\nthe same subject. \u2022\nThe speaker also touched on different types of .teaching, and then\non practical helps recently issued\nfor  approach   to   Suropean   history.\nPrincipal  L.  V.   Rogers   of  Nelson\nhigh school presided at the morning   general   session, '\nGYMNASTIC   DRILL\nThe * only other number at the\ngeneral session was an extremely\nproficient and pleasing exhibition\nof gymnastic marching, of wand\ndrill, and of a gyAuiaalum game of\ntag, by a class of 12 Junior high\nschool girls, directed by Miss Belle\nMcGauley, who Is ln charge of that\ndepartment.\nORGANIZATION\nFARMERS MEET\nNELSON, TODAY\nFarmer's  Institute  to  Take\nMatters of Interest\nAgriculturists\nThe West Kootenay Parmer's Institute representing all tho constituent Institutes of the Kootenay-\nBoundary district will hold its semiannual meetins here today at the\ncity hall.\n, This organization, of which O. B.\nAppleton of Sunshine Bay is the\npresidtnt, wllj take up matters of\ninterest to the farmers ln the district and will probably have at\nhand the government's answer to\nresolutions submitted by the instl-\ntute after the meeting held at\nRobson last spring.  .\nNELSON, TRAIL\nCARS COLLIDE\nAT BONNINGTON\nAbout 9:20 Saturday evening\ncar driven by L. J. Discombo of\nTrail had a side-on collision with\na sedan driven by c. Wilson of Nel\nson on a curve Just south of th\nWest Kootenay Power and Light\ncompany gravel pit at Bonnlngton\nFalls.\nThe lert front wheel of the Trail\ncar was buckled from the force of\nthe Impact but outside of that little\nmaterial damage was clone.\nHON. ELEANOR\nPLUMER\nA charming portrait of. Htm.\nHerbert. Pluiner, high commissioner\nEleanor Plumer, daygtiter of Baron\nfor Palestine. Miss Plumer is warden of the Mary Ward Settlement\nat London, England.\nDAVE BORLAND IS\nON WAY NANAIMO\n' FROM ROSSLAND\nST. PAUL'S CHURCH\nHAS ANNIVERSARY\nCELEBRATION HERE\nNelson Orchestra' and Mrs.)\nGladys Foster Contribute-\nto. the Music\nTheater Manager Who Succeeded Pitner Goes to\nVancouver Island\nDave Borland, formerly of Nelson,\nwho succeeded J. Paul Pitner as\nmanager of the new theater ln\nRossland, passed through Nelson on\nSaturday night from Rossland on\nhis way to Nanaimo where \/he will\nassume managership of the theater\nthere.\nMr. Borland left Rossland owing\nto inability to secure a house for\nhimself and family. His place is\nbeing taken by Hugh Williams of\nChilllwack. Mr. Williams drova Mr.\n'Borland to Nelson on Saturday.\n\"I am sorry to leave the Kootenays once again,\" said Mr. Borland.\n\"I have renewed many old prewar acquaintances fn Trail\nRossland and - Nelson. How*\never, going to Nanaimo , is like\ngoing- home. I am returning to\nmanage a theater I formerly managed there and it is an odd thing\nthat while I was unable to get a\nresidence ln Rossland. I will move\ninto the same old house la Nanaimo upon my arrival there.\"\nROSSLAND PIONEER\nPASSES IN SEATTLE\n\u25a0sfi sermon upon Ideajs and churches by Rev. T. ?. B. Ferguson; a\nVtpHh solo bv Mrs. Gladys Webb.\n'Fomer, and selections' by the Nelson\nSymphony orchestra, featured In the\ncelebration of St. Paul's church\nanniversary. Sunday evening. Mem-\nbets, of Trinity'United church' were\npresent and Rev. ,W. C. Mawhinney,\npastor, assisted In- the services.\n. Mr. Ferguson spoke upon the\nideals on which churches were\nbuilt. He, declared that love was\nthe church's one foundation. ''God\nmade the world on love,\" told Mr.\nFerguson, \"and beople cannot'., live\non anything but It.''\nHe traced the life of Christ, emphasizing the example He. had set\nfor tBe. world. After 19 centuries;\nhad passed, stated Mr. Ferguson,\nthe word of God was still the leader  in thought.. \";\u25a0<'\nMen who did not Bo tochurch,\naccording to Mr Ferguson,- were behind the, times. It was a scientific\nfact that love of mankind alone\ncould save the world; A Christ-llRe\n-person had a .greater ease and\nhappiness, he stated, .