{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-09-10","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1924-10-08","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0402068\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" 'JJ.sjpj.i..'    \u25a0 \u2014\"\nJr\u00bb=\nApple Prices\nBEGIN TO CUMB\ny$at Page 8 \u2022\nlaito\nBI80     UMtJ\nmo* iiMtma\nfICTCAU   \u2022  C\n,   '   '\u2022\u2022\u2022'('C;.v\\f.\u00bb|l\n\u25a0\/6t&\n..\u25a04&m&\nVOL. 23    .\nNELSON, B. Cn  WEDNESDAY MORNING,,OCTOBER8, 1924\nNO. 146\nLandis Gives .\nPLAYERS NEW HEARING\nSee Page 7 '\nManitoba Laborite\n\u25a0Y ,;\u00bb,     .  Attacks Control\n.Concerned in Five Runs, the\n\"Goose\" Is Idol of\n<   Washington\nfiWORLD SERIES IS\nNOW TWO-ANDTWO\n['Giants Unable to Solve Mo-\ngridge $nd Marberry j\nt Throughout Game\nTeam R.   H.   E.\n^Washington . .003020020\u20147 15 3\n[|New York    '100001011\u2014 4      6      1\nBatteries\u2014Mogrldge and Ruel;\nI Barnes and Gowdy.\n*'     \u25a0       A   Record  Crowd\nNEW YORK, Oct. 7.\u2014The \"goose\"\n\u25a0hangs   high  In   Washington   tonight,\n|for  Leon   Goslin,  slugging  pride   of\n'he  Senators,   and  favorite  of  their\n.   clubbed  the  New  York  Giants\nflnto    defeat    today    almost    sir'rle\nanded,     and    put    the    American\n.leaguers   back  ip   the  thick  of   one\n'of the baseball's greatest championship battles.\nAnother record breaking crowd,\n|,over 60,000, stormed the polo\ngrounds, and cheered the Senators\nlas they pulled themselves together in\ntspite of a make-shift infield caused\n\u25a0by the loss of Peckinpaugh, battered\n[three Giant pitchers, and captured\nI the fourth game of the 1924 world's\n^\u2022rles,  7 to  4.\nThe series now stands at two-all,\nland the fifth game, which is likely\njto witness a repetition of the opening struggle between Walter John-\nIson, the Senators' wonderful right\nI hand veteran, and Art Nehf, brilliant\nlOiant southpaw, will be played to-morrow at the Polo grounds.\nThe battle ground will shift back\nJto Washington Thursday, for a sixth\n\u25a0 game is now assured, with a likeli-\n1 hood the series will go the limit of\nI seven   games.\nThe Goose Is \"II\"\n^ Five of tbe. Senators' run*, te \u2022 ..\nday, alone enough to clinch the\ngame,   were   accounted   for   by\n\"Goose\". Goslin, who  hammered\nI   out four hits in as many times\n1   up, including his second  homer\n'  the  series,  which  scored  two\nuns ahead of him in the third\nning,   and   gave  Washington   a\nad which it never relinquished.\nWhile   the   slow  southpaw   curves\n|.>f George  Mogrldge,  and  the   relief\nitching   of    Fred   Marberry,    again\nuccessful  in  his favorite role,  kept\nThe   Giants   in   check,   the   Senators\nfjunched   their   attack   In   three   in-\nJjings, and  Goslin was the dominat-\nfing figure  each  time-\nThe offerings of Barnes, who retired after being bombarded for five\n\u25a0 innings, and of Wayland Dean, who\nffinlshed the fame after Howard\n| Baldwin    had    gone    througjh    two\n\u25a0 innings unscathed, proved particularly relishing \"sauce\" for Goslin, In\nI iddition    to    his   homer,    a    terrific\n\u25a0 drive that. sailed on a line far into\n\u25a0the right field stands, the \"Goose\"\n\u25a0brought Harris across in the fifth\nlatter  a  wild   pitch  had   let  in  Mc-\n\u25a0 Meely.   and  started another  two-run\n\u25a0 rally In the eighth with his fourth\n|nil,  scoring  ahead  of  Joe  Judge  on\nBluege's    third   safe   blow    of    the\ngjame.\nThe \"Goose's\" spectacular slugging\nnade him not only the hero of the\nay,   but    the    Idol   of   the    crowd,\nafter  his circuit  clout,   gave\nan   ovation  scarcely  less voclf-\nous  than  that of his own  followers after  his  first homer,  a  potent\nI faotor in Washington's triumph Sun-\nfday.\nCrowd With Senators Again\nAs    yesterday,    the    crowd     was\n[\u2022'with\"    the    fighting   Senators    and\ntheir youthful  pilot,  Stanley  Harris.\nFPhe  Giants  came  in for their share\nPof cheering,  particularly  when  they\n[.'rallied   in   the   closing  innings,   but\nI the crowd's noisiest sympathies were\nI with  Washington and Goslin.    There\n| was another din of cheering for the\n\"Goose\"   when   he   came   out   to   the\n[field  after  his  homer and  displayed\nthis   versatility   by   making   a   circus\n[catch  of  a  long drive  off  Wilson's\nI bat.\nMeanwhile the Giants were baffled\nIby the southpaw shoots of Mogrldge,\n\u25a0former New York Yankee mounds-\nIman, who silenced the heaviest New\n|York artillery with a puzzling change\nof pace and a tantalizing slow ball.\nor seven innings, the McGraw men\nnthered but three hits off Mo-\nrridge, and two runs, one of which\n|tya\u00bb due to an error, and tbe other\n(Continued   on   page   3)\nBAYLEY,  M.P.P.\nFor Asslnlboia, describes conditions\nin that province as \"deplorable\" under\ngovernment control. He has issued\na challenge to the Manitoba Moderation league president to meet him in\ndebate on some Ontario platform during  tho  plebiscite  campaign.\nSHANGHAI LOSS\nAGAIN SEEMS\nVERY IMMINENT\nThree Armies Allied to Wu\nPei Fu Are Encircling\nSungkiang City\nSHANGHAI, Oct. 8.\u2014The Chckiang\nprovince armies today were threatened\nwith loss of the city of Shanghai\nfor the second time within a month.\nnnd were- punning reinforcements\nsouthward to check the latest aggressions of their Klangsu enemies, although Red Cross units which have\nbeen following up the fighting near\nSungkiang, 28 miles to the southwest\nof Shanghai, were brought bnck to\nShanghai today from Lungwha. south\nof the city, denied there had been\nany Chekiang retreat in the Sungkiang sector.\nRush    Reserve*   ts    Stop    Encircling\nIt was admitted, however, that the\nsituation around Sungkiang, where\nthe combined Kiangsu-Anwhei-Fuklen\nforces have almost surrounded the\ncity, was serious. It also was admitted that reserves were being\nrushed toward Sungkiang to break\nthe encircling movement of the\nenemy.\nAn official statement from Lungwha declared that the Kiangsu troops\naround Sungkiang were handicapped\nby lack of ammunition, because Wu\nPel Fu, military commander-in-chief\nof the central government at Peking,\nto which the three provinces of\nKiangsu. Anwhei and Fukien, owe\nallegiance, had ordered tbe munitions stream from Dangiang, Huep\nprovince, arsenal, diverted to tbe\nnorth, where ho is fighting Gen.\nChang   Tso-Lin.\n[JURY CHARGES\n;  MANSLAUGHTER\n(John \" Tanqueay     From\nj Whose   Qar Wood  Was\nThrown, Is Named\nVICTORIA, Oct. 7.\u2014A verdict of\n[ manslaughter was rendered by the\nrury sitting on the Inquest on the\n|>ody of the late George L. Wood,\nj ound, dead near the overturned car\nJohn Francis W. Tanqueray, yesterday morning.\nI Mr.' Tanqueray gave evidenee under\nfro test.\n\\ The jury returned with a statement\nat they found that' the late Mr,\nod had come to his death by\nng thrown from the car driven\n; an excessive speed by Mr, Tan-\nay.\nked it they intended  this for a\ndiet of accidental death, or one of\nnslaughter, the jury explained that\naufliter v\/*\\8 their verdict.\nSHOTS REPEL THE\nSHERIFFS PARTY\nSaskatchewan Officer Fails\nto Make Execution; Calls\non Police\nGRAVKLROURG, Sask., Oct. 7.\u2014\nWhen Sheriff Alphonse Charlebols of\nGravelbourg and two assistants visited the Lopwener Brothers' farm a\nfew miles south of Klncaid yesterday\nto seize a thrpshing outfit and some\nhorses under an execution they were\ndriven   off   by   rifle   shots.\nTwo shots were fired at the party.\nThe rifle was fired from a range of\nabout 30 yards, and one bullet struck\nthe separator within about 3 feet\nof F. Bolstead, who took cover by\nthe   machine.\nAfter the shooting the sheriff's\nparty mado a quick exit and reported\nthe   matter  to  the  provincial  police.\nVancouver Shut Tight,\nPolice Chief Reports;\nOver Hundred Arrests\nLIBERALS CARRY\nNEW BRUNSWICK\nSEATHANDILY\nSnowball   H-as   Over   Six\nHundred Majority in\nNorthumberland\nEIGHT HUNDRED LESS\nTHAN LATE MEMBER\nParty Standing Unchanged;\nGraham Hails It Great\nVictory\nNEW CASTLfc, N.B.. Oct. 7.\u2014Six\npolls wero not heard from late tonight, but their returns could not affect the result. In the 40 districts\nreported, Snowball, Liberal, received\n6008 votes and the Conservative\n57s3, a majority of 638 for the Liberal candidate.  ,\nCampaign Strenuous\nNEWCASTLE, N.B., Oct. 7.\u2014(Canadian Press staff correspondent)\u2014\nW. B. Snowball. Liberal, was elected over C. P. Hickey, Conservative,\nby over 600 majority in the by-\nelection held here today to fill the\nvacancy in the Dominion house,\ncaused by the death of the late J.\nMorrlssy. Mr. Morrissy's majority\nin  1921  was 1421,\nThe election was the culmination\nof a strenuous campaign in which\nthe outstanding leaders ot both parties participated.\nThe Liberals were represented by\ntbe premier, Rt. Hon. W. L>. Mackenzie King, Hon E. lapolnte, Charles\nMurphy, Hon. A. B. Copp, and Premier Venlot, and the Conservatives by\nUt. Hon. Arthur Meighen, Senator\nGideon Robertson, J. M, Baxter,\nM. P., and A. J. Doucett, M. P.\nMr. Snowball appealed to the electors on the record of the King government, and his opponent, following\nthe successful tactics of A. J. Doucett,\nKent, and W. A. Black, Halifax, in\nthe byelectlons of last year, took\n\"maritime   rights\"   for   hi*   slogan.\nThe totals in fhe 'general elecTaMTof\n1921 were: McCurdy, Conservative,\nC265;   Morrisey,  Liberal,   6706.\nHow  Parties   Stand\nThe result in Northumberland\nleaves party standing in the house\nunchanged. The parties now stand\n(excluding  the  speaker):\nLiberals 116; Progressives 62;\nConservatives 60; Labor 2; Independents 2;  vacancies 2.  Total 234.\nThe two vacant seats are Yale,\nB. C, and West Hastings, Ont. Both\nreturned Conservatives at the last\nelection. Should they again return\nConservatives, the Liberals would be\nin a minority of 2. were all parties\non the opposition side of the house\nto  vote together.\nThe 62 Progressives are inclusive\nof the so-culled \"ginger group,\" which\ni broke away from the party caucus\ni last  .session.\n! Graham Welcomes Snowball\nOttawa, Oct. 7.\u2014 (Canadian\nPress)\u2014\"The people of  Canada,  par-\ni ticularly  the  Liberal  party,  will wel-\n[ come to public life a man of the out-\nI standing    ability of Mr. Snowball,\" said\nHon.  George  P.  Graham,  minister   of\nrailways  and   acting  premier,   in   the\ncommenting \"on   the   result    of    the\nNorthumberland  byelection   tonight.\n\"The result,\" ho said, \"iB a great\nvictory for those who believe in a\nbroad Canadlanlsm, and Is a credit\nto the Intelligence of the people of\nNorthumberland, who refused to be\ncarred away by the sectional cries\nwhich have been more successful\nin former byelections in the maritime provinces.\n\"The government is doing everything in its power to conduct its\nbusiness and Us legislations to bring\nabout better conditions in the maritime provinces and in all Canada.\nThey welcome Mr. Snowball as a\nsplendid addition to the representing\nof   the   provinces  by   the   Atlantic.\"\nXing 8\u00abss Tariff Approval\nSASKATOON, Bask., Oct. 7.\u2014The result of the Northumberland county\nbyelection indicates In all certainty\n\"the approval of the people of eastern\nCanada of the fiscal policy of the\nLiberal government, said Premier Mackenzie King here  tonight.\n\"The electorate of Northumberland\ncounty has clearly expressed Us opinion as favoring the reduction in\ntariff, the restoration of the Crow's\nNest Pass agreement and the policy\nIntroduced by the government In Introducing legislation calculated to mitigate western problems and to attain\na solution of the Issues facing the\nwest  today,\"  declared  the  premier.\"\nHelps Britishers to\nEmigrate to Canada\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 7.\u2014In a report to the mayor today, the\npolice chief states alt gambling\nplaces and undesirable houses in\nthe city are now.closed. In the\npast woek 122 arrests were made\nby the  morality squad.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nMlnnekhada, at New -York, from\nHamburg.\nParis, at Plymouth, from New\nYork.\nTurcoman, at Montreal, from Avon-\nmouth.\nMCALLISTER, Okla., Oct. 7.\u2014Gateways to Mine No. 12 of the Rock\nIsland Coal & Mining company near\nHartshorne were dynamited last night\nand an attempt made to burn two\nrailroad trestles leading to the mine,\nit became known today.\nDamage was slight, but the incident\nhas aroused the mining field. * No\narrests have been made.\nTHREE PAYROLLS\nTAKEN IN DETROIT\nArmed   Bandits   in   Auto\nCity Pull Off Successful\n,   Coups\nDETROIT, Mich., Oct. 7.\u2014Armed\nbandits in a series of holdups today\nobtained three payroll satchels containing approximately $25,000. Two\nbandits held up the secretary and\noffice manager of the Belle Isle\ncreamery ' as they were about to\nleave for a bank, and escaped with\n$17,000.\nShortly after, five men entered the\noffice of a restaurant syndicate, and\nmade off with $3800.\nA payroll belonging to the J. I*\nHudson company, amounting to $5000,\nwas taken from a paymaster shortly\nbefore uQojfc       ...      _       .\nW. J..GARNETT\nSecretary 'of the British Emigration\nsociety, has been touring Canada in\ntho  Interest of that organization.\nCANADA TO GET\nNEWSPRINT FREE\nINTO AUSTRALIA\nGives Preference to Dried\nFruits; Treaty to Be Proclaimed\nOTTAWA, Oct. 7.\u2014(Canadian\nPress.)\u2014-Canada's trade treaty with\nAustralia will come into effect by\nproclamation on a date to be decided   by   the   two   governments.\nFurther details available today\nshow that the chief concessions obtained by Canada in the Australian\nmarket are on canned fish, paper\nand ohr-s\u00ablj\u00bb.. ..On >;^iwi\u00bb4 fish. Can\nada gets tho British preferential\n**ato bt a penny per pound aa\nagainst an intermediate tariff of\none and one-half pence and a general tariff of two and one-half\npence.\nNewsprint paper enters free as\nagainst an intermediate tariff and\ngeneral tariff of three pounds per\nton.\nPrinting paper not ruled and in\nlarge rolls or sheets is admitted free\nfrom Canada, as compared with a\nduty of three pounds a ton from\ncountries not enjoying the British\npreference.\nOther printing paper from Canada pays a duty of 15 per cent ad\nvalorem, while the intermediate rate\nis 20 per cent and the general tariff\n25  per  cent.\nChassis unassembled get the intermediate rate tariff of 7 1-2 per\ncent oa against a general tariff of\n10 per cent. Chassis assembled go\nin at 10 per cent from Canada, as\ncompared with a general tariff of\n12 1-2 per cent. There are lower\nBritish preferential rates of 5 per\ncent on unassembled chassis, and\n7  1-2  per cent on assembled chassis.\nIn return, Canada gives her full\nBritish   preference.\nI n. addition, provision has been\nmade for giving Australia a further preference on dried currants\nand   dried   raisins.\nParliamentary sanction is not required for putting these Into effect,\nalthough it is understood that some\nfurther tariff changes may be necessary.\nNORTH\nHUNG GIR\nARM AND LEG\nHanged Youth Head Down\non Torture Rack for\nWitchcraft\ninspectoeTshot\nat from ambush\nFive   Slayers   Arrive   at\nPrince Rupert; Are\nStruck Dumb\nKAMLOOPS YOUTH\nSHOOTS SISTER;\nWentworth  Lynes  Is  Extracting Jammed  Bullet\nWhen Rifle Discharged\nKAMLOOPS, Oct. 7,\u2014A shooting\naccident oceured here last night when\nWentworth Lynes, son of W. W.\nLynes, an old-time conductor on the\nC. P. R., accidentally shot his young\nsister as she sat in the kitchen\ndoing homework.\nlt appears thai Wentworth was In\nthe pantry endeavoring to extract a\njnmmed bullet from his rifle, when\nthe gun went elf. penetrating the\nwnll of the pantry, and going through\nthe  lung of  the  unfortunate  girl.\nThe patient wns reported this evening as  progressing favorably.\nBoasted That He\nShot Policeman;\nTrott to Be Tried\nWELIiAND, Ont, Oct. 7.\u2014John\nTrott was today committed for\ntrial on a charge of murdering\nConstable J. Truman of ThoroLd,\nOnt., on  December 17, 192a.\nEvidence was given by two Italian mine workars that Trott had\ntriad to have th\u00abm engage in the\nbootlegging business ttotre hut\nJanuary* an* thsy claimed he\nadmitted to tham he shot a policeman at Thoroidi.\nTh* man's testimony was corroborated.\nBRANDON, Man.,. Oct. 7.\u2014M. J.\nFinllne, for 10 years superintendent\nof the experimental farm at Scott,\nSask., has been appointed superintendent of the farm. here to succeed\nW. C. McKilllcan. appointed dean of\nthe .Manitoba Agricultural cc-llege,  .\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C.. Oct. 7.\u2014\nWitchcraft is still the creed of the\nnorthern nomad Indians. Witness\nthe story brought to civilization by\nInspector T. Sandys-Wunsch *nd\nConstables P. W. Neville and C. R.\nMartin, Royal Canadian Mounted\npolice, who have with them aB prisoners five aborigines, one with an\ninfant In arms, charged with murder.\nThe victim was a youth, 17 years\nold, who was punished by hanging\nhead downward. His name was\nMoccasin, or Atel. After his death,\nor before It\u2014the Mountles who made\nthe patrol are not sure which\u2014his\nthroat was cut\u2014some say by an Indian woman, that the final spasm\nmight come more quickly. Whether\nthe knife was wielded to save suffering, or time, is a matter .to be\nbrought  out  in  evidence.\nGirl Move* Like a Crab\nStill to 'be investigated is the\nstory of a girl named Madeline,\nsuspected of witchcraft, who was\nsuspended for three days and\nthree nights by one foot and one\narm. Both have been useless\nsince she was cut down, and now\nshe walks like a crab, using the\ninjured leg and arm as balance\npoles.\nThere   are   more    stories    still,\nbut they cannot be repeated, and\nwill   not    be   known    until     the\nMounted   police   patrol   penetrates\nfurther into this northland, which\nis 1000 miles north of where the\nroHwtiys'leave off.''     - \u25a0-\u25a0 '\nThe    Sandys-Wunsch    patrol    has\nbeen  working  on   the  Moccasin-Atel\ncase  since  .Tune,  when  they  arrived\nafter  a   1000-mile   trip   on   foot,   by\ndog team and by canoes on the dangerous Upper Liar A liver.\nShortly after camp was made in\nthe neighborhood of the tribe, near\nTelegraph Creek, Inspector Sandys-\nWunsch was fired upon, the aim of\nthose In ambush bcin,*!: fnr from accurate. Despite the fact that he is\na world-renowned shot with a revolver, he withheld his own fire, preferring arrests an l the itccomplish-\nment of his purpose.\nFind Hoi* Scratched by Wolf\nAfter weeks of search in the territory, there was discovered a hole,\nscratched out by a wolf. Beneath\nit, and under some planks, there\nwas found the body of the youth, his\narms ninioned as he hung to the rack.\nArrests followed, and then there\ncame a confession. The victim suffered that the evil spirits might be\ndriven out. After being cut down,\nbe was hacked with a knife, and then\npounded   with   rocks   until   dead.\nOn that confession, and the facts\nthe Mounted police have gathered,\nthe   five   prisoners   will   be   tried.\nIn ibis city the prisoners are dumbfounded at the sights and filled with\nadmiration and suspicion of the white\nman's ways. They were amazed at\nthe height of a three-story building,\nand a boy riding a bicycle, and badly\nfrightened when an electric light was\nturned on from a wall switch.\nThe sight of a child playing with a\ncat caused one of them to rush to\nthe rescue of the infant.\nLeave   for   Vancouver\nFRINCK RUPERT, B.C., Oct. 7.\u2014\nWith five Indian prisoners, one a\nwoman with an infant in arms,\nInspector T. Sandys-Wunsch and\nConstables Neville and Martin of the\nRovul Canadian Mounted police loft\nhere today on board the Princess\nAlice  for Vancouver.\nThe Indians have been brought from\na point 300 miles north of Telegraph\nCreek, and are all charged with the\nmurder of a boy nf 17, whom they\nbelieved   lo   be   practicing   witchcraft.\nThe police have been at work on\nthe case since June, having to travel\nnearly 1000 miles inland, with pack\ndogs and canoes, tracking down the\nnomad tribe. After weeks of searching for clues, they discovered a hole\nthat had been scratched out by a\nwolf, and there, under planks, a few\nfeet down, they found the hody of\nthe bnv, hands tied behind him.\n\"Big\"   Alex   Leading   Spirit\nConfession followed, the leading\nspirit in the murder being \"Big\" Alex.\nThe boy was hanged, head down, to\ndrive out the evil spirits. After being\ncut down, he was pounded with rocks\nuntil dead.\nThe prisoners speak but little English, and are unkempt, wearing any\npoor rags. They eat meat, but regard bread with suspicion.\nLater reports from the region say\nthat a girl named Madeline, also suspected of witchcraft, was hung up by\none foot and one arm for three days.\nShe is now said to walk like a crab,\nmostly on one foot and hand, using\nthe injured arm and leg for balancing.\nKootenay Typists\nPass Examinations;\nFive Names Posted\nVICTORIA, Oct. 7.\u2014Successful candidates at the British Columbia civil\nservice examinations for stenographers, held on September 13, included:\nCranbrook\u2014Senior, Miss Frances M.\nM. Noble; Junior, Miss Ivy M. Bidder.\nNelson\u2014Junior,   Frank  Gould, 'MisB\nF, &,iJ\u00a3re\u00bb Mis? jlay Howard -\nActs for States in\n....... Canadian Oil Probe\nE, g. mcmillan\nOf Rowell, Held, Wood, Wright &\nMcMillan, Toronto, is acting as the\nlocal counsel for the United States\nin connection with the Toronto angle\nof the big oil transactions now under\ninvestigation  by   Washington.\nSEClTlYl\nJAIL ATTACKS\nHYDSf BOARD\nOntario Cabinet Gets a\nTwenty-Page Letter; Decides on Probe\nTORONTO, Oct. 7.\u2014The government will appoint a commission to\nmorrow to investigate certain charges\nagainst officials-of the Ontario hydro\nelectric commission, and certain in>\nslnuatlons regarding hydro admfnl\nstrntion contained in.a. letter written\nto Sir Adam Beck, chairman of the\nhydro commission, by his former\nsecretary clarence Setell, who is now\nin custody at Hamilton charged with\nobtaining ?29,Mt) by fraudulently\ncashing a hydroelectric cheek.\nThe decision to appoint a commission came after the letter had\nbeen considered by tbe provincial\ncabinet at a meeting tonight.\nThe commission is being nppointed\nat the request of Sir Adam Peck himself, and in response to many allegations which Settell makes in. his\n20-page letter to the hydro commission  chairman.\nDescribed as containing \"much obviously malicious gossip and slander,\"\nthe letter was yet held by Sir Adam\nto be one which, in justice to members\nof the hydro st\/ifi\", the public and\nhimself, should be given thorough\nprobing, in order that the charges\npreferred should be made to stand\nor fall on  their merits.\nThe text of the letter lias not yet\nbeen made public. Its chief nIteration, however, according to statements made tonight, is that certain\nitems in hydro accounts have been\nwrongly charged, and the commission\nhas been paying for items which\nshould be personal expenditures of the\nhydro  officials.\nOPPOSED GENERALS\nTURN AGAINST WAR\nViervaux   of   France   and\nVon Schoemaich of Germany at Peace Congress\nBERLIN, Oct. 7\u2014Only complete\ngeneral disarmament can save the\nworld in the opinion of General Velr-\n'iux. of Prance, commander of the\nsixth army corps during the world\nwar, and General Von Schoemaich.\nof Germany, commander of the republican guards, who are now opposing\nthe Nationalist military organization.\nThese two address the world peace\ncongress today on international disarmament.\nGeneral Veiraux declared that \"even\nlittle armies are as dangerous as big\nones.\"\nGeneral Von Schoemaich said that\nmost generals of the old regime\nknew their theories were wrung, but\nthey havo not the courage to confess\nit.\nGeneral Schoemaich promised to\nsupport the movements looking toward   the refussal  ot military  service.\nVeteran Lost in\nWindermere Bush\nDies ol Exposure\nINVERMERE,    B.C.,    Oct.    7.\u2014\nEdward Macdonald, aged about\n45, veteran of the Great War with\nthe 23rd and 4th battalions,\n\u2022badly wounded at Courcelette,\nwas found dead this afternoon in\nthe woods, from exposure, having\nbeen   lost   several   days.\nThera are   no  relatives  Here.\nHe was a native of eastern\nCanada or the  United States.\nVICTORIA, Oct. 7.\u2014Construction of\na new unit in the University of\nBritish Columbia building scheme in\nthe form of a forest products laboratory, will be started this year, It\nwas announced at the puldic works\ndepartment here todity.\n\"I Did It,\" He Declares Following Affray on July\nFirst\nTAKES STAND ON\n.     HIS OWN BEHALF\nYoung Girl Witnesses Death\nBlow; No Mercy Jury\nRecommends\nA   verdict   of   manslaughter,\nwithout any recommendation for\nmercy was returned by tbe Jury\nlast night at about 10:30 o'clock\nIn  the case of Charles Pyykka\nof  Rossland,  who  mi  charged\nulth the murder of Gus Koorfeikl\nat Rossland on July 1, last.   The\ncase probably the first In the history of Nelson to be decided in\nso short a time wis one of Interest    a nd    the    jury,    which\nbrought In a decision unanimous)\non the first ballot taken, was out\nabout  an   hour  before  deciding*\nupon a verdict.   Pyykka was the\nonly  witness to take the stand\non   his   own   behalf   while   the\ncrown  called  five witnesses,\nPyykka In his own testimony, ad*\nmitted   his   part  in   the   crime,   but\nclaimed that he could not remember\na   thing   about   lt.     Witnesses   pro*\nduced Bhowed clearly that Pyykka at\nthe   time   of   the   stabbing   had  de*\nclared  that  he had done it. f  \u2022   ' -\n\"I did it,    I did lt,\" he wu stated\nto have said to one Pollalla, who had)\nasked him what he had done*.       .\nThe Case Briefly\nRoughly summed up the case wail\none  in  which  Soorlnkl and  Pyykkai\nafter  drinking all  day  had  got inttf\nan   argument   over   money   matters\nSoorinki,   the   murdered   man   claim*\ning that Pyykka had stolen between\n$20   and   $40   from   him.   Therefore\nhe  was  going to get Pyykka.    Th\u00ab\npair met on Second avenue in Ross*\nland snd in a scuffle Pyykka stabbedT\nSoorinki    with    a   knife,    which   he\ndeclared   he   had   taken   from   th*\ndeceased.\nThe case did not get under way>\nuntil about 2:80 o'clock yesterday\nafternoon owing to the grand Jury\nsitting some two and a half hour*\nbefore bringing in true bills in the\nabove case and in one to be heard\ntoday. Rex. vs. Hooliaff on a charge\nof doing grevlous bodily harm.\nThe grand Jury of which Alderman A. 8. Horswill was foreman,\nwas composed of the following men\nfrom  Nelson and district:\nFrederick K. Archer, Kaslo, mer*\nchant; Charles A. Broderlck, Trail,\narchitect; It. W. Dawson, Nelson,\naKent; Leslie Craufurd, Nelson, Clerk;\n.John Gilroy, Willow Point, rancher;\nSam 11. Green, Kaslo, merchant; A.\nS. Horswill, Nelson, merchant; John\nIt. Hunter, Nelson, merchant; Fred\nIrv ne, Nelson, clerk; Alexander\nLeith, Nelson, accountant; Hugh I,\nMiddleton, Willow Point, rancher;\nRoy W. Sharp, Nelson, salesman;\nThomas H. Weildon, South Sloean,\nrancher.\nFollowing the announcement from\nA. S. Horswill, foreman, that true\nbills had been returned, his honor.\nJustice Morrison, excused them, stat*\ning that It was their privilege to\nvisit the public institutions, in the\ncity.\nThe Jury Is Named\nFollowing the dismissal of the\ngrand Jury the jury to deal with the\nmurder case was drawn. Some 28\nnames were chosen before the Jury\nof 12 members was selected. One\nJury was drawn, but was challenged.\nTho jury as picked consisted of the\nfollowing persons: Thomas Sargent.\nforeman; It. A. Howe, J. A- Curran,\nJohn Colliding, G. D. Nagle, J. H\u00bb\nCroll, T. S. Nelson, L. B. Campbell,\nJ. R. Craig, J. Balfour, Charles\nHoofer, A.   B.  Gilker.\nRalph Sherk, the first witness\"\ncalled by the crown, and a fireman\nresiding at Tadanac, told of arriving\nin Rossland on July 1, at about 4:45\no'clock. It was his first time in\nTlossland. He was accompanied by*\nhis wife nnd a small girl friend ot\nthe family's. A squabble attracted\nhis attention, und he Haw Pyykka, the\naccused, staring toward Soorinki*\nthe deceased. He was talking in a\nforeign language. They came together about four rods from where\nhe stood. Tho accused struck first,\nand the deceased staggered. Regaining himself, he clinched, and they\nwrestled on the sidewalk. In the\nmeantime ihe witness approached\ncloser, and the pair continued to fight\n(Continued on page 2)\nThe Weather\nTbe temporntures below are for the\ni hours ending yesterday afternooo\nt   6  o'clock                 .,\nVICTORIA.    Oct.    7. \u2014 Nelson    tnA\nicinlty: WeFterly winds; partly\nloudy,   and   colder  at  night.\nMin. Mar.\nNELSON      51 52\nVictoria    ;.-*.. 46 66\nVancouver     \u2022\u25a0\u25a0 48 62\nKamloops    ...>.*\u2022 48 60\nBarkervillo    \u00ab 86\nPrince Rupert   88 58\nF.sievun        44 54\nAtlin      20 82\nPawson    26 39\nCalgary 40 64\nWinnipeg     28 56\nPortland  48 6\u00bb\nHan Francisco    64 62\nSeattle    48 56\nPentlcton     \u00ab 46 64\nVernon  41 62\nGrand  Forks  39 65\nKaslo    ..40 55\nCranbrook  28 52\nKdmonton      84 54\nPrince Albert   *,.., 36 66\n \u2022 *   t ft I I ' \u2022\n\u00ab     s.     t I '   - i \u00bb '\nPage Two\nTHE NELSON DULY NEWS. WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 8, 1924\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWAere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel ol the Interior\nAMERICAN PLAN RATES, $3.50 TO \u00bb5.00\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths.\nHeadquarters for all Travelling Men, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists.\nROTARIAN   HEADQUARTERS\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER, $1.00\nTHE MOST COMFORTABLE  ROTU.NDA  IN   THE  CITY\nHUME\u2014W. R. Richardson, R. H.\nGreenwood. H. P. Powell, William H.\nDay, Vancouver; M. Silverfleld, Winnipeg; H, A. Newcomon, Lardo; Howard Hill.' ReRtiia; K. Thorn. Montrral;\nE. C. Burton, Toronto; John Anderson, Regina; H. 0. Norry, Woodstock;\nA. a. Richards, Calgary; J. H. Wilson,\nSpokane;   J.   R.   Craig.   It.    H.    Devltt,\nBalfour,    Charles    Batter,    Trail; I Toronto.\nM. A. Henderson. J. H Palmer, J. H.\nCrowe, Rossland; Mr. and Mrs. C. A\nKrodeiick, Ceorge L. Merrv. Trail;\nK. E. Archer, Kaslo; S H. Oreen.\nKaslo; >1, Newoomen. T.ardro; B. H.\nYorke. J. L. I.uhn, Metallne Fall?,\nJ. C. Sheeley, L. A. Kvans. Spokane;\nD. H. Taylor, Vancouver; J. Ii.\nHughes.    Honniugtoti;    A.    H.    Cowling,\neuROPEAN   PLAN\ndaylight Sample Room* for\nCommercial    M\u00abn\nHotel Strathcona\nOnc\u00ab?  You  Get  Acquainted With the Strathcona\nVOU WILL STOP AT NO OTHER\n5avo\u00a3 Ibotel\nROSSLAND KAN\nONVICTEDIN\nSTABBING CASE\n(Continued from page 1)\nin the middle of the road. Each man\nhad his arms alwut the other, while\nSoorinki was In a atooped position,\nthe accused striking him with his\nrisht hand. Suddenly hoth stopped,\nand the deceased stumbled to a telegraph pole, leaned on It for a second,\nand then dropped.\nPyykka in the meantime hod wnlked\naway, and the witness went to tel-\nephone for help and a doctor. When\nhe returned he Haw Soorinki In n\ndying condition, blood running from\na cut over his heart. He had been\nstabbed, and his white shirt wan\ncovered with blood. Within a few\nminutes he had seen the accused,\nPyykka, in charge of the policeman\nDevitt.\n\"Why,   He's   Dying\"\nThe only thing the witness heard\nthe lOCUfMl say while at the scene\nof  the stabbing was:\n\"Why,  he's dying.\"\nThe doctor then arrived and pronounced   the   man   as   dead.\nIn the cross-examination, the witness stated that he could not Hay\nthat Pyykka was intoxicated, nor\ncould he tell how he was dressed.\nThe stabbed man was the larger\nof the two. He had not seen the\nknife, but knew there had been a\nstalibing from seeing the blood and\nthe wound. The witness stated that\nhe had no reasbn to interfere in the\nscuffle, and he had not seen one\nblow   struck   downward.\nR. H. Devitt, chief of police for\nTadanac, also on arrival on the Trail\ntrain of July 1 told of seeing a man\nin a white shirt which was badly\nstained   with   blood.    He  also  saw   a\nYOU NEED US NOW\nSAID  a  Gentleman,  yesterday:\n\"I  CAME here  because my\nNEIGHBOR  Swears by Your\nM EN'S   and   Boys'   Wear.\"\nWE said:   \"That's  All  Right,\nIF   He   Doesn't   Swear   AT   Ua.\"\nNewly Remodelled\nNelson's Best Cafes\n''omplei\nly  furnished  wit h   the  best  uf  everything\nFor Your Comfort\ni    A.    KERR,\nHorner of Baker and Falls Sts      1\nProprietor\n2  Blocks from Depot.                 1\n-l,ET'S   STAY   a!   the   SAVOY-                                          1\nsteam    Heated\n-Hot    and    Cold     Running   Water\u2014European    Plan.       1\nBOSTON CAFE\nand Furnished Roomt, 511 Baker St.\nThe newest cafe in tiie city. Rooms.\n50c per night. Special rates by week\n\u25a0>r month. Special Chicken and Turkey Dinner each Sunday, 50c.\nRegular Dinners and Luncheons, 35c\nOPEN\"   DAY   AND   NIGHT.\nSAVOY\u2014Fred    Saioncoff,    Taghum;\ncouver. ___\t\nTrail;   O.   L.   AlfereWS.   Van-\nQueen's Hotel\nStean     heated    Throughout\n*n   *nnms   with   hoi   and   col*\nfinning    water\nii.    eoiei   nf   butinesF  district\n\u25a0 it    molt'    is     \\\\>   -Jim   to   pleas*\nA. Lapointe,\nTHE MADDEN HOTEL\nT.    MADDEN,   Prop.\nSteam-heated    Rooms   by   ths   Day.\nWeek  or   Mon.h.\nEvery    consideration   shown    to\nguests.\nCor    Baker   and   Ward   Sts.,   Nelson\nMADDEN\u2014P. C. Timber, James O.\nJohnson, Urdo; Mrs Matthew, Salmo:\nF. F Jackson, Shiran; V. Hughes,\nKaslo;    L,    B.    McCully,    Trail.\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic   Restaurant\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   Prevails\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\nI .uncheon,   11:30  to  t   35c\nSpecial   Dinners,   5:30   to   8    35c\nWe   Specialize   in   Chop   Suey\nand  Noodles.\nman walking away with his right\nhand In his pocket. He caught up\nto him and told him to take his\nhand from his pocket. The police\nfficer then took a large jack-knife\nfrom the pocket of pyykka, the accused. The witness at this point\nidentified the knife by a mark he\nhad  placed  on  It.\nReturning to the scene of the\nscuffle with Pyykka. he found Soorinki lying on the sidewalk. Fffs shirt\nwas open and a gash was in his\nleft breast; blood was oozing from it.\nMr. Devitt held the prisoner there\nuntil the arrival of Dr. Palmer and\nChief of Police Timms of Rossland.\nThe doctor stated that the man was\ndead.\n\"Here**  Your   Man\"\n\"I said to Timms, 'Here's your\nman and here's  the  knife.'\"\nA voice from the crowd then spoke\nto the accused In a foreign language.\nPyykka.   according   to   Chief   Devitt,\nreplied:   . \"Vou -s     I'll    give    you\nthe same.\"\nUpon being cross-examined by Mr.\nMatthew, the police officer stated\nthat the two men were pushing each\nother around at first, and he hadn't\nthought it much of a row. lt was\nhard to tell who was getting the\nworst Of the fight, lie had not seen\na knife, hut stated lhat Soorinki\nwas the taller of the two men. Liquor\ncould he smelled on ihe accused, but\nft was impossible to say if the deceased had  been drinking.\nThe chief had examined the knife.\nand stated that it was an ordinary\nI.X.I* jack-knife. The accused had\nappeared sensible enough, and was\nnot staggering. When arrested, he\nhad   said,   \"I'll    go   with    you.\"\nlt. W, Timms, chief of Rossland\npolice, told of receiving a call from\nthe hall grounds, and seeing 1'yykko\nin the hands of Chief Devitt of Tadanac. Devitt had said when he approached, \"Here's your man, chief.\"\nHe also handed over a knife. Dr.\nPalmer was also there, and a man\nwas stretched out on the ground. lie\nIdentified* WW as Cm Soorinki, the\ndeceased.\nDevitt had asked in what condition\nthe man was, and the doctor had\nreplied that he was dead. Pyykka\nhad then been taken to the police\nstation and locked up. At the station\nthe knife had been opened up and\nit had bssB produced at the coroner's\ninquest and at the preliminary bearing. The knife had been given to\nMagistrate Plewman of Rossland to\nkeep. The chief stated that he had\nopened the large blade and had found\nmoisture   on   it   resembling   blood.\nVnder cross-exam i nation, he stated\nthat at the time of his arrest the\naccused was under the influence of\nliquor. He knew that Pyykka lived\nat the Rossland hotel, as did the\ndeceased. Mr. Matthew a sited the\nchief if n man could get drunk In\nthe Rossland hotel. The police officer\nreplied that it was possible. There\nwas also a place known as the\nMiners' Rest, which was run at that\ntime hy Charles Gordon. He conducted a soft drink nnd cigar stand,\nand the chief stated that he had his\nSuspicions that liquor could be purchased   there.\nDoctor   Testifies\nDr. J. H. Palmer of Rossland, a\nmedical practitioner tiiere, was the\nnext witness for the crown, and told\nnf being called to the stabbing affray\nfrom the hall game on July 1. Upon\nreaching the scene of the affray lie\nfound a man on tbe sidewalk. He\nhad seen him ones before, and recognized him as Hoorinki. His shirt\nwas covered with blood, and there\nwas a st;,h wound in his chest.\nAfter the doctor knelt down beside\nhim the stabbed man gave two or\nthree convulsive gasps and died. His\nbreast was exposed at that time.\nThere was a wound on the left side\nof the chest, about the area of ths\ncartilage   of   the   fourth   rib   and   near\nOCCIDENTAL    HOTEL\nA     C.    TOWNER,    Proprietor\nTht    home   of    plenty\nFifty   rooms   ol    solid    romfurt\nWe   serve   the   best    mealf-   in   Nelson\nIt's   the  cook\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616 Vernon Street  East.\nKuropean and American plans,\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nMrs. MaMet.e & Son, Proprietors\nVice warm, comfortable rooms al\n**asnnable   rates     Open   day   and\nnight.\nCorner    Hall    and    Vernon    Streets\nLAKEVIEW\u2014-P.      M.     Hansen,     Wa\nneu;    11.    Bcrlemiuette,   Hall.\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nFinest-equipped restaurant in the\nCity. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice cream, soda water\nand hot drinks. Nice, clean, furnished rooms; hot and cold water.\nWe   cater   to   private   parties.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320  Baker  Street,  Nelson,   B.C.\nOPEN    DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30,   Special   Lunch   ..35c\n5:30 to 8:00 p.m., Supper    35c\nPhone 154\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n\/15   Vernon   Street    East\nSteam  hea.ed     Hot and  cold  wate>\nW*   are   here   to   serve   you,\nP    H    BUSH,   Prop.\nPARIS CAFE\nIS   NOW   OPEN   FOR   BUSINESS I\nNYx!    to   Tremont    Hotel. j\n' Meals   35.. Breakfast.  6 to 12 a.rn   '\u25a0\nNEW GRAND\u2014Mm.  W.  Barnes. Mrs.\nH    W.    Hankln.   Trail;    Mr.    and    Mrs.\nBarklev.    Meadows;    Mr,    and    Mrs     E.\nVri.   Wyrinuel;   Mr.    and   Mrs.    George j I\nReine,   Kamloops;   B.   J.   MacKay,   J. 'I\nValentine,     Vancouver.\n5HERBR00KE HOTEL\nNear   C.PR.   Station.\nKi ontp    al    Reasonable    Kates,\nH.   DUNK,   Proprietor.\nA WANT AD IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT.\nELECTRIC CAFE\n507 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nOpen Day and Night.\nExcellent Meals, Quick Service \u25a0\nEverything cooked by electricity\n[.uncheon. 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., 3Hc\nSupper 5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., 35'\nSpecial Sunday Turkey Dinner, 50r\nplntt Phone  450\nthe breast bone. It was an Incision\nwound about three-quarters of an inch\nin length. The doctor stated that he\nwas subsequently present at the\nautopsy, and there saw that the\nwound hnd cut through the cartilage\nof the fourth and fifth ribs, had\npenetrated the sac covering the heart\nand had entered into the right ventrical of the heart. It was a mortal\nwound, and had caused the death of\nSoorinki. It could have easily been\ncaused by the knife on exhibit. '\nWent Bight to Heart\nIn the cross-examination the doctor\nstated that the knife which had caused\nthe death of the deceased had penetrated downward ond inward, and that\nthe blow had been struck .n a downward sweep. lt was impossible for\nhim to ascertain whether or not\nHoorinki had been drinking, as there\nwan bloody froth issuing from his\nmouth. He had not particularly looked\nfor any signs of liquor. Tbe deceased watt a well-built man, and of\nthe   average   In   physique.\nRuth Jones, a 12-year-old Rossland\nschoolgirl, was the only witness who\nhnd seen the blow actually struck\nwhich had killed Soorinki. She was\non the stand for some time, and gave\nher evidence in a straightforward\nway. She told of going on July 1 to\nthe Bailey store for some candy, As\nshe drew near the store, she noticed\na man standing on the sidewalk and\nanother approach ing from the direction of the station. As he approached,\nhe said. ''Hello.'\" or something to\nthat effect, lo the other man, and\nat once the two started to wrestle.\nThe accused, whom she identified as\nPyykka, put his hand into his pocket\nand pulled out a knife. She was unable to see the handle, but clearly\nsaw the hlade. He stabbed Soorinki.\nwho fought back desperately. At\nabout that time the train whistled\nand the deceased fell down a longs Id.\nof Bailey's store. Mrs. Hal ley came\nout,  and   said,   \"What   Is   this?\"\nA    man    then    came    from    a    hotel\nacross the street, and told Mrs. Bailey\nto put   ice on   the   injured   man's chest.\nIn    the   meantltne   a   huge   crowd   had\n| gathered    around.      Ruth    then    stated\nI that   she   went   home.\nStarted to Wrestle .\ni In further elaborating on the strug-\nj gle, at the request of his honor, Ruth\nI stated that the two, in commencing\n1 the struggle, had grasped each other's\n| hands. Soorinki knocked Pyykka's\ni hat off, and while they were wres-\ni tling she was about 4 feet away.\n! She saw the knife at this distance,\nI and after the stabbing she stated the\npair went on struggling toward the\nj road. She saw the accused with a\nknife, and saw hlru striking at\nI Soorinki. She was nut able to see\ni all the knife, but only a portion of\nj the   blade.\nThe little. girl was put through a\nI long cross-examination by Mr. Matthew, for the defence. She was ' of\n. the opinion that Pyykka had struck\nI the first blow, but was not certain\nShe thought that the fight had lasted\nI about IB or 20 minutes. Soorinki\n\\ was the tallest and Pyykka the fattest\nj of the two. Pyykka, she thought, had\nI hud the best of the fight, as he had\nj struck the more blows. Bhe thought\n. that Pyykka was drunk, as he d\n| not fall over as much as the d\n\u25a0 ceased.\nI      She   stated    that    she   had   not    seen\nj Pyykka   open   the   knife,   but   hud   seer\nhim   take  pomethinR   from   his   pocket\nwhich   she    Identified   \u00bb\u00bb   a   knife,   as\nshe  had   seen   the  blade     Soorinki  w;\nattempting   to   punch   Pyykka,   and   had\nhit  him  several   times about   the   hea<\nShe   spoke   In   particular  of   two   dowi\nward    strokes    delivered    by     Pyykki\nIf Soorinki hail a knife, she had  failed\nto   see   it,   and   she   stated   that   it   was\nquite possible   that,  he might   have had\na    knife.      Also    the    deceased    might\nhave   had   the   knife   taken   from   him\nby   Py.vkka.     She   slated   that   she   was\n^*\"I^S^\nInsist on BAYER TABLETS OF ASPIRIN^\nUnless you see the \"Bayer Cross\" on tablets you are\nnot getting the genuine Bayer product proved safe\nby millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for\nColds      Headache       Neuralgia     Lumbago\nPain       Toothache      Neuritis       Rheumatism\n\u25a0e^\n. Accept  only   \"Bayer\"  package\nwhich contains proven directions.\nHandy   \"Bayer\"   boxes   of   li!   tablets\nAlso bottles of 24 and 100\u2014DruggioU.\nAfpirin In the trade mark {retrlstered In Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetle-\nai-l.lef.ter of SiilifvUraeld (A.-ety! Salicylic Acid, \"A, 8. A.\"). While It la well known\nHint A.-plrH meiiUH Bayer manufacture, to assist Hie public against Iiultstlom, the Tablets\nof Buyer f'ou.iniuy  will be NUuij-ed  witli  lUuir gt-u\u00abr\u00abl trade  mark,   Ui\u00ab \"ilajrwr Ohjss.\"\nnot excited, and had stood close by\nand watched the entire fight.\nAocnMd on Defensive\nJames Benson, an electrician In\nRossland, stated on the stand that\nhe had seen two men fighting, hoth\nhaving their backs toward him. He\nhad seen the dead man, Soorinki,\nstrike some heavy blows, and was\nof the opinion that the prisoner was\nnot defending himself any too well.\nHe Raw the prisoner strike one blow\nwith his left hand; lt was an upper-\ncut,   and   the   fight   stopped.\nPyykka walked away with hla hands\nIn his pockets. The wounded man\nturned with his hand on his breast\nand dropped, blood spurting from his\nside. He then heard a man shout,\n\"Walt there!\" and saw Chief Devitt\nrush   up   and   stop   Pyykka.\nHe asked the accused for a knife\nand the accused replied that he did\nnot have one. The chief thereupon\ntook one from Pyykka's pants pocket. In his cross examination he\nstated that the murdered man had\nseemed to him to be the aggressor.\nCharles Pollalla, a Kindlander, offered the sensational evidence of the\ncase. He was a miner, working\nin the mines there, and had seen\nboth the accused and murdered\nmen on several occasions- He told\nof Joining the crowd at the day of\nthe stabbing and asking Pyykka, In\nFinnish, what he hnd done. Pyykka had replied: \"I'll do to you\njust the name. You're talking too\nmuch.\"\n\"I Did It\/* Says AocuksoiI\nIn his cross examination he stated\nthat the two men were apparently\ngood friends and he had seen them\ndrinking on July 1. He stated that\nupon his approach to Pyykka and\nupon asking what he had done the\naccused had said.\n\"I did It. 1 did it. I would do\nthe same to you. You are talking\ntoo   much.'*\nPyykka then put h's hand into\nhis pocket its If looking for something. Witness said that he was\nscared at this and walked away. He\ncouldn't say whether or not Pyykkn\nwas intoxicated. Me did not know\nIf Pyykka had expressed any regrets as to  his  crime.\nCharles Pyykka, the accused, was\ntho only witnessed on the stand\nfor his defence. He stuted that he\ncome from Finland In 1912 going\nto Vancouver. He was married and\nhud worked at Anyox. He went\nto Rossland in May, 1924, meet ng\nSoorinki on May 29, for the first\ntime-\nDrinking   Heavily\nOn the night before the crime\nhe and his friend had been drinking and on July 11 he went to Soo-\nrenkl's room and asked him !f he\nwould like some drinks. They went\nout and had some beer and whisky\nat a hotel and Inter went to dinner.\nAfter dinner they went to the\nMiner's Rest, run by Gordon, where\nthey again drank heavily. While\nat Gordon's, Hoorinki declared that\nPyykka had Htolen his money anil\nthai he was go ng to kill him. At\nthis juncture Gordon asked them\nto leave and Pyykka stated he left\nalone with the intention of going to\nhis room at the Rossland hotel. Soorinki had followed him and started to hit him. He hit Pyykka about\nthe face with the handle of the\nknife or someth ng else of the same\nnature. Accused was unable to remember what it was-.\nPyykka stated that he took the\nknife away from the deceased and\nwhen he got it, he opened It and\nstruck  him   wilh   it.\n\"1 was drunk. T didn't know\nnothing, except that I defended myself. Soorinki was intoxicated, we\nnight before and the whole day. I\nhad been dr nklng together the\ndo not recollect ever speaking t)\nPollalla. This Is not my knife\n(ihowing tiie court the knife on exhibition), 1 have the same kind with\na difference in one end, on the\nhandle. I d'd not have a knife of my\nown in the fight. Soorinki was the\nbetter fighter and if he were here\nnow it could easily be seen. I don't\nremember striking the blow,\" so declared the accused through an interpreter, Hannah Saurrukk.\nCharged   in   Vancouver\nCross examined by James O'Shea,\ncrown prosecution, he stated that he\nbad answered to a stabbing charge\nin Vancouver and that he had paid\na fine of $10 in addition to doctors\nbills and hospital fees for the victim- This was In December of last\nyear. Soorinki had accussed h'm of\nstealing  his  money and  buying beer.\nSoorinki on approaching him had\nstnted that he was going to kill him\nnow, and struck at him. Witness\nwns not able to remember whether\nhe had been struck by a kn'fe or a\nfist, ;i( any rate, he had the mark\nOn his face yet. He did not remember if ho had a knife in his hand.\nHowever, he stated, that he must\nhave taken the knife from Soorinki\nas his own knife was In his work.ng\nclothes In his room.\n\"If I had it I must have taken it\nfrom him. I can't tell. I was not\nSober. I never had It before and\ncan't remember if I had a knife\nwhen I walked away from Soorinki.\nThe pol ce stale that they took a\nknife from my pocket, but I don't\nremember. I d n't know whether\nI had a knife or not, nr W I opened\nit or not, but 1 m.ist have done it,\nIf I hit him. I must hive got the\nknife from Soorinki,\" ro concluded\nthe witness.\nLawyer   Make;   \/     c il\nr. O. Matthew, attor v f :\u2022 \"i\naccused, In addressing th - lur'' ?*, i.:\non the different stories of the <\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0\nnenrea for the pror.^cutl it.. I1- itt\nEherk and little Ruth .'ones a I h\u00abt'\nMuted thnl it was net much of a\nfi'-'hi. Sherk had not Interfered;\nDevitt, a policeman, haJ not though'\nil much, nnd Ruth Jones had nol\nappeared {if raid hut wailed tiriund\nDid   it   look   like  a   child's  play,  ac-\nTHE  GUMPS-DON'T MIND   THE   RAIN\nI       VMS FWtNDS\u2014 WHUX  \\  W NOT MME  TWE\n\/ mctuss honor, uf punu born \\h thvs\n\/ MMaN>F,Cl-NT  MtTKOVOUS  ,  Ftsl .\\S MUCH KT\nJ    MOMf.   UM   SOUR   BEWlTffUL   OTN  AS   A,\nJ   .JWrNM  U'S   MOTHER'S   KRK-VS - \"TMc NKME\nOM&M&.  \\N\\U_   KLW.WaS   (SMMN   ENGRAMEfc   ON AN\nHEART  W1H  VOTERS   OF  V\\Rc  AS  MN\n(aRtNT 6RKNT>-t>M>\\NN  CAM'S HERE \\n A\n\/     \\ S-\u00bbs.NY5  ftLVORE NOV),  A  LOVER OF  THE\n\/   uSEKT   OPLN   SPfVCES, A,   MAN   WHO  BtUtSJES\n\/   \\M  OMAWfV, -rviE CITS OF Dts-Ttt-r,- AND \\\nLOOK   FORNMARt)   TO   \"mNT   (iUORVOVJS   PAN\nVmtH \"we VRo\\rt> errs of omaha. \\nh_e.\nIAke vre RKWFDL foPlACfc as -THE ISNM46\nOYH    OF    TWE ^\/\/\u00bbN\\vJER-SE-An\u00a3pvs\nnRTt   OFF,C\\A\\_  aciv.(as VRES^EUT \\n\\U-\nBE TO   VNSS   A   EAVJ \t\nTHE   CA? ,TA\\_ OF THE\nwrtE* States \u25a0\n\/      Tv\\E   CWJUbS OF OVfSESSlOM UoVtR\n\/    OMIR THE   VOUTWAEVCKMZQW OF OUR\nTMR. LNNT> - ?,UT ON EEECTVDM t>M ANDREW,\nGviMV V0\\EE SENb   T:WE SDNUGWT   OF\nPROSFtRWS  To SVUNE OM OWAviA - \\>ON'V\nF0ROET-  G-U-M-P- SVEEEtJ   C>\\VE  US J\nMore VRosvtRvrN- wf\/w\nBlouses\n7\nNew models, Enz^sh\nBroadcloth, in plain and\nstripes and Crepe r!ev\nChene. Mostly tailored,\nsome novelty. Prices,\n84.50 Up.\nWINTER COATING\u2014Velours, cut Bolivias, Blanket Cloths, etc. All\nwanted shades. $2.25\nand Up.\nCHILDREN'S AND\nMISSES' DRESSES\u2014\nHomespuns and Flannels. Prices, $4.50 &A\nUp.\nNeio  Necktoear  Novelties\nJust In.\nNelson Dry Goods Co*\nLadies' Wear Specialists\ncording to the evidence of the ac\ncused on the stand, asked Mr. Mat\nthews. The little girl's story am\nthat of the ar-eused had agreed fnas\nmuch qh both stated that ib wa\nwrestling match at the start.\nIn the evidence of Miss Jones 1\nwas hard to say Just how much wa\nimagination or actual facts. Sh\nsaid the blow had been struck aa th'\ntrain whistled, in which case th\nother witnesses could not have seei\nthe blow struck.\nMe pictured the two men. the de>\nceased and accused, away from thei\nnative kind on a Canadian holiday\nXo home ties, no friends, they wen\ntogether diinking, and later dinini\nin the Rosaland hotel. In the after\nnoon they were at Cordon's res\nroom.\n\"Do you believe they were drlnklni\nginger ale?\" asked the lawyer. Hi\nspoke of the evils of drink, and how\nIt affected different people In dif\nf( rent ways. There had been n\nmotive advanced for the crime. Wn\nit possible that both were so intoxi\ncated that they knew not what thej\nactually did? There was no intent\nind no defir.ite evidence sis to hov\nthe case started. If there whs anj\ndoubt, the accused was at least en\ntitled to the benefit. After the blow\nwas struck the accused had not rur\naway. He was suing home, Th-\nknife hnd not been proven as bis\n\"If yuu believe tbe men were intoxi\nnated In a drunken brawl, then I\nthe accused guilty of murder?\" aafce\nLhe  lawyer  for   the  defence.\nCrown   Talks   to   Jurors\nMr. O'Shea, in addressing the jurj\n\u00abtnted that a serious offence ha\nbeen committed. Did this man d\nit or didn't he? The facts were ver\nsimple, There were several eye\nwitnesses. Sherk had told a clear\ncut story. He was a chap who woul\nnote a thing. He noted Soorinki\nhe noted the crowd. It was not\nserious quarrel, aa Devitt or Shei\nsaw it. It was nothing to sugr\nthe shedding of life. Miss Jones ..i\nthe fight commence. She saw F vkk\nattack Soorinki. She saw i >.\u2022\u25a0!\ntake out a knife and strike Sooi \u25a0\nFrom what they saw, was there an.\nthing to cause the use of a knife\nBenson saw the struggle and th\nblow.\nPollalla, a Finlander, was threatenei\nby Pyykka after the brawl. Th\npolice found fresh bloodstains on th\nknife.\nPyykka had been convicted to\nusing a knife in Vancouver. A squab\nble wai no cause for knife play, ye\nhe admitted doing so. In the Ross\nland \"instance he used a knife agair\nand  a  man   was  killed.\nGordon had told Pyykka to leav\non July 1. There must have bee\nsomething offensive about him ther\nAfter that his mind had become\nblank, and that evidence could hardl\nhe accepted. If he took a knife fror\nSoorinki, what grounds did he hav\nfor killing him? The only thins whirl\nappeared in his defence wns th\nfa\"t that he was drunk. \"Thai is\nilefence,\"    said    Mr.    O'Shea.\nLooking     into     the    nucptlnn\ndrunkenness, the lawyer for the crOWi\nold  how  the  accused   had   been   abb\nto    look    after    himself    despite    hi!\nend it ion. He v.*ni irrational wher\nipoken   to   by,   Devitt.     He   had   ttu\n'iv    whi h    woti'.d   cause   death   il\n>r \"''t   i r \"   ihe  heart.    He  made\n'i ,v    \u2022 : '<    n    u'capon   which   woub\n(Po.itinued   nn   page   3)\nBeauty\nOf Hair and Skin\nPreserved By\nCuticura\nSoao to Clean**\nOintment to H\u2014I\nGirls! Hair Grows\nThick and Beautifi\n35-Cent     \" Danderine\"     Do<\nWonders for Lifeless,\nNeglected Hair\nA gleamy\nof luxuriair tit\nfull of\nlustre and I\nshortly fallow\ngenuine tc> t.\nup of ne-rle\nsr-alps with\npendable \" 1\ndefine.\"\nFalling hal\nitching scalp ai\ntho dandruff\ncorrected 1mm\ndiately. T h I\ndry, wispy or fading hair Is quick\ninvigorated, taking on new strengl\nOolOT and youthful beauty. \"Da\nderine\" la delightful on the hair;\nrefreshing, stimulating tonic \u2014 I\nsticky or greasy!    Any drug store\n (Oil\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, \"WEDNESDAY, MOROTNG; OCTOBER 8, 1924\nPage Three*\n^ NORA LEE!\nElenorc;Meherin's. Greatest Story\nJRtrtaling the Heart and Soulofthe 1924 Flapper \\\nsos^ooooob\nCHAPTER   XV\nBan* and Nora Go to a Picnic at\nConnia'a Homo in tho Hills\n\"Nora Lee rlonerl her door and very\n\u2022ftly turned the key In ltn lock.\nThen she ran over to the mirror, tilt-\nnK It so that she could view herself\nrom   head  to   foot.\nShe gave a deft twist to the small\noherry-colored hat and brought a\nspiral of dark hair across her cheek\nIf she looked a wild, singing gypsy\nthat Was what she felt. Bright 1*4\niweatef\u2014bright red arconllnn-pleated\nklrt very long, little white collars\nnd   cuffs.\nThe bell rang. Her heart pounded\nnoisily,\n It   was   Sunday   morning\u2014the   first\nSunday In February. And she wns\nsolng on a- picnic wilh Connie's\nrowd. A man was taking her. Thai\nman was Dane Herrlck.\" So her heart\nliounded.\nHe had reached port Thursday. 10\nlays late. They had come sneaking\nn at 5 o'clock in the morning. Before he even went home, he took a\ntrip all the way out to the wilderness\nwhere Nora Lee lived, just to say\n'Hello.\"\nBronzed and eager, with n flash\nu white teeth, and much of swaggering lilt about him\u2014better even than\nthe happy Images In her memorv\t\nNow Margaret knocked. When she\nsaw Nora Lee with the bright, splashing color In the soft gold of her skin.\nMargaret's eyes filled. She said\nmusing:   \"Well, my gypsy child!\"\n\"I don't look childish, do I. mother?\"\n\"Not so very\u2014\"\nThen Nora Lee gave a  low, trlum-\nhant  laugh:   \"Going on  18.\"\n\"Just past \"17.\"\n\"You always reckon backward, but\nIt Isn't any use!\"\nMargaret kissed her. She felt her\n^mother's lashes wet. against her face.\n'Oh.   mother,   why?\"\n\"You   take  my  breath  away\u2014\"\nMargaret rarely said a thing like\n(that. It filled Nora Lees cup till\nH  brimmed.\nShe hoped she'd take his breath\naway,   too.\n, He said softly: \"flee\u2014\" nnd held\nIher arm hard ns they ran down the\nsteps to the little roadster. When\nshe was seated beside him nnd they\nrwere dashing down the curving roads\nthe looked down and laughed: \"I'm\nr\u00ablad to be home, Nora Lee. No reason* given!\"\nAt Uncle Tom's cabin three machines with Connie and her friends\nwere waiting. They waved nnd greeted loudly: \"Push the tin can quicker!\niWo'll  get behind  you.    All aboard\u2014\"\nIt was after li. The highway was\ncrowded. They dashed in ami out,\nkeeping In an uneven line\u2014mad, exciting  fun\u2014\nThen they left the traffic and went\nscooting into the hills, miles beyond\n~,os Gatos. Here Connie's folks had\na cabin, set In a deep 'bowl of trees.\nThe hills rose up in majesty about lt.\nFor Nora Lee it wns a scene of enchantment. Half In a dream she\nheard Dane say: \"After lunch we'll\n(take a walk.\" She nodded.\n, Mickey was shaking two bottles\u2014\nlitis ruddy face filled with mirth.\nMickey was an irresistible fellow\u2014\n''My blond gladiator,\" Connie called\nnim because he had a rather shoved-\nV>ut   jaw   and   a   short,   pugnacious\nBILIOUSNESS\nsick   headache,   sour   stomach,\nconstipation,   easily  avoided.\ni An   active   liver   without   calomel.\nCHAMBERLAIN'S\nTABLETS\nNever   sicken    or   grip^-only    25c\nprisoners:\nPIRATE!\nCHECKED C\nA GUARANTEED\nRELIEF FOR ASTHMA\n\"I want every Asthma sufferer in this\ncity,to try my treatment entirely at my\nrisk,\" Dr. Hcniffmann announces. \"(Jo\nto your ilruggifit. and get a package of my\nAsthmatlor and, should it fail to givo\ninstant relief, the druggist will cheerfully refund your money without any\nquestion whatever.\" The Doctor saya\nfurther: \"No matter how violent tho\nattack, how obstinate the east), or what\nelse has failed, my Asthmador or Asth-\nmador Cigarettes will give instant relief,\nusually in 10 seconds, hut always within\n15 mnutes. Hundreds of unsolicited\ntestimonials abundantly prove what my\nremedy has done, and I know it will do\nthe same for others. I am so positively\ncertain that it will produce instant relief\nand will be found the best remedy ever\nused that I have no fears of authorizing\nthese druggists to givo this guarantee,\nor of their being called upon for the refunding of money.\" Druggists any whero\nhandling Asthmador will return your\nmoney, if you say so, Persons preferring\nto try it before buying will be sent a free\nsample by addressing Dr. R.Schiffmann,\n1734 N.Main St., Los Angelos. California.\nTHE PRUDENT MAN\nlays In his coal now. He does\nnot wait until cold weather,\nwhen everybody wants coal at\nonce. He ia for preparedness\non the coal question anyway.\nBesides, coal la cheaper at thla\nseason. Why not bo as wise\nas he, and give us your coal\norder now? There's profits aa\nwell as prudence In doing so.\nWest Transfer Company\nPHONE  33\nnose. But he had a lovable way and\na  great  crop of  sunny   hair.\nEveryone liked him. Dane had an\nalmost pathetic love for him. He\ntold Nora Lee: \"Mick's brilliant. He\ncould set his mark as high as he\nwanted and reach lt, if he'd only\nquit fooling around and get down\nto business.\"\nNow Mickey passed out tiny silver\ncups filled with the honey-colored\nliquor. Connie toasted: \"Here's to\ncrime!\"\nMkkey filled the cups again:\nThey made short work of the sand-\n\"Here'H to  love!\"\nwlehes. Someone had brought a\nphonograph with all the latest jazz\nrecords. So they held a dance on\nthe porch.\n\"Oh, come, Nora Lee, don't you\nwant to talk to me? I've got an awful lot to say.\" Dane whispered lt\ngleefully   close   to  hei*  ear.\nThey walked down a narrow trail,\nthen up and up. Soon they were on\nthe crown of a small hill. The peaks\nswept out before them, clothed in\nsea, the sky came down to meet the\namber glory. Far off like a turquoise\nearth. *\nDane said in a husky voice: \"When\nI saw things like this, Nora Lee, I\nwished  you  were along.\"\n\"Do you love things like this. Dane?\nI've   wondered   If   you   did.\"\nOh\u2014 have you? Did you think\nmuch of me?\" She took a fleeting\nglance at his deep-set eyes. They\nhad a warm look as though his heart\nwere   trembling.\nShe said uneasily: \"Let's sit down.\"\nSho clasped her hands. They were\nlong and slender, the one beauty that\nshe got from Margaret. To the young\nman, surveying her, she seemed possessed  of wild,  fragile grace.\nWhat are all the things you had\nto  say  Dane?\"\nShe raised her eyes. He looked\ninto their astonishing blueness and\ngrew dumb. \"Oh, lots. I notice you\ndidn't take  the  cocktails.     Why?\"\nI don't care for them.\" She\nadded whimsically: \"I promised my\nmother I wouldn't. Between the\ntwo of you, my chances for the joy\nof life are ruined.\"\n\"How?\"\n\"She's against cocktails. You re\nagainst   cigarets.\"\n\"What makes you think that in\nthis   age   of   freedom?\"\n\"You said In a letter you were\nglad I didn't smoke. And I wanted\nto   like   anything.\"\nHe bent down and looked into her\nface with a young, exultant laugh.\n\"Gee! Do I count like that, Norry\nLee?\" .     .\nShe answered quietly, though the\nwings were all stirring in her heart:\n\"t think a great deal of my friends,\nMr. Herrlck, especially as you were\none  of  the first.\"\n\"I can guess that I'm not the last,\nNora Lee- Boys don't make you\nwhite with stage fright any more,\ndo they? In one way you seem to\nhave  grown  awfully old.\"\n\u25a0\u2022yes\u2014i come of a family that gets\nold quickly. I'm not afraid of boys\nnow but they didn't interest me.\nThey're too foolish. I wouldn't tell\nthis to a soul but you, Dane, but I\nthink they're awful bluffers.\"\nHe said with a wink: \"But how\nabout men? Of 21 or thereabouts?\"\nShe looked up earnestly: \"Don t\nlet's flirt. I have to do that with\neveryone else. But I'm just going\nto have the luxury of being myself\nwith you. Do you think anyone can\nrisk  it?\"\n\"What?\" ,  ,\n\"Just being themselves and doing\nwhat they feel and think and hold-\nng to their own ideas\u2014\"\nHe   reached   over   with   an   impulsive   move   and   touched   her   hand:\nYou   can,   Nora   Lee\u2014If   you   care\nfor   what   one   friend   thinks,\"\n\"You,   Dane?\"\n\"I'm so glad of that. I hoped you'd\nlike me still. Tell me what you saw\n\u2014and what you learned and what\nyou're   going   to   do?\"\nThey talked and talked. The sun\nturned to a- crimson ball\u2014fires\ntossed in the far-off sky. Twilight,\ntrailing distant songs came near.\nThey stood and held each other's\nhands. \"You asked me what I did\nand what I saw. You haven't asked\nme what I mostly thought, Nora\nLee\"\n\"Was it  beautiful?\"\n\"Yes\u2014I  thought   of you.\"\nShe drew ber hands together, murmuring  softly:   \"Oh,  I'm  so glad.\"\nBut she wouldn't raise her head.\nThey walked without anuthcr word\nto the grove. Laughter met them\nand the ruddy glow of fires. The\nboys were kneeling on the ground\nbarbecuing   steaks.\nNora Lee leaned half against\nDane's arm, listening as to the\nvoices of another world because of\nthe great, exultant singing in her\nheart. That anyone could eat when\nlife   had   joys   like   this!\nIt was half-past 10 when they\nstarted home. The three big machines sped like winged arrows\ndown the road;- the little car was\nleft   behind   them.\nShadows fell from the trees. The\nhills pressed close behind them. But\nbeyond, the moon rose palely In a\nsea of gold. They seemed passing\ndown a midnight trail into portals\nof beauty and ineffable light.\nThe car slowed of its own will.\nSuddenly, with a bewildering shock\nit  stopped.\nHalf an hour later tt was still\nmotionless. He came to her with\na troubled, pleading look: \"I don't\nknow what to do, Nora Lee- I\nfilled her up this morning. There's\nnot a drop of gas. There must be\na leak\u2014\"\n\"Can't wo get some? My mother\nwill   die   worrying.\" \\.\nThey remembered a garage a mile\nback. They walked toward lt. The\ntrees were so thick they could\nscarcely see each other's face. It\nwas midnight when they reached\nthe garage. It was closed. There\nwas  no  way to  enter It.\nDane said: \"We've got to\ntill morning. Thore'a nothing\nto do.\"\n(To Be Continued)\nNew  York Booze Broker\nSays They Supervised\nRum Transfer\nALLEGED PRISONER\nELOQUENT IN  BOX\nIsaacs, Winnipeg  Lawyer,\nWarned He Would Be\nFed to Fishes\nMONTREAL, Oct. 7.\u2014I;u his\nevidence of his three weeks' \"trio\"\non the now famous Lutzen, nt th*\nresumption of the trial of Captain\nSamuel Forde. for nirac. in t>\"\u00bb\n\"ourt of Kintr's bench tndav. J. M.\nfWlfft, Wlnnfneg attorney WU\nnothing if not elonuent. with n mem-\nirv for detail, as he told a storv of\nnointed revolvers, Imprisonment In\n\u2666he shin's ehnin loeke-. threats of\nVlng \"fed to (he fish.\" with the\nnecessary \"drilling of holes\" with revolver bulM*. the looting of the caren\n->f Honor off New YnrV, hip eme*,\u00bbr-\n\u00abne*- from a bootleggers' battle with\nt beating up and n lot of Abuse\n\u2022yMfh he unfolded ns though on n\nnnvie screen.\nThe pirate\", scolding lo I\u00abaae*\nwere both bold and had. and tiehad\n\u25a0\\ very thin time, even having Ms\nwatch stolen on board tbe ship\nfollowing her sailing from St. John\nK, B., on O'-'ober fl. 1**1 vear.\nA Financial 'Fai'urs\nSale of the 4000 odd ruses of\nScotch whlt-kev was not a btt'tnMP\nflorress. according to th* evidence\nwhich showed that only $1R a case\nwas obtained, as a*atn*t n then current \"market prim\" of ltd, and bad\nweather and tbe fear of interference\nfrom the authorities did not tend to\nimnrove   matters.\nFrank Hoffman, a New York \"broker,\" or. as he admitted under examination, liquor dealer, as a witness for\nthe defence, testified that while on nn\nexcursion to Bum row. he met the\nLutzen, the sunercargo of which told\nhim to see Adelman at the Astor or\nPennsylvania hotel about buying the\ncargo.\nLater he took liquor from the Lutzen, the whole operation being supervised by the two supercargoes. Isaacs\nand Morris, who, according to their\ntestimony, were being held aH prisoners   by   the \"pirate\"   Forde.\nMerchants Pay In Advance\nThe merchants of Rum row are a\ntrustful body, according to Hoffman.\nThey pay in advance for their liquor.\nDespite all the opportunities for\nfraud, the wltnens said, credits up\nto $100,000 were common In the booze\nbusiness.\nAsk for Engineer's Arrest\nApplication was made before adjournment for the arrest of Fred\nHansen of New York, second engineer on the Lutzen, who testified\ntoday   for   the   defence.\nThe defence couneel opposed the\napplication on the grounds that this\naction was intimidation and was calculated to prevent other members of\nForde's crew from coming to Montreal   to   give   evidence.\nCounsel for the complainants declared that efforts would be made to\nhave all members of the crew who\ncame    to    Montreal   arrested.\nJudge Monet postponed decision\nuntil   tomorrow.\nA FAST TORONTO COLT\nPOLISH CROP\" \u25a0\u25a0'\nSHOWS SLUMP\nProvidence', IM., Oct. 7.\u2014J. .1-\nj Hnsen, in superior court, yesterday\n; dismissed \"for lack of prosecution\"\n! the Indictments against William C.\nI Pelkey, chairman of the Republican\n| urate committee-; William (Toots)\nI Murray, and ,f. T. Toomev, charged\nI with conspiracy to plant liquid bromine in the state senate chain ber\ni during a Democrat filibuster, June\n;  li.,   last,\nThis 5-yeur-olil chestnut, owned liy C, Buxton. Is seen winning\nthe feature event by three lengths in 1:12 1-5 at Thorncliffe track,\nToronto,  recently.    .Toy  Smoke  was   second  and  Polynesia  third.\nlanguage    to    interpret    readily    and\nclearly.\n\"Gerftlenun, I don't ask you to recall as to whether you are satisfied\nthat he really intended to murder the\nman. One is dead, the other is\ncharged with his life. If you have\nto guess, then an acquittal Is necessary.\"\t\nFARRINGTONS TOP\nEGG CONTEST LIST\nwait\nelse\nBelgium's Loan\nto Germany Is\nSeven Million\nBRUSSELS, Oct. 7.\u2014Belgium's share\nIn the $200,000,000 loan to Germany\nprovided under the Dawes reparations\nplan has been fixed In principal at\n$7,500,000. The government previously\nhad assurance of subscriptions of $5.-\n000,000, and the balance. It Is understood, probably has been found by\na number of bankara whom Premier\nTheunis  called  into  conference  today.\nROSSLAND MAN\nCONVICTED IN\nSTABBING CASE\n(Continued   from   page    2)\ncause  death,  and   that  man   is  guilty\nof. the  charge   made.\nHis  Honor Puts Case\nMr. Justice Morrison, summing up\nthe evidence, warned the jury to\ngive the prisoner any benefit. Nothing was yet proven in this case;\nit was not until the jury said so,\nIn dealing with evidence of witnesses\nin regard to time or distance, he\nurged them to use their own common\nsense.\nIt was not one of those difficult\ncases where it was the outcome of a\nfeud.\nThe justice hereupon described tbe\ndifference between murder and manslaughter.\nA previous conviction, such as that\nbrought out by Mr. O'Shea, was not\nevidence that he committed the act\non July 1. It was produced to test\nthe credibility of the accused.\nIn dealing with the evidence, his\nhonor pointed out that the peopl\nminds were set on the celebration.\nSherk saw men fighting, and thought\nIt was none of his business. It\nseemed nothing serious, and perhaps\na poor fight anyhow. Chances :\nSherk had not seen the beginning of\nthe fight. Devltt saw a scuffle, and,\nlater, blood, and had finally taken a\nknife from the prisoner's pocket,\nwhile the prisoner had denied that\nthe knife was his.\nChief Timms of Rossland bad stated\nthat the prisoner was drunk. Dr.\nPalmer had stated the wound was\nmade by an instrument such as Ihe\nknife  shown.\nThe justice was of the opinion, in\nreferring to Ruth Jones' evidence,\nthat tbe children should not be called\nunless  necessary.\nBenson of Rossland bad stated he\nhad seen the deceased strike the\nprisoner, who wan not defending himself very welt. Pollalla. the Finnish\nminer, had been threatened by the\nprisoner  following  the   fight.\nThe accused did state in his evidence that he took the knife from\nthe deceased, opened It, and struck\nSoorinki in self-defence. This, stated\nhis honor, was grave evidence, especially when he could handle the deceased so easily. \"You saw the prisoner. He Is 40 years of age; he\nseemed an athletic man. It's for\nyou to aay whether or not he was\ncapable of inflicting such a wound.\nHe had been threatened by the deceased.\n\"Gentlemen of the jury, he really\ndoesn't know what he Is Raying. If\nmy friend la dead and I stabbed him,\nT must have got the knife from him.\nHe can't speak English sufficiently\nwell to put forth his case. A person needs a good grip of the English\nSix   Pens   in   Twenty-two\nHundred Class and Four\nWeeks to Go\nWith only four weeks to run in\nthe British Culumhia egg contest at\nAgassi:! und six pens in the HL'IHJ\nclass the stru^ele for first place is\na keen one, Parrlnglon Brothers of\nCentral Park bead th.- 4Mb week list\nwith 2271+ \u00abggH to the credit of their\npen. M. It. Ruttledge of Sardis conns\nsecond with 2272: then comes Rump &\nHendali with 22*6, \\i II. Orahamc\nwith 3349, Simpson * Holland with\n2215 and   W,  K-  F   M. Tozer with   220\".\nThe University of British Columbia,\nwith its noncompeting pen, lias run\nup   a   total   of   2361   eggs.\nMr. Grahanic's pea laid f.o eggs In\nthe week, the highest number of ans\ncue   pen.\nResults   of   the   contest   to   date   are:\nOwner and Address\u2014      Week    Total\nAnconas\nGrant.   W.   H.,   Edmonds    ...   10       1923\nPullen,   F.   E.,   Whonnoek    -.17       1*6!)\nWhite Leghorns\nArnoubl,   i.,   Sardis       2:1\nBolivar    w.    Ughorn    Farm,\nCloverdale       17\nBrown, Rulh, Pitt Meadows *Ji|\nBruce, W. H. Pitt Meadows li*\nDominion   Exp,   Kami,  lnver-\n1941\nMl\n1 inl\nine\n.\".ft\niTi;\nBrothel\nft\nitral\nGOSLIN CLUBS\nBRILLIANT WIN\nFOR SENATORS\n(Continued from rage One)\nto a two-base hit by Kelly, but\nin the eighth the southpaw developed a streak of wildness, and despite a five-run lead was hastily\nwithdrawn by Harris after the first,\ntwo   men   to   face   him   had    walked.\nInto this critical situation came\n\"Firpo\" Marberry, hero In a relief\nKile In the .second gam.', but \"bust\"\nyesterday when he started for tin-\nSenators and was hammered from\nthe mound. Marberry. who apparently at bs best when performing\na rcsciO' act, mel and turned back\nii determined Olant rally In both the\neighth   and   ninth.\n\"Hack\" Wilson, Hie first man to\nlace Marberry In the eighth, e.lou'-\niil a two-bagger that scored Young,\nwhile in the ninth dowdy's single,\na freak wild throw by Uice. which\nbounced off first base for a two-\nbase error, and Lindstrom'a third\nbit, produced another run. Llndstrom, advancing on a patii to\nl-'rlsch, got to third when Young\nrorced tin- Giant captain, \"Firpo\"\nlightened, nnd struck Out George\nKelly    tin    three    pitched    balls.\nThis finish Was dramatically similar to that of the second game,\nAiiu n .Marhrrry, relieving Zachary,\ncame to the mound in the ninth with\nthe bases full, two out, score tied.\nand struck out Jackson on three\npitched bails. The big twirler now\nhas saved the Senators In two crucial moments, but he gets no credit\nin the official record for either.\nWashington's devastating at lack,\nin whi.li 13 solid blows were combed\nfrom     the     offerings    of     McGraw'a\nFarringb\nPark                 -:\u25a0\nFlowerdew,   &   \u00bb..   Coghlan   .   IS\nOrahainc,     It.     H,     Langley\nPrairie.      ':'\"\nHuman  &  Twemlow, Coghlan  11\nKennedy      Brothers,      N\u00ab w\nWestminster      32\nKershaw,   ,1    II.,   Port   Haney  11\n\u25a0Mains,   Alex,   New   Westminster         -s\nMetcalfe,   C.   I'.   Hammond   .   IT\nMufford,     J.     il .     &     Sons,\nMilner       I-1\nRalne's   Poultry   Farm,   Surrey     ,    19\nReadey.   J.    VV.,   Chilliwack    .   M\nRump   &   Seadall.   .Sporting    .   --\nRuttledge,    M.    H .   Sardis    ..   1H\nSchofietd,   A,   W.,  New Westminster       20\nSimpson     &     Holland,     Port\nHanev     \u25a0 - \u25a0 .   -tt\nToier,   W.   &   F.    M,   -Milner 15\nUniversity of  British Columbia,   Vancouver       S3\nUnnworth,   A,.   S.ir.lis        lit\nWebster,   J.   T.   Robson       27\nWhite  Wyandottea\nBridge,   T.,   Vancouver       $9      2112\nDominion    Exp.    Farm.   Bum-\nmerlanri         -U      201\"\nCurrle,  T.,  New  Westminster 2H      1880\nDominion    Exp    F;mn,   Bum-\nmerlamt          12       21DI\nSingle  Comb Rhode Island  Reds\nRussell.    D.,   Jubilee        18      17fil\nSweatman,   lb.  Agassi*   .... 41     1930\nBarred Rocks\nMcAlpine.    IV.   Creston        22       1712\nWilkinson,    H,   Jubilee        27      177**\nDominion   Exp.   Farm,   Agassis\t\nDominion   Exp.    Farm,   Ana\nsiz     \t\nTotals     S6:t    72\n\u20222881\n2002\n1851\n2101\niu;\nFather Mclntyre\nCelebrates Mass\nfor Appledale\nAPPLBDALE, H.C, Oct, 7.\u2014Re\\.\nA. L. Mclntyre spent the week-end\nhere and celebrated muss Sunday\nmorning,\nMr. and Mrs. A. Leleu of Fresno.\nCal., one time residents here, arrived Sunday by auto and are the\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. A. Cant.\nThey will spend a week here vletting   old   friends.\nH. Q. Greenwood, poultry inspector,\nwas   through  hero,     ;\nthro\nMis\nlilt'\nlip\nllaus in the defence of lh\n\u25a0 In. chiefly lo tho loss of Peckinpaugh, ami the consequent breaking\nup of their brilliant Infield combination      Two of the team's three errors\nHi.\nv\\ a\nnt\nII.\nlight.\nbaseball's latest\nmanager,\" shared with Gos-\nMarberry the day's spot-\nFulling his men together\nafter yesterday's disastrous set back,\nthe young leader scintillated in defence, besides scoring two runs,\n.\u25a0mil figuring lurgely in the attack, which also saw Bluege and\n.Me.Xcoly regain their batting eyes\nfor the first time In the scries. Singles by McNeely and Harris were\nthe opening shots in two of Washington's barrages, while Rluegc's\nsmash brought across two tallies in\nthe eighth.\nHarris   ranged   over   a   wide   stretch\nof    territory    aliehl,     handling     10\nchances faultlessly, and making two\nremarkable stops in the seventh that\nrivalled some of the performances\nyesterday of Frisch, who had no\nopportunities to repeat his miracu-\nloul work this a Tier noon. On the\nfirst of these plays Harris nipped\nGowdy after bagging his hot shot\nover second base, while a. few minutes later he raced back behind first\nlo get PriKh'u ground-cling ng bail\nand   nail   Ins   man  at   first.\nThe Giants, on the whole, failed\nat any lime to wheel their attacking\nmachinery Into formidable position.\nCollecting only six hits altogether off\nMogrldge and Marberry, they registered no more than one in any Inning\nbefore the ninth, when \"Firpo\"\nchecked their best scoring opportunity.\nToday's record crowd represented\na paid attendance of 4it,243 and receipts of $11)1.677. This eclipsed\nthe previous high figures of 47,tiUS\nand $ 1 Htt.572 for the Polo grounds,\nset in yesterday's game.\ni i   \u25a0      i mi\nOTTAWA, Oct. 7 (Canadian Press).-\u2014\nA cablegram received loday from the\nInternational Institute of Agriculture\nat Rome states that the reviSfMJ estimate for the production of wheat in\nPoland W 29.799,t)flO bushels, compared\nwith 42.$10,000, the first report for\nthis   year,   and   49,735,000   harvested   In\nPRINCE FOR VIST\nHe Had to Decline Flying\nTrip to Sound City by\na Speed Boat\t\nVICTORIA,  Oct'.  7.\u2014Rising  before\n8   o'clock  und   donning   golf  clothes,\n' tho  prim-e of Wales yesterday start*\nj ed a  two-day holiday \u00bbs an ordinary\nj vb:itor   to   Victoria   .     There   was   no\ntime for his favorite game of squash\n! rackets. %\n1      A    delegation     from    the     Seattle\n; chamber  of commerce   with   a   com-\nmndious   speed   launch   extended   an\nInvitation    to    the    prince    to ,  step\naboard and take a flying trip to Se-\nattle,   but   the   Invitation   was  gruce-\n| fully    declined.\nBrakes Were Defective\nUpon the Death Auto;\nMrs. Burns Exonerated\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 7.\u2014That the car\nwhich Mrs. T. Burns was driving\nwhen it        struck        and    killed\nGordon Town, aged 6# had defective brakes, was disclosed at the inquest by the police auto expert.\nAfter hearing thi\u00bb evidence, the Jury\ndecided that no blame attached to\nMrs. Burns,\n,, ,..,\u201e1..iiiiniiiiiiii,vnii\nthe Qualitv\nIN   Vz AND     '  \\\\ I'    I LB. CARTONS\nMothers!\nGive the children WRIGLEY'S\nafter every meal\nA prominent physician says:\n\"It is surprising how free from decay\nthe teeth can be kept by using gum\nafter each meal.\"\nYou know how hard it is\nto get the children to clean\ntheir teeth. By giving\nthem WRIGLEY'S you not\nonl yreward themf or cleaning their teeth, but the\nreward is actually the\nmeans of performing this\nimportant service!\nWRIGLEY'S aids digestion\ntoo, and acts as an antiseptic wash for the mouth\nand throat. Several flavors-all of\nWRIG LEY\nquality.\nThe Flavor Lasts\nEnvelopes\nWe carry the largest stock of envelopes in the\ninterior of British Columbia.