\nService,, said the pastor, was the\nonly path to greatness. To became great it was necessary to\nserve mankind and God. In, closing\nhe urged his hearers to haVe .a\ngreater love for one another, and\nfor. the Maker \"that they might en-\nJoy  living more abundantly.\"\nNelson Symphony orchestra accompanied the choir and pipe organ\nand rendered Haydn's \"Heavens are\nTelling,\"* from \"Creation.\" Rev. .W.\nG. Mawhinney. asked'- the.'prayer,\nblessing the church tn, the event of\nIts anniversary.\nRossland Resident\nfor 33 Years Goes\nto Live Ttimberley\nFormer Rossland\nWoman Pioneer Is\nBuried at Coast\nROSSLAND, B. C., Oct. 28.\u2014Mrs.\nDorothy Ann Keating passed away\non October 17 ln the General hospital, Vancouver. She was the wife\nof tlie late G. A. Keating, a Rossland oldtlmer, who in the year\n1918 removed to the. coast. Mrs.\nKeating was born ln Kemptville,\nOntario, September 12,  1863.\nShe leaves four daughters, Doris,\nBess and Almira of Vancouver, and\nMrs. M, Newltt of Calgary; two\nsons, Harold of ReVelstoke, and\nAllan of thlB city; and three\ngrand-daughters. She Is also survived by a sister, Mrs. John Klrkup\nof Vancouver, and a brother, James\nG. Kerr of Kemptville, Ontario.\nTlie funeral was hel<i Tuesday,\nOctober 21 nt Vancouver, Major\nRev. C. C. Owen, officiating, Interment being ln the family plot,\nI. O. | O. F. portion, Mountain\nView cemetery-\nMrs. Keating was an old-time resident of this city, having lived hero\n29 years, and left to reside ln Vancouver In 1918.\nRev. Dr. H. J. Keith has resigned\nas pastor of St. Andrew's United\nchurch,    Wlnnipge.\n\u00a9\u00a9\u00a9\u00a9\u00a9\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u00a9\u00a9\u2022\u2022\u00a9\u2022\u00ae\u00ae\u00ae\u00a9e\u00ae\u00aeeeee\u00ae\u00ae\u00a9eee\nROSSLND, B. C, Oct. 26.\u2014Richard Hooper, late of Seattle, Washington, died ln that city September\n28, aged 78 years. He was an old-\ntimer of Rossland and came to this\ncity in 1898 and was employed\nln the mines until the year 1917.\nwhen he went to Seattle to reside.\nHe was married 62. years, those\nsurviving being Dls wife, Mrs.\nSophia \"Hooper, residing ln Seattle,\nand four children, Mrs. Martin Dally\nof this city; Mrs. W. H. Guild, La\nGrande, Oregon; Walter Hooper of\nSeattle, and Mre. J. B. Hamilton of\nBrlttannla Beach, British Columbia,\nall of whom were present at his\nbedBlde when the end came.\nMr. Hooper was a member of the\nold Methodist Episcopal church\nwhile a resident of Rossland. and\nwill be remembered by many old-\ntimers of Rossland and district.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL,   Que.,   Oct.   26.\u2014Butter,   eggs   nnd   cheese   steady.\nCheese,   finest   westerns   16y8   to\n16 K.\nCheese,   fittest   easterns   14y4   to\nUK-\nButter, No.  1  Quebec  30.\n' Eggs, fresh specUilB, 60;\nEggs,   fresh   extras   56.\nEggs, fresh firsts, 48.\nNews of the Day\nrAPAZIAN'S   JEWBI.LRY AUCTION\nCONTINUES   DAILY. (2454)\nROSSLAND, B. ft, Oct. 26.\u2014H. O.\nOliver, who haa been a resident of\nRossland lor the: past 33 years,\nserving aa electrician at the mines\nof the Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company of Canada, Limited, here, haa been transferred to\nKlmberley to the BulUvan mine.ana\nwith Mrs. Oliver and little .Son,\nHerbert, Is leaving, for Klmberley\nnext Veek.\nNINA GANSNER. IS\nOUT OF DANGER\nLeather\nOur' leather Coats!\nmake a hit With out-i\ndoor meh who appi*#\ndate Iwarmth\u2014without weight, play togs.i\nWater proof andj\nwind proof. They hitf\nthe bull's eye for appearance, long wear ]\nand low price.\nBrown'sheepskin, j\nwind breaker style!\nplush lined,...$11.001\nBlack Horse hide,T\nwind breaker style,\nplush lined ..'.'$14.75.1\nBlack    cow   hide:!\nzipper   style,   plush\nlined ......:.-.'.$16.00\nBlack horse   hide\ncoat, 30 inch\nlong  ......v...$1.75 j\nTan sheepskin zipper front, satin lined \u25a0\nfor'sports wear\n,;.\u201e.,.......