\nIt pays to buy in quantities, but we pay just as\nmuch attention to smaller orders.\nAnything from 500 to 50,000, printed or plain.\nTHE DAILYNEWS JOB DEPT.\nPrinting\u2014Ruling\u2014Bookbinding\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)        NELSON, B.C.\nMi\ntm\nm\n \u25a0'Page FouT\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNIN6, OCTOBER 8, 192?\nTHE DAILY NEWS\n*'\u25a0 Paftltahed \u2666vary morning except Sun-\nfar by Tha New* Publishing company,\nttriM,  Nelson,  S.C.\nBuaiaaaa letter* should be addressed\nand check* and money order* mad*\npayable to Tbe New* Publishing com-\n United, mud  tn no case to indl-\n\" jtember* of the atari*.\n\"\"    ' ng   rate   card*   and   A.B.C.\nof   circulation   mailed   on\nor may be seen at the office\n81  any   advertising  agency   recognised\nT tbe Canadian Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy nail (country), per month ...|   .CO\nPar year    f.00\nBy nan <clty>, per y*ar   13.00\nOutside Canada, per month 75\nPer year  ..\u00bb\/ ,    7.60\nDelivered, per week 26\nPer year   , 11.00\nPayable In Advance.\n1 .4*41* Ivhi of ClreuUUem\nWEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 8, 1924\nTficienf\nusek\nLaur*. A. Klrttown\nSOME   GOOD  CHICKEN RECIPES\nA British General Election?\nIf Great Britain is to have\na general election it is to be\nhoped that one of the three parties will emerge from the strug-1 m.\ngte\/wlth a clear majority in\nparliament.\nWhether Labor can gain\nstrength is doubtful. In fact,\nIt proposes to place a smaller\nnumber of candidates in the\nfield than in the last general]\nelection, which is not altogether\na promising Bign from a government standpoint.\nLiberals are split. Theoretically the party is united under\nAsquith. Actually it is split\ninto three main factions. Behind Asquith stand the old-time\nLiberals of the Whig school.\nA second group, fearing the\neffects of Labor administration\nupon trade and commerce, are\ninclined to support even the\nConservatives rather than risk\na long term of Labor rule.\nA third faction rallies loosely\naround Lloyd' George, whose\nsupport of his leader, Mr. Asquith, is not any too wholehearted.\nAn opportunist always, Lloyd\nGeorge has. the appearance of\naioaiting developments and of\nbeing prepared to jump in almost any direction\u2014to the left,\nto the right, Or to the once-\nmuch-talked-of center positiem.i\nUltimately it ivill be right or\nleft; there is no room for a\ncenter party in British political\nlife, or under the British political system.\nExtreme right, extreme left\nor' precarious balancing on a\ncentral fence fits in neither\nwith British mental tendencies\nnor with the British political\nstructure.\nIlliberal gains in a general\nelection, therefore, are hardly\nprobable.\n'' There may be Labor gains,\nor Labor may still possess the\nlargest group, though perhaps\nwith less strength than at the\npresent time.\nOn the other hand, there are\nmany political observers who\nanticipate the return of Mr.\nBaldwin and the Conservative\nparty by a clear majority. Great\nBritain may have had enough\nof minority rule and indecision.\nWhere a Kiss Is a Crime and\nMurder Rages Uncheched\nSoviet Russia has forbidden\nkissing on the ground that it is\nunhygienic. Neither lips, cheek\nnor hand may receive the oscu-\nlatory salute.\nHandshaking is also under\nthe ban.\nSmoking is soon to lie forbidden.\nBut murder is still n popu-\ntar\" governmiutal amusement.\nGeorgians may not be kissed,\nbut they may be \"executed\"\nby the thousands.\nGreat is \"reform\" in Russia.\nImmigration and Unemployment\nThe recent conference at Ottawa on- unemployment at least\nshows that this situation is of\nsufficient importance to warrant serious thought. There is\nso much divergence of opinion\nas to the remedy, however, that\nlittle progress was made on\nconcrete proposals. But any\nmeasure taken under the stress\nof conditions as they prevail\ntoday could only be in the way\nof emergency remedies. They\nmight keep the patient alive till\nthe doctor arrived, but they\ncould not be considered cures\nfor the malady.\nWhile some interest* seem\nopposed to permitting any but\nthe most restricted immigration, new settlers constitute the\nonly source of genuine improvement.\nCanada is equipped with railways and productive machinery\nfcdejuate to serve three times\nTOMORROWS    MENU\nBrwkfi.t\nLeft-Over Pineapple\nCereal\nGriddle Cakeu,  Syrup\nCoffee Toast\nLuncheon\nBaked t Stuffed % Peppers\nWhole   Wheat   Bread\nTea Celery Jelly\nDinner\nTomato   Soup\nRlHHoteK (from left-over\nstew meatl\nBaked  Potatoes \u25a0 Squash\nLettuce   Salad\nCoffee Cup Custards\nA housekeeper reader has written\nme to ask for some good recipes for\nusing left-over chicken. She says: \"I\nwould like to know of some attractive\nways to use cold cooked chicken for\nMonday's dinner, after we serve it for\nSunday dinner.\" The following will\nbe found delectable:\nChicken* Wiggle\u2014Melt two tablespoons of butter In a saucepan, rub\nInto tt two tablespoons of flour, and a\npinch each of salt and pepper, then\ngradually add two cups of sweet milk.\nLet this sauce simmer for a few minutes, till thickened, then add two cups\nof diced cooked chicken, three-fourths\ncup of cooked peas (the canned variety may be used after being simmered\nfor 15 minutes). Let cook for U0 minutes over boiling water, then turn onto slices of toast and servo at once.\nChicken I\/>af\u2014Heat three-fourths\nof a cup of sweet milk, then put into\nit one and one-half cups of soft\nbread crumbs and let cook for five or\nsix minutes. Turn this mixture into\na bowl with three oups of. minced\ncooked chicken, one-half teaspoon of\nsalt, a pinch of pepper, one teaspoon\nof minced parsley, one-half teaspoon\nof onion Juice (or one-half teaspoon\nof finely minced raw onion may be\nused Instead of the Juice), two table-\nspoons of butter and the yolks of\nthree eggs well beaten. Mix ail together, then fold in three stiHIy-\nwhipped egg whites and turn the\nmixture into a buttered mould. Set\nthe mould in a shallow pan containing hot water, and slip the two into\na moderate oven to bake for 4ii\nminutes or till firm. This may be\nserved cither hot or cold.\nItalian Minced Chicken\u2014This recipe requires three-quarters of a cup\nof canned mushrooms. (If the fresh\nmushrooms are used, separate the\ncaps from the stems and cut the\nstems in pieces). Kry the mushroom\ncaps In butter (using about four\ntablespoons of butter), seasoning\nlliem with a pinch of pepper and\none-fourth teaspoon of salt. Add the\nstems and fry these five minutes,\nthen add one teaspoon of minced raw\nonion, four tablespoons of flour, and\ntwo cups of either freshly stewed, or\ncanned tomatoes. Let boil for five\nminutes, then serve on hot toast.\nTomorrow.\u2014Does Your Housekeeping Dominate You?\nAH Inquiries addressed to Miss kirk-\nman In charge of \"Efficient Housekeeping\" department will be answered\nIn these columns In their turn. This\nrequires considerable time, however,\nowing to the great number received.\nSo. if a persona) or quicker reply Is\ndesired, a stamped and self-addressed\nenvelope must be enclosed with the\nquestion. Be sure to use your full\nname, street number, and the name\nof your city and province.\nTHE  EDITOR.\n$K~Jbu\u00bb\nBYLENOW\nas many people as the present\npopulation of less than 9,000,-\n000. Tax burdens have grown\nenormously' in recent years,\nwithout any proportionate increase in population to lighten\nthe load. Canada's part in the\nwar cost the federal government about $1,460,000,000, according to the statement of the\nminister of labor; from 1914 to\n1923, the annual interest charge\non the national debt increased\nfrom $14,687,797 to $136,007,-\n667. For pensions alone, in\n1923, the total liability amounted to over $30,000,000.\nWith this national obligation\nto be met) the Dominion is impelled to look for new settlers.\nThere is any amount of room,\ntoo, for a much greater population. Canada is naturally endowed with great potential\nsources of wealth. There is no\nlack of fertile land, and the\nclimate is all that industrious\nnorthern people could desire.\nThere should be employment\nopportunities for all.\nWhat the Press Is Saying\nproblem.    The poor tilings must havo\nsome  way  to  get  tight.\nSchool teachers are people who look\nafter the children while mother attends the movies.\nIn theory nil law violators should\nhe jailed, but think how lonely the\nstreets would seem.\nThe education of embryo politicians should include an intensive course in  tax-paying.\nPobp\nof\nSour*\nj        Ten Years Ago        \\\n\"So French,\" 1 heard a woman remark about this model as we both\nexamined it in one of those smart\nlittle shops tucked away in the EasV\nFifties near St. Patrick's cathedral\nIn New York It illustrates well the\ntrend toward youthfulness in present-\nday fashions, nnd the costume is a\nparticularly successful example of the\nvogue fnr the ensemble suit.\nStraight, short and slim as most of\nus still prefer our clothes to be, this\nmodel is developed in cranberry red\nkasha, that new shade of red that has\nall the warmth and glow uf red without any of its garishness. Still, it\nmust be admitted that the lovely\nbrowns and beige, and rich forest\ngreens, are more conservative. The\neoat, you muy see, is of the three-\nnuarler length, tiie pleated flounce\nmeeting that of the dress (which is\nskeiclied in miniature) and creating\nthe front flare silhouette which is so\nfashionable. Skunk is used for (he\ncollar and cuffs, and the dress is belted wilh black kid.\nFriends are people who cannot conceal    their   astonishment    when    you   '\nmake good.\nA Ualtimore youth says he didn't\nknow what he was doing when he\nmarried.     So   few   men   do.\nPolitics can't be ;is-black as It's!\npainted. Observe bow many candidates begin  to attend church.\nCorrect this sentence: \"'Vou can\ntell he's married,\" said she, \"lie won't i\nflirt at  all.\" I\nUadio reception. in Japan is limited\n] to specified wave lengths for each set.\nIff \/imi W. Barton, MJ>m\nThe Big Meal Before Retiring\n(Registered   In   accordance   with   the\nCopyright   act).\nI havo suggested frequently, that\nwhere you find lt hard to get to\nsleep, that a little warm soup or\nmilk might help, by bringing the\nblood away from the brain to the\ndigestive apparatus.\nOf course tho other suggestions\nmust   be   tried   first\nYou remember there were a number\nof them, from the counting of sheep\nto the reading of a dry book. The\nidea behind all these was that your\nattention, your thought, should be\ndulled hy monotony of some kind.\nTbe monotony of doing something uninteresting* for some time.\nHowever, there is a point about the\neating before retiring that is worth\nIhlnkfng about.\nYou will remember that if at noontime you eat a heavy meal, you feel\na bit heavy and sleepy for the first\npart of the afternoon.\nYour blood is down doing the work\nof digestion, and your brain is not\nso alert, The same principle of\ncourse holds at night. You sink off\ninto a heavy slumber In a very few\nminutes.\nWhen you awake in the morning at\nyour usual time, you feel somewhat\nheavy and sleepy, and wonder why\nthis should be, considering the good\nnight's rest you have just had.\nWhy are you not refreshed?\nWell the food you took Into you,\nbeing a real meal, will take the\nstomach some hours to prepare for\nfurther   digestion.\nThen the small intestine gets busy\nabsorbing this into the blood, tho.\nliver does its work of selecting materials to manufacture sugar and bile,\nand all the way along the digestive\napparatus,   work   is  in   full  swing.\nThere    has    been    really    no    rest\u2014\nno sleep\u2014for this part of your body.\nNow   it   needs   rest   just   the   same\nas any other  part.\nSo, if you arc tired mentally and\nphysically when you go to bed, you\nwill need steep or rest, to make\nup for the energy required to handle\ntho food you have eaten before you\nwent  to  bed.\nThe point is, that a little food\nbefore retiring may just suit your\nneeds exactly, by gently drawing a\nsmall quantity of blood from the\nbrain.\nA heavy meal, especially If you\narc very tired, is a. mistake,\n\"The lips that touch liquor shall\nnever touch mine.\" once expressed\nvirtue, now it expresses selfslmess.\n(The Daily Newi of October 8, 1314)\nDr. L. K. Borden and F. W. Sterling\nare back from a hunting trip to the\nheadwaters of Clearwater creek.\nThey brought back a nice bag of\ngrouse and report that there is deep\nsnow in  the bills.\n\u2022 *    *\nThe first open house of the-season\nwill be held In the' Y.M.C.A. this evening at 8.15 o'clock, when a reception will be given tho new physical\ndirector,   J.   W.   Howell. \u2022>\n* *   \u00bb\nMen's socks, shirts, pyjamas and\ndressing gowns are all needed in large\nquantities, according to information\nreceived by Mrs. Armbuster, of the\nlocal chapter of the Daughters of the\nEmpire, from the superintendent for\nthe Red Cross In Toronto.\nT Sidelights on a Great Industry]\n\u2022 \u2014 \u2022\nRoyalty Measure\nTaxes Wages I\n1914   ACT    IMPERILS   SIXTY-MIL-\nLION-DOLLAR  PAYROLL\nPresent  Act  at  Variance  With' Real |\nPrinciple   of   Royal'.y\nTwenty Years Ago\n(The Daily News of  October 8, 19\u00ab4)\nHarold    Nelson   and    most   of   his\ncompany are registered at the Queen's.\n\u2022 \u2666   *\nA meeting of the teaching staffs\nof the public and high schools was\nheld at the public school yesterday\nat noun, and cumplete arrangements\nfor field day nest  Friday  were made.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nAt the regular meeting of tiie\nUniversity club in the parlor of the\nSuccess club rooms this evening, nt\n8 o'clock, C. Mclean Fraser, M.A.,\nwill read a paper on \"Color in\nAnimals\".\n\u2022    \u2022    \u00bb\n& V. Hod well, K.C. returned to\nVictoria yesterday morning by way\nof Spokane.\nAged Quebec Farmer\nFaces Bigamy Charge;\nBoth Wives Aged, Too\nHull, (Jue\u201e Oct. 7.\u2014Alexia Alartel,\nalias Benusejour, a hoaiy-hcaded and\ndeaf farmer, aged 75, from Thurso,\nQue., faces a bigamy charge after\nthe authorities learned that he married a widow, Mrs. Adele Ciirard of\nHull, here on August fi last, while\nhis first wife, whom he espoused 50\nyears   ago,   was   still   living.\nMrs. Mattel No. 1 is 75 years old,\nand  Mrs.  Marte] No.  2,  65 years  old.\nMartel yesterday elected a speedy\ntrial for October 16. He Is out on\n$500  bail.\nAfter seeing her former lover with\nanother girl at a dance. Rae Goldsmith, aged Tl, civil servant at Ottawa, dr;*hk carbolic acid and died.\nMan was made to mourn, but probably it was never intended that he\nshould spend f-:n much of his time\nat it.\nA BOUT the very last thing a roy-\n\u25a0**\u2022 nlty act should tax is wages.\nYet the present measure, by taxing\nall the factors that enter Into the\ncost of production, places a heavy\nImpost on wages, which is of course\nthe  greatest of all  these factors.\nThe   truo   purpose   of   the   Timber\nRoyalties   Act   of   British   Columbia\nshould be to take care of the publlc'a\nequity In its standing timber.   If that\n\u25a0 timber  gets more valuable the public\nshould benefit accordingly. The equity\nof the public tn the forest stops when\nthe  trees are felled.    After that they\nbecome   private   property.     Any   further taxation of the raw or manufactured   material   should   certainly \u2022 not I\nbe   on   a   royalty   basis.     A   Royalty I\nAct   which   Impedes   any   process  of ]\nmanufacture   is   unfair   and   illogica1.\nBritish Columbia has done, and\nwill continue to do, very well indeed\nout of Its standing timber, which has\ncontributed $45,000,000 to the public\nrevenue  in   20 years.\nBritish Columbia timber has also\nattracted to lt an investment of\n1200,000,000 by an Industrial group\nthat paid out $00,000,000 in wages\nlast  yeur  alone.\nThe    present    act, 'if    uuamonded,\nthreatens   to   tax   that   purely   industrial payroll out of existence uy. rais- I\ning tin*  royalty  300  per  cent, and  so 1\npreventing the lumber Industry from j\nfunctioning and  paying  wages at all.\nThe immediate result of  the enforcement  of  the   present  Timber  Royalty\nAct  after  .January   1st,   1.(25,   will   be\nthat   no   timber  will   be   cut   and   no\nroyalty  collectable.    British  Columbia\nwill   lose  its  main  source  of  revenue\nand   a   period   of   unemployment   will\nensue   unparalleled   in   the   history  of j\nthe Province.\nThis series of articles coinr\nmunicated by the Timber Industries  Council  of  British\nColumbia.\nTo Safeguard\nquality and flavor\nStreet Car Supreme\nThere have been many interesting\ndemonstrations nf tin' fact that the\nelectric street car, taking up only a\nfraction of the space occupied by\nHUtomnbilefl and buses, carries the\ngreat bulk of traffic. None of these\ntests is more impressive than those\nmade in Chicago between the hours\nof 6.30 a.m. and fj.30 p.m. on a normal\nweek .day. They showed the following results: 31,-SSO commercial ve-\nhieala carried 31.700 persons; 4^.U0\npassenger autoinohiles carried 84.130\npersons. While 33;;o electric street oars i\ncarried 330.00U passengers. In other\nwords, the street cms carried nearly\n75 per cent of the passenger traffic\nwith only 10 per end of the total\nnumber of vehicles in use and took\nup only a small fraction of the space\nof the ftreets as compared with that\noccupied by tbe other vehicles, private\nautomobiles,    public    buses,    etc.\nFor rapid transit, economy in fare\nand space, the electric street car\nstill holds unparalleled supremacy as\na means of mass transportation. It\nis a reliever of congestion instead of\na cause of congestion.\u2014I'ubllc Service\nManagement.\nHolding tiiat there was not suffl- |\ndent to warrent a conviction on a\ncharge of then ol goods from the j\nCanadian Pacific railway, .Judge Bar*\nrett, at Brandon, dismissed all three\ncharges preferred by the railway!\ncompany against William Creighton. !\nWitnesses were brought from as far\nwest as Vancouver, and Montreal in\nthe east.\n\"SALADA\"\nis always sold in an  air-tight\naluminum packet, never in bulk.\nThe Lighter Side\nReaders of The Dally News contribute many of the best Items to\nthis column. Just slun your name\nor Initials, or nnin-de-plume, and\nsend In your brightest ideas.\u2014fikli-\ntor, Lighter Side.\nAlso the proof of matrimony is in\nthe  eating\nAnother excellent digcslant is four\nhours of good hard work.\nIf youth is an excuse, very few\nmurderers of the future will be over\ntwenty.\nNot every station sells ethyl gas,\nbut you can get the lethal kind anywhere.\nWE\nARE\nAt any rate there is much happiness in places where Main street\naffords good grazing  for  the cow.\nIt isn't possible to make laws work\nby appointing more job holders who\nwon't.\nThe danger ia that France will\nbegin to think the national air\ninclude* all of it.\nCorsets   lor   mea   may   solve   the\nGiving Away Free\n^This   Beautiful   Round   Oak\nEnamelled   Range\nWITH EVERY PURCHASE OF   $5.00 AND OVER FOR CASH\nWe  will  give you a  ticket,  and  these   tickets will be drawn for on Christmas\nEve, December 24, 1924.\nEveryone has a chance of winning a   $200.00 Range absolutely free.   You get\nfull value for your money with your purchase.\n|PF~    See This Beautiful R ange in Our Window\nNelson OHard war c Co.\nThis advertisement is  not  published  or displayed  by the\nLIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or the Government of B.C.\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nBuilding\nMaterial  John Burns & Son\nNELSON\nWholesale  and  Reta il Quality Hardware\nB.C,\n\/\nTo Sell It Advertise\nIt In the Classified\nColumns\nIt doesn't matter what it is. It may be an article\nof used furniture, it may be live stock, it may be a\nhouse, it may be city property or it may be a farm.\nYou can get in touch more quickly with the largest\nnumber of prospective buyers by advertising it in\nthe Classified Columns of The Daily News.\nThe charge for Classified Advertisement is l'\/^c\nper word per insertion or lc per word per insertion\nwhen the advertisement is run for a week or more\nand cash accompanies the order.\n 'top,\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 8, 1922\nr~Page live\njililiniiiiniiHHiirmm;\n-J.\nfar\nIhe story of foot comfort Is\nspreading everywhere\nYou toe, will become en.\nthwiaitic \u00abhea yoo wear-\nKootenay and Boundary\nimp\nFENDER\nSHOE\/\nmini In 111,1 miliiiiiiiiiiT\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaden   in   Footfaihion\nYhree Feet of\nSnow in Hills\nat Trout Lake\nR CREEK DR. KING HOLDS\nSLAPStA RECEPTION\nTENT WITH TAUT CRANBROOK\nSam Cavanaugh Beseiged Minister of Public Works\nTwo Nights; Beast Then and Wife Meet Friends at\nLeaves Affronted Auditorium\nTROUT LAKE, B.C.. Oct. 7.\u2014Bill\nHoward and Sam Cavenaugh, who have\nbeen making the trail on (lay nor creek,\nhad an interesting experience with a\ncougar last week. The animal, an\nunusually large one, to Judge by hit*\ntracks In the newly fallen snow visited the ciimp, presumably attracted by\ntheir supply of fresh meat. ,\nMr. Howard said that it walked |\naround the tent In which Cavenaugli\nwas staying several times, slapping\nit with hla tail. Ah there were no\nguns in camp all overtures toward\nthe cougar were made by word of\nmouth from within the walls of the\nlint.\nCRANBROOK; H.C., Oct. 7\u2014 Dr. J, H.\nKing and Mrs. King left on Sunday'*\ntrain for the coast, and there were\nmany friends at the station wlien the\ntrain left lo bid then gnodby. They\nwill not be away long at this time,\nlie we ver, wince Ur, King will be here\nagain October 2H. wb.-n he will aceoin-\nl.any    Premier    Klt,^    on    his    visit    to\nSocial Happenings \u25a0\nP\"In Nelson\u2122\nCranbrook.\nAudi-\nen ter-\nrecep-\n1 On Friday evening at the\ntorium Or. nnd Mrs. King\ntalned to a very delightful\ntion. when their friends from all o\\\nthe district were present to mi\nthem. There was a very large cro-\nand   the   proceeding:\nHi.\nRepeated   arguments   on   the   part   of   form of dancing, interspersed In  which\nCHveiiaugli     failed     to'    convince\n11m\nOtlgHI'\nthat It should leave,\nnights were spent In this\nfashion before the cougar decided\nthat his welcome was not all it\nmight be and departed for parts unknown.\nj TROUT LAKE, B.C., Oct. 7.--A great\ncal of wet weather has been exnerl-\npced here lately, and no less than .1\n'-et uf snow   is already   In   the:  bills.\nOlc Lerinn, while rowing up from\n| Ive-Mlle, Wednesday, caught about 34\nMPNdf Of salmon arid dolly vardon.\n(Twice last week young people bad\n^in fires on the beach. Songs and\n\\ \u2022neral    Jollification    followed.\nRally    day    services    were    held    In\nj   church   Sunday   afternonii.   Scptem-\nr   2S,   when   the   Sunday   school   work\nthe   year   was   put   under   way.\nBONNINGTON NOTES\nIL\nhous\nSloean City Hears\nVancouver Preacher\nHMX'AN CITY, B C, net. 7.--Service\nwits conducted in Si. I'aid's Anglican\nchurch Sundiiy both morning and evening by tbe Hev. Mr, Hennege of\nVancouver.\nMrs. A Merry and children returned\nhome from Trail Friday after vlsit-\nwith    relatives    for   a    couple   of\nWeeks.\nMrs\nMis.\nO'Nea\nMe-noi\nMis\nM iss\nNVIsoi\nIt.   i;.   McMillan,\nD.     B.     O'Neal     i\nI    spent    a    couple\nduring the  week\nThomas Pagdln\nIt. 1'ag.lin, left\nvisit     foi\nfri\nels,\nMr\nand   family.\n>ItIA.   Oct\nBritish\nand\nr~A  delegate\n|:BONNINOTON FAM,S. B.C.,\n'r. and Mrs: H. Wood have en\n'juth Sloean to reside in tl\nlitely   vaeated   by   \\V.   1).   Itidge. VICT\n^ Krlc   Campbell   has   returned   from   a 'lending\nlocation   spent   at   the   coast   cities, I swept    on    th'-    commissioner    of    fish\nMr. and Mrs. It. H. N. I.ockyer and cries. Hon. William Sloan, today, and\n\u00bbn. Douglas, left Saturday noon to ] urged sweeping reductions in taxa-\n\u25a0t-U Trail and Kossland en route to , tion on the fishing Industry. Mr,\n\\',b  coast | Sloan    promised   consideration.\nwere musical numbers. The chairman\nof the evening was W. H. Wilson,\nwho   announced   the   numbers.\nOuring the evening Dr. King mad'-\na few remarks expressing the pleasure it gave him to be present with\nMrs. King, giving credit to the latter\nfor suggesting the idea. They felt\noften that they would like to tune\nth< ir home here, where they would\nlie able to meet their friends more\nfreely.\nAmong those contributing to the\nprogram were Mrs. M. Forrest, solo;\n,1. Heldmnn, vocal solo; Mrs, Mitchell\nof Lumber ton, vocal solo; Mrs. F. M.\nMac!'her son and Mi*s Wanda Fink.\nVocal and Instrumental duet; h-\nJiwelley of Lumberton, vocal solo;\nmale quartet. H. B. iiinton. J. M.\nChirk. F. A. Williams and J. h.\nI'almer; Mesdatnes J. Norgrove, and .1.\nj Thompson, vocal duet; Mrs. W. A-\nMrs. J. Law, i Nlsbet, vocal solo: Mrs. K. Paterson,\nnd Bertrand ', vocal solo; mixed quartet, Mrs. M\nof days In | Korrest, A. Knight, A. McDonald and\nJ.   Heidtmin.\nTasty decorations of flowers and\nfoliage had been arranged throughout\nthe hall under the direction of Mrs\nIK ing, I he serving table looking especially pretty with its silverware and\nred carnations, A number of young\nladles asslste.] In the serving of refreshments during the e\\ en ing. The\nmusic tor the dancing was provided\nhy Robinson's orchestra, and the affair did not break up I ill close on\nI o'clock, when hands were joined in\na big circle with \"For Auld Lang\nSyne,\" which was followed with ''Kor\nThey Are Jol.y f.ood Fellows\" and\nihe national anthem. Three hearty\ncheers were also given for Dr. and\nMrs.   King.\nml   daughter.\nMonday     for\nweek    with\nMrs.    F.    J,\nreshly w\/xed\nMustard\n\u2022      lunCNfitS^buti   makes the\nnot only adds zest, du\nham more digestible.\nbutitmastbeCb\/mri\ni   Old\n| Dutch\n| Contains no\nj lye or\nI acids.\nThis column ts being conducted\nby Mrs. M. J. Vigneux. All new*\nof a social nature, Including receptions, private entertainments, personal Items, marriages, etc., will\nappear in this column. Telephone\nMrs.  Vigneux.\nR. H.   Devitt of Trail arrived  In  the\nelty   yesterday   morning.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nAn Item of news which will be\nInteresting to Ntlsoniles Is that the\ndramatic scholarship at the Cornish\nDramatic school. Seattle, has been\ncaptured by Miss Marion Clayton,\nformerly of Pentlcton. The acholar-\nship has a vuiue of $700. Miss Clayton is an exceedingly clever dramatic\ndancer, and has appeared on various .\noccasions on the public platform in\nthe interior. Miss Clayton Is a niece '\nof Mr. and Mrs. H H. Pitts. Vernon\nstreet.\n. The Excelsior club met Monday\nnight at the home oi Mrs. J. Mlnnis.\nVernon street, lira, ft J. McDonald\npresiding Serving refreshments were\n.Miss Maisie Jones, Miss Maud Simons\nand Miss Catherine Sts*rk, Those\npresent were Miss Mona, Harlow, Miss\nJessie Donaldson. Mrs. S. J. McDonald, Miss Charlotte Notmun, Miss\nMargaret Arthur. Mrs. A. Oliver. Mrs.\nH H. Currie, Miss Constance Martin,\nMiss Catherine Stark. Miss Ethel Carl-\nsou, Miss Maisie Jones and Miss\nMaud   Simons,\n'jeorge F. Motion and party, Mrs.\nM. Woodcock, president of the Ilfbekah\nassembly, independent Order of Odd\nKellows or British Columbia, and Mrs.\nI. Stevens. Mrs. Motion and Westman\nMotion, motored ty Ymir yesterday\nafternoon.\nMr, and Mrs. A. C Houghton of\nLa France Creek were Nelson shoppers yesterday. They expect to leave\nthe latter part of the month with\ntheir   family   for   England.\nMrs. C. Fenwick of South Sloean\nwas   a   city   visitor   yesterday.\nMrs. P, T. Legg of Procter spent\nMonday   in   Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Q, T. Ironside of Silverton.\nwho has been spending the past three\nweeks visiting in Vancouver. Victoria, Seattle and Spokane, spent the\nweek-end In Nelson and leaves this\nmorning    for   her   home.\n\u2022 *    *\nMrs.  J.   Crulckshank of South   Sloean\ns  a   city   visitor   yesterday.\nJames    Nelson,    of    lo\nE.   Kelly,   of   Spokane.\nin    Ihe   city,\n\"Ity    shopper    yesterda\nArthur    Lake:\nleft    by    motoi\nfor   Spokane.\nconsilium.\nyesterday\nVasli.,   and\nyesterday\nengineer\nafternooi\nGOLD VISIBLE   i\nTO NAKED EYE\nNEARGERRARD\nWalter Phalen Takes Rich\nSamples From Minnin on|\nTenderfoot i\nMrs-.     M\nHankln,   ,,\ntrain   twin:\nKtifmdlriK\nNolnon,\n.iiiim   m\n.nillvi-   st\nyesterday\nHa rues\nTrail,    I,\ntoday fo\n.Mrs.     Hu\nnil    tile    in\nHoward Kiisti 321 Ttotmnn\nand tier sun, left Monday liy\neat    Nrtrttiein    fur   Spokane.\nTrail  #\nIn   the  c\nid .Mrs. ('. .\n\u2022 upending tin\nty.\n\u25a0k    of\ndays\n.lames Anderson of Kaslo. who\nlieen spending tile past couple of\nlays In the r-llv. left for Ills Ilium\ni.v   (lie   afternoon   boat   yesterday.\nOUT  LAKE,  II\nnt  find  has  lie\n\u25a0M   on   Tonderf,\nfn\nWaller I\nout   IV.\ntnl   anil I\nMr\nisllor\nI'eters\nArcher   of\neslerday.\nof Procter\nlonilav even\n1    Itevelslolie\nKaslo\npas.\nMas\nof\nmile\nfour\ntn\ntin\nnude being the Nlnnln.\nirouftht up samples show\nVo assay lias been tn*\nluanlily nf free Kohl v\nsamples     wiinld     Indicate\n.1     Bui four   of   Trail\nIty yesterday  mortilnff.\nW.   ll.   Burgess   ol    I\nown    yest.-rday    hy    the\nnil    left    last ' evening\n0   attend    the    funeral\nate   MaJ.   John   I..   Reti\n\u25a0d\nIl I e\n'illl\nuf   III\nlues.\nClose Down Opliir-I.ailo\nyork    on    the    llpliir-l.ail\nspeniled    owlnir    partly\nst\ni yie,\nnl   the\nV lh\nSoftdttdflal^\nVoiitscrdtri\nAlittleioe^\nMADE IN CANADA\nthe trail and partly nn act\nsnow. All the null mm\nbe stored nt Ferguson for\nand an early start will in\nspring.\nJohn    Parisian   came    up\nraid   on    recording   I nisi tie.-\nnl'   Miry    will\nwinter.\npending    the    nasi    t\nn   vacation   wilh   his\nIrs.   J,   Paul   Pltner,\n\u25a0aves     this    evening\nikea   for   the   coast.\nMr,   and   Mrs    J.   j\\\niliple\nI ia rents\nCRAWFORD BAY NOTES\nminis   ['audio   I\n| Itm-liael    Part III,\nI VV.    II.    Martin,    ('ana\nI way   iiKent   at   Cl'eslo\nI heir\nid her\nnf   Slo\nlaughter\n\u25a0an   Plti\nI'il.lfi,\nCRAWFORD\nMr.    I    Mrs.\nson.   Bobby,  ha'\nbeing   In   Nelson\nHel.l.y    was    ill\nJoe   Ink.   who\nHi\nnf\nIII\nBAT.    HI'.\nlefl    fur   tin\nr.   and    Mrs.    M,    If\nrt.    who    have    beel\n'he     pant     en 1\nI'd     lo     Ihe     eilv\nIII\"   Arrow   lakes\nrs,   Il    tl    II    Ai.i.l\nll\u00bb\n\u25a0pel\nI\nal   111   Kail   MM\nIn\nin.\nMr. a\nhave l.i\nI'eters.\nMis\nret time,I\nby     Mil\nUreifnr.\nwith    :l\n611 Baker Street. Phone 100\nWednesday  Morning  Specials\n(Store Closes at   12:30  Today)\nUnusual Bargains for Half-Holiday Shoppers\nBLACK MESSALINE SILK Women's WOOL HOSE at 98c\nAt $1.59 Yard All-Wool Heather Hose, with seamless\nfeet  and  legs.    All   sizes.    To  Clear\nPure   Messaline,   full  3G  inches   wide,    at, pair  98^\nwith nice lustrous finish.    Wednesday\nSped\u00bbl. yard fl.58    Women's FLANNELETTE GOWNS\nNAVY SERGE at 98c Yard - $US\n\u201e, ._ .       ,      \u201e       , XT       \u201e White  Flannelette  Gowns,  made   pull-\nThirty yard* only, all-woo! Navy Serge,     ovfir    ^       f \u201e    . d  mate'rial.\ndaySpeciarSd 'e 98^    VVednesday Special, each  ?1.2i>\n\" HIKE WOOL Bumms  \u25a0       \u00ab\"'\"\nAt $4.95 Each\nAt $9.00 Pair Well-tailored Cardigans, made of fine\nSkcldon's Blankets, made of pure Scotch Silk-and-Wool yarns. Several colors.\nWool.    Full size.    Wednesday Special,    Wednesday Special, each  tM.95\npair ?90\u00b0 STRIPED FLANNELETTE\nPOLO CLOTH COATING at $2.49 At 35c Yard\nPure   Wool   Coating,   56   inches  wide, Only  five  pieces  left.    This  i.s   good\nheavy weight, in a range of colors.  Sell- weight, yard-wide Flannelette, assorted\ning this morning at about half price\u2014 colored   stripes.     Wednesday   Special,\nyard  $2.4*) yard    35<\n\/oung daughter. Norocn, of Orund\n.\u2022'\u00ab)i'l<-s, wliu have been (-spending th<\n.Vf.k-fiiii with Mrs. Krntli vs parent h,\nMr   and .Mrs.  Hugh  Hubs, Hlllca stret-t. j\neft  Mum lay evening  for tlitir home.     >\n8.    