$20.001\nPhone Taxi\nFreight    Schedq\nDally to BoHlal\nand Trail, 10 a.1\nBUD      STEVEN\nProp.\nTrail Phone I'M\nLittle Nina Oansner,,daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. John Gansner,* Carbonate street, was on Saturday pronounced out of danger, i She has\nbeen suffering for some days vrtth\ndouble pneumonia. ; - -\nCOMMITTED FORtf TRIAL\nSMITHERS, B. C., Oct. 26.\u2014After\nn twoiday preliminary hearing here,\n91gurdi Jusail, alias Fred Andersqn,\nyoung' Philander, was committed\nfor trial by Stipendiary Magistrate\nStephen H. Hosklna for murder of\nCharles Yoch of Houston, j who was\nslain ln his own cabin about September  3.\nHITS   THE   SPOT\nwor CmjhiCColdB, Croup MW'\nBronchi tlB \u25a0\u00bb\nsmXHETa- CHERRY  COUGH I\nSYRUP\nSmythe's Phat-macj\nPrescript! cm  Specialist\nPhone   1\n44 TAXI AND 44]\nTRANSFER,\n\"'\"*TRAn. AND ROSSLAND\nFREIUHT AND EXPRESS\nSchedule *\nDally to Troll, leaves 10 A. M.I\nTAXIS DAY AND NIGHT\nWatch for the\u2014\nNEW RED WAGON\nGive your clothes a ride to and from our up-to-date DRY\n,     CLEANING PLANT.\nNow is the time to get your evening dresses, dress suits\nand tuxedo suits scientifically cleaned and deodorized for\nthe coming festive season.\nKootenay No-Odor Dry Cleaning Co.\nTonight\u2014St, Paul's Anniversary\ndinner at 6 o'clock. 60 cents a\nplate. -V  \u25a0' (2456)\nAnnual meeting of Mothers' auxiliary to Scouts and Cubs in Armoury,  Tue^'Jay,  3  p.m. 1.2466)\nDaughters   of England  will  meet\ntonight   at   7:30.,   Whist   Drive   at\nU:15.     Admission1 35c.     Everybody\ni .volcome. v . i2445)\nCome to the Whlat Drive Memorial\nHall Monday evening, 27th. Good\nprizes and refreshments. Admission 35c. Everybody welcome. Auspices Sons and Daughters of England. (2427)\nRemember the Hallowe'en Masquerade dance on Friday. October\n31, at the South Slocan Hall.\nPrises for customes. Gents. $1^);\nLadles  50c.i (2460)\nTwo Shows\nNightly\n? and 9 P.M.\nWI\/\/&\nTODAY~TOBf ORROW\nScreen's Most \".Polished Actor ir\nin His Mightiest Role\ni\nC. A. LARSON, Mgr. \u2022\nPhone 128 Nelson, B. C. \u2022\nNOTICE\nHard Times dance at Ymir on\nHallowe'en night. Four good prizes\nfor most original and comical costumes. $1.50 per couple lnclutStni\nrefreshments. Trail orchestra. Let's\nGo!   . (2449)\nMERCURY\nThe Best Coal\non the market\u2014ask your\nneighbor . . . Does not\nclinker .. . Lots of heat\n. . i Burns well in any i\nstove. .\nLUMP      ' .    NUT   i\n$11.50     $9.50\nTON DELIVERED\nRENWICK'S\nTRANSFER\n\"SHADOW\nOF    THE\nLAW\"\nA   Picture  Packed\nWith   Hndtempint\nand    Sensational\nHappenings    '\nYou'll   Say   It'B\nGreat\nTo Miss This\nStirring,   Thrilling\nGripping   and\nDramatic  Film  Is\nto  Miss   a   Great\nTreat\nFate Dealt Him\na Stunning Blow.'\nHe Took. Law and\ny\/\/li T^woSrou8 \u00ab* .*\u00bb ?*\n^\u2022a- n   one    Wants-   Hla q^ ctove, Hands\nMoney,-: the   Other His Love and   When   tha\nShadow   of   the\nSee   What\nHappens\nWltLlAKi\nPOWELL\nShadow\nLaw'\nPast  Clutched  at\nthe Woman He\nLoved !\nit You Like\nWorth  WhUe\nPictures     Don't\ntlie   L3W     M'\u00bb BMtog\naOmmaatgutm  \"SHADOW\nOP  THB\nLAW\"\nCOMEDY\n\"I'LL    TAKE\nTHAT   ONE\"\n.You   Will   Sure\nGet    the    Laughs\nat  Thla   One.\n       I     '\nYou'll -Enjoy 'This-\nClever Musical\nAct V \u25a0 \u25a0\n\"MUSIC  '   \u25a0\u2022\u2022\nMAKERS\"\nFeaturing\nHOWARD\nBROS.\n'\u2022Hook line\nAND\nMELODY\"\nAn    Exceptionally\nGood, Heel\nWednesday   \u2014   Thursday\nNORMA   SHEARER\n- In\n\"THE' DIVORCEE\"\nFiiNIay   _   Saturday\nRICHARD BARTHELMESS\nIn .\n\"THE   DAWN   PATROL\"\nmmmmpappmm\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1930_10_27","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0400695","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1930-10-27 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1930-10-27 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0400695"}