II.    Orcen   of    Ktt\u00abIo    was   In    tin\nily   yesterday.\n.1.    It.   t'nalg   of   Trail   arrived    h\nNel si m   yenterday   morning.\nII,   NVweomen   of   Lurdo   was   a   ell'\nvisitor   yesterday.\nM.   A    Menders r   lloHslaitd   'p-n\nvcsti'iday    in    town.\nDominion Live Stock PORT OFFICIALS\nWORRY A LITTLE\nU'IN.NII'K'I.   Iirl.    J.- Kn'i'lplK   I...I;i'\n.i.-iI..J   -,:',';   rallli..   mm   liiign   mul   10\nS rs- I'h'.i,',   $',\n:o t*.n.\nButulli'r   lull'.,-' \u25a0 I\n.'\"\u25a0'!.   12.75   In   $11.\".''\nHuti'hir   .in    I'll\nj ,  \u00bbs.r,o  \".  *\".;:,\nIlnll'i    i\nSt.\u201e.|,,i    in\nI'V.il.r   \u00ablf\nKu.nl.   JJJ.T.-,\nS:l 7r,  lo  |4:\n.il.\nSlow Loading Owing to the\nShips Not Being Ready\nPortends Congestion\nVAM'IH\/VKK. (lit. 7.\u2014 Possibility of\n| grain congOHllnn nl lliis port worriml\n| uffk'lalH   in   churgf  of   III\"   grain  move-\ntl\" 17\n.Mil\nli,\n'In\nMrs.    K.    Miitrair    ol'    Willow    I',\nipriit   yisti'i'ilay   Khoplng    in    Ni'lson.      I     I'lilvi's    t'llolr\",   :|\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022 |     Huga\u2014m-li'rl   I\"\"'\nMrs.   F.   Ilnrlw'ot   Hi\"   Arrow   liikvi-.    J\u00bb.!.\"i.\n\u25a0Willi    lor    so ill    itiiiiKlilil\".    \u00ab;ii:    oi      UltnliK     ll     \"I\"    lo\n.'ily     visilor    y.-sl. r-liiy. I     Shoi-Ji    H I,    $.\"    I,<   *1 J\"\"\nMrs. Dale [.. Krane of ririing\" (Irovn. CH'garr   R\u00abccliit\u00bb } ,.,.\nI'nl..   Him   lins   I,\"im    Visiting   Willi   lirr   !    I'AI.'l.MlV,    till.     7.     Flimllils lo-lny | .,.,\nliar-ills,    .Mr.   anil    .Mrs.    Illllman,   Car-   lotalpd    MS    riiltl\".    1'    imK.s   iiiiiJ    IMS    ,.,,.'\nbonatc stri'i't.  for Hi\" past  few inonllis. . Hhoop.                                                                         '.,\u25a0,;,    V'anniiiiin    I'aclflr    railway hiin\nIhvm  tonlghl   for Hock Crer-k acorn-       H.s <, 11. \u25a0 r-   sloes    rholro.   fl'i... k  | 31111 \"arse\" grain   hi   llioyarja \"nrl\nluinioil   liy  lor  mother,   who  will   visil '$ I   to  Jt.3.\"i. oilo'is   ..ii    ill\"    wiv       'I'll\"' I'liruliati\nwith    hrr    for    ll,,-    iioxt    rouple 1     ll'll'is    t'holi'r.   .<::-'.,   lo   ill:,\"             I Xain.iial   railways has   17 carloads hen\n      ,'.<,,1,\"\"'\"               :\",cl    l'\"'K\"   \u00bblil|\"t'\"'il\u00ab   \"ii    route. Tha\n,:\"''\":.','.      ,        ,.,    . Liilwnys     llllonll.     II     is    .-.ll ill.    ns    soo'i\ni'i'.'.'i    s,,;;\u201e'i'i,    ik-,'i '',v     \"'   >\"\"\"   sl\"\"v   sic,,s   \"r   ',0\"-\n'\"\"'   \u25a0-'\"'\"'\"'\u25a0    \"  Kosiion.   I,,   reduce   Hi\"  qiiiiiilily  moving\n..     ...      .      ,.,\",1.1,    ,\u25a0  i,,        1'\"\"'    loading    points.       [t    is   roil    be-\nr'cvei   i.   VoT   1!,,   1 li\"'   \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 ' \"\".v''d \"\" \u2022\u25a0'\"'\u2022\u25a0\"'\u25a0\"\u25a0 wln  '\"'  ''\"''essiiry.\n'I'l\"' ' levator 1I1I  i\u00bb\" slii|,s along-\nI\"   and    1 las   grain- .all    Hi\"   time\norder   to   liaiirile   Hi\"   lii'oklngs  aatis-\n\u25a0'ot'lly,      lli-'v     polntorl     out     today.\nhis    i'.m     ..nl.     on.,    ship    has    been\nolv   ;il   ;i   time.\n11,.     I'ana'lian    I'n,\n\u25baf   weeks   in\nl\"  her  leaving  for'In\nf. Ini'll\")' Hlackwood ami his clangli-\nler. Miss Marion Hlackwood. Hull\nMhos 1011.1, who spent Hi\" week-end\nTiiiliillii\".    W'T\"    Hie    (rn.'sls    ol'    Mr\nHulls\nHogs\n\"id  Mis.  j,  Buchanan\nMrs,\n'f  llii\nFowler   and   her   ilii ugh I \"r,\nai\"   in    th\"   elty.\nWestern Amunition\nNew Loads Just to Hand\nWestern 230-MOl).. 108   grains.   I. nhnloy    Bullet,    open    point.\nWestern 30-30.   150  grains,  Luha loy    Mullet,   open   point.\nWestern 303   British,   174   grains.    Lubaloy    Bullet,    open    point.\nWestern 30   Govt.   1!106,   150   grains.   Lubaloy   Bullet,   open   point.\n^Western 30-40.   100  grains,   l.uba loy   llttllet.   open   point.\n^Western 8  mm..   23B   grains,   Lu haloy   Bullet,  open   point.\n^Western 250 Newton,  129  grains,   Lubaloy   Bullet,   open   point.\nWestern 35   Nevvlon,   250   grains,   Lubaloy   Bullet,   open   point.\nf\\   Western 30   Newton,   180   grains,  Lubaloy   Bullet,   open   point.\n? Full   stock   of   nil   other   calibres   In   Western   Ammunition.\nj Western  Super X  Shot Shells,  In  4.  5 anil  6  shot,  12-gauge.\nSee Our   New 300 8AVAGE   RIFLE\nfJHIPPERSOIN HARDWARE CO.\nPHONE  4(7\nLook for tha Rid Hardware Storo\nP.O.   BOX  414\nTin\n1500\nI'lllti\"!    Slate\nBlueRibbon\nIf a vote were taken In\nWestern Canada as to\nwhich is theibest tea,\nBLUE RIBBONfwould win\nin a walk.\nThe BLUERIBBON family\ncomprises half the entire\npopulation of Western Canada. It is an enthusiastic\nfamily and adds many to its\nmembership every day.\n.1 Katon oi Manchester, Knglund,\nwho has been louring Cunaila, has\nbeen in th\" eilv lh\" tasl few duvs\nHi\" guest ol' .Mr. nn,I Mrs. t'lnirles F\nHunter  nnd   leaves   for   his   liotue   thl \u25a0\nS I'. I'nii'l returned l:isl nlghl from\n\u25a0\\   week   spent   in   StMiUnne   1.11   business.\nMrs.   .1.   W    Saiinliv   of   Victoria.   \"1\",\nis   returiiitig  from  n   I f\\   meeting  ol\nIhe  Women's Missi, rv  society  ,,|   Hi\"\nM.lho.llsl \"liniili. Is visiting \"' Hi.\nhome of Mrs. M Neelln while in\nHi\"  city.\nMrs. Bowes of Nakusp Is II,\" guesl\nof Mrs. Tathain while in Hi\" \"Hv\ntlteuding lh\" district M. thodl ,1 \"\"ii\n\\\"iiti\"n\nMrs. Hunt, wit,. .,t l.'.v u r Hunt\nof   Kaslo,   is   11'   Hi\"   hoi '   Mr.;.   I.\nBonnington Hdds\nHarvest Festival;\nNew Allvr Vasfs\nnoNNINUTON I'AI.I.'i Hi'., ' '\"I .'\n\\ hnrv.sl festhal v us held \"I Si\n.l.ii\"'s church lasl VVi'lni'S,!'\", |t,v\n' F. Turner ol' Itossland tukinc th,\n\"ll\"\". Hpeclsl lilUSle was ,.\u201e,!, ,..\n\", 11 N. Brown, orgnnlsl The hras:\n.ll.'ir   Mis.s,   which   strived   ft'oln    I'lng\nand   s    weeks   (,<,,.   .mo!   preset\t\n\"    lh\"    church    I\"     Miss    All\"\"    llinits\nvine     used.        (iladlnll      Willi      ;i no\nIn\ning.\ngains!     <L'.-,s.      ji,     SepleinhiV.     r.''j:i\nI   was   annou <!   lo i\"   today\nNo\n.iho'll   Ho\nill\n     ready   be-\n''    and     14,    after\nno  lurllor trouble.\nLET US INSTALL\nYour furnace\nNOW!\nW\"    \"ill    cuni-'H o     u si\n'\"    rr. I\"i\"     >..u    f'.i     ' lull;\nR.   H.   MABER\nTinsmith\nWORK   GUARANTEED\nOffice:  Opposite City Hall\nP.O.   Box  618 Plnnr.  67\nLadies'\nCigarette Holders\nllfitullfill hi'lih'is just 'ai'-\nrived. In \"OS'S of enrdeil silk,\nj:nl\"   or   ornamental   enamel.\n81.25   i'i  S6.00\nA. T. N0X0N\nYour   Jeweler\n(\"rull iiihI  VPKClablpH  h.-lokfti.il ;t   lioun-\n(Tul ItarvPHl       Mrs.   (1ollnBwocnl   tiruy.\nMi\". R.   (I.    l,..nK   ami   roU.nrl   r. 1-\nweiu rfsipoiisihlc   for   the  lirrurullonf\nCrawford Bay Bear\nafld Family Enjoy\nFarm Life Too Much\nrRAWFonn   hay.   h.c  oi-t.   t\nW. Fraser \u00abr UoIIhiipI rHiich hurl ti\nhi'iir and threp cubs maklnn their\nliome -ii Ins ranch fnr amni- lim-.\neating lli<> plums, pphth and ii|i[i!cr\nhtmI niiniiiK wmir \"i I In ir\u00ab'c\u00bb, Mr\nFmser shot lli\u00ab' moth.-r aiid iwn nil.s\nhist week. ;is they were Betting tori\nfriendly   iti  be  *\u25a0\u2022>(*<.\nW. Haviiss. <;. McGregor unci E\nlt<il\u00bblnwin have return.\u25a0(] tn>m the bills,\nwhere   they   have   been   proMtreotlng.\nAppledale Whist\nDrive Is Popular\nAl'PLEDALE, H.C. Oct. \".\u2014BeVtral\nI'arloatlK of yoimn people from Sloean\n\u25a0t t\u00bbRded the wlilut drive and dance\nheld here Friday evening under tin-\nBtMplcM of the Appledale ProfrcMlve\nDMoolatlon, The prizes were won by\nMn, I). C, Bo wen. ladies\" firs! ; Mis,\nH. V. Meyren. Indies' consolation; .J\nKwinii, (entlemen'r) first, and Mr. Nye.\nKent I emeu's      OOlWolti Ion,\nMr. and Mr.s. A. Barton and dau^'h-\nier, Miirnart't, and Mr\u00ab. J'tilllipH and\nA. PhlllipH motore<l In from Trail\nand weru the guesLs of Mrs. It. <\"\nUood.\nHan Franeiml) may have a municipal broadi-RDtlng atatlun, aomewhat\nlike that owned by New York. Appropriations for Its erection have\nbeen requested of the board of nuper-\nvlsora by Mayor James Rolph.\nMother is the\nHealth Doctor\nLifebuoy\nwill get him the job\nNO butfnei* man rouM\ntrsi-,t th*- appril ol\ncleanliness and healih\nwith their background of\ncharacter.\nIt was you. his mother, who\ngave your boy this chance,\nwho taught him the health\nhabit of Lifebuoy Soap.\nYou must continue to air]\nhtm to keep up his habits of\ncleanliness. You must teach\nhim to watch over himself.\nGrrmr, arc not visible. Tbff\nare. on almost everything one\ntouches. Urge your boy to\npurify his face and hand*\nwith a true health soap.\nMothers recogniie that Lifebuoy Soap really combats\nthe danger,of germs. The\ncreamy, copious lather of\nLifebuoy carries deep into\nevery pore a wonderful antiseptic, kindly to the skin,\nbut ruthless to all infection.\nLIFEBUOY\nHEALTH   SOAP\nMore than Soap-a Health Habit\nPlace a cake of Lifebuoy at every\nplace where there is running water.\nLEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO\n5\n ^^^\nPage Six\n*HE NELSON DAILY NEWS,-WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 8, 1924\nMarkets 22! Finance\nSTOCK TRADING\nIS DESULTORY\nPrice Changes Are, Small\nand Unimportant; Bears\nAttack the Sugars\nNEW YOItK. Oct. 7.\u2014Desultory\ntrading characterized today's stock\nmarket, with price changes generally\n\u25a0mall and unimportant. Bear traders\nmade an attempt to unsettle the general list during the morning, centering their attacks on the sugars und\n\u00bb. few specialties, but they failed to\nbring out much stock and their efforts were soon abandoned. United\nStates Steel common. American Can\nand Baldwin all closed fractionally\nhigher.\nHeavy selling of the sugars was\nattributed to the political disturbances in Cuba and tn speculative disappointment over this year's earnings. American Supar Refining, Cuba\nCane preferred and 1'unta Alegre chined\nkto    \\y\u00bb    lower    Wuile    Houth    1'orto\nlean   broke   4   points   to   67.\nSt. Paul Issues made further recovery from yesterday's early weakness. Southern Railway was heavy\nIn the early trading but rallied later\non publication of an official statement   disputing   that   claim.\nAmerican Water Works broke 7\npoints to 108Vj nnd then rallied feebly.\nThe decline In Chandler Motors, which\ntouched a new low at 31H. was Interpreted as an adjustment to Its recently reduced dividend rate. Consolidated Gas of Baltimore broke 4\npoints on one sale und Nash Motors\ndropped   4Vi.\"\nCall money held steady at 2'i per\ncent.\nTotal   stock   sales.   4i*fi.6on   shares.\nCloaing   Quotations\nHi ph.      Low\nC.  P.  R\t\nC. M. & St. P. . .\nGeneral   Motors\nInt.  Nickel   \t\nMo.   Pac\t\nMo. Pav.-pfd. ..\nRock Island ....\nStudebaker     .. ..\nU. S. Steel   \t\nWillys-Overland\n17%\nDin.,\nH%\ntt%\n3\u00bb7\u00bb\n108\n14\u00abtt\nll1*\ni:-\\\nr.r, i.j\nClose\n147'^\nn7*\nr.s'-\n17%\nr-\\\n3!\u00bb7i\n107 %\nS%\nCORN SHOOK UP\nAND RYE DOWN\nWet Weather and Small Offerings  Start  the  Corn\nMarket to Boiling\nCHICAGO. Oct. 7.--With corn prices\nshooting upward and rye down the\ngrain market went through more\nvaried changes today than have been\nwitnessed   here    in   a   long   time.      Wet\nweather and sudden icarclty of offer-\ningN scare recent sellers of corn, and\nthat grain Jumped wildly, closing\nnervously at ii V '\" -T\u00bbc up. Decem-\nber 11.11% to |1.1S%. Rye at one\ntime was (le off aa B result of lessened European demand. In wheat the\nfinish was unsettled at Vic down to\nan equal advance, December Jit!\"*\nto 11.4m and May Jl.'.lVi I\" 11.54%\nwith oats varying [mm '^c decline to\n%c. gain and provisions all the way\nfrom   15c   lower   to   17c   Up.\nSterling Exchange\nNEW YOltK. Oct. 7.\u2014Sterling rx-\nchange   Irregular   al   M.43   ror  60-day\nbills   and   at   JI IT1,    fur   rl.inan.l.\nMoney un call easier at fri I\" -%\nper cent;  ruling  rate,   2%   per cent.\nCanadian   dollars -99 Jl-!2o.\nItalian   lire\u2014livmanil,   t.Sir.c.\nFrench   franca\u2014Demand,   5.225c.\nOerinati marks\u2014Demand, per trillion,\n:3.876c.\nNelson    counter    rale   on   sterling\u2014\nCanada Bonds\nWINNIPEG,\nprices:\nOct.\n\u25a01112.\",\n-Dominion\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA,   Oct.   7.\u2014Quotations   arc:\nToronto\u2014Jobbing, specials 58c, extras   49c,   firsts   89c.\nMontreal\u2014Jobbing, extras 46c, firsts\n41c.\nWinnipeg\u2014.lobbing, extras 4tic, storage   firsts   35c.\nSaskatchewan\u2014Jobbing, extras 38c to\n40c.   firsts   35c.\nEdmonton\u2014Dealers ciuoUng countrj\nshippers delivered, extras li.'.c to S6c.\nfimtw   8(\u00bbo.\nVancouver\u2014Jobbing,     extras    55c     tt\n57c,   firsts   50c   to   65c.\nNew   York\u2014Unchanged.\nWar    loans\u2014ll>25,    $100.80   bid,    Sl'H\nasked;   1331,   (101.70   hid,   $102   asked;\n$103.50    bid.\nunding    loans\u20141928,    $ 100.50    bid;\n1943.    $10L'.:iO    bid,    $102.50    asked.\nWar loan renewals\u20141927, $101.90\nasked;   1832.   $103.85   bid.\nVictorv loans\u20141824, $99.60 bid: 1927,\n$102.SO hid. $103,10 asked; 1933, $106.40\nbid, $106.60 asked; 1934, $104.15 bid,\n$104.20   asked;   1937,   $108-40   asked.\nToronto Board\nTORONTO. Oct. 7.\u2014Toronto Hallway closed nt 103% after reaching a\nnew high for th.' year at 104T\u00ab on\ntoday's dull session of the exchange.\nA net advance of % was scored by\nBrazilian at 51 Vfc. Bread common\nmade a gain of '- to 93'\/4. P. N*.\nBurt was unchanged at 13fi. Canadian Pacific Hallway was off >*, to\n148. Ontario Steel Products common\nwas unchanged at 44. Port Hope Sanitary was up %. Canadian Car preferred\noff 1 \\4 to 84H nnd Steamships preferred   down    %   at   41)'...\nWINNIPEG  GRAIN  QUOTATIONS\nWheat\u2014\nOct. ..\nNov. ..\nDec. . .\nMay\nOats\u2014\nOct. ..\nNov. . .\nPec. . .\nMay . .\nBarley\u2014\nOct. . .\nNov. . .\nDec. ..\nMay\nFlax\u2014\nOct. . .\n156%     158\n93\nNo\nPec\nMay\nRye\u2014\nOct.\nNov.\nPee.\nMay\n134^     184\nMon\ney\nAT WORK\nBrief      but      Important      Leetona\n\u2022riauLO*.   Market*,   Stocks,   Bonds   and\nInviattnenta\nBOND-     .\nPRINCIPAL. '\nSTABILITY OF    |\nINCOME ;\nFAIR INCOME '\nRETURN^'\nMARKETABILITY\nVALUE OF\nCOLLATERAL\nTAX POSITION\npitecooM fswi\nCARE.\nALCEPTABLE\nDuf\u00ab\u00ab.TIQN mC|\nWHAT\nTHE\nAVERAGE\nMAN\n. SEES\nWHAr\nYOU I?    , '\nQANKER\n3E.ES\ni\nMetal Markets\nLONDON,   tui.    -.\u2014Quotations   are\nCopper\u2014Standard,    spot    E62    5s,    fu-\nires    \u00a3\u00ab3     lis     lid:    electrolytic,    spol\nE6fl,   futures   t66   r.s.\nin        Spot     Vl\\(i     Us     (id,     futures\nCrimean Veteran\nPraises ii Fruit-a-tive*\"\nMAJOR CEO. WALKER\nMajor George Walker, now a familiar\nfigure in Chatham, Ontario, is one of\nIhe men who went through the terrible\nIndian Mutiny. As he says: \"I am a\nveteran of the Crimean War and the\nIndian Mutiny, serving under Lord\nRoberts. Fierce hand-to-hand fighting\nand continual exposure left me a great\nsufferer from Rheumatism, so much to\nthat my legs swelled up, making it impossible for me to walk. My bowels\nwere so constipated that I was in terrible shape until I began'to use 'Kruit-a-\ntives.' They relieved me both of the\nRheumatism and the Constipation.\nToday, I enjoy perfect healt h\u2014no more\nRheumatism or Constipation.\"\nAnd in another letter, written December 1st, l(>2,t (eleven years after),\nMajor Walker lays:\" Truit-a-tivVarc\nkeeping me in the best of healih and I\nshall never lw without them.\"\n\"Fruit-a-tivcs\" are the famous Fruit\nTreatment \u2014 intensified fruit juices\ncombined with tonics\u2014that make you\nwell and krep you well. 25c and 50t \u2014\nat all dealers or from Fruit-a-Livcs,\nLimited, Ottawa, Out.\nVancouver Stocks\nSilver  Crest\nTrojan  Oil\n.10\n.(10 3-18\nMontreal Produce\nid,    futu\n.::,:,.\nLead -   Spot      \u00a331\nZinc\u2014mot    V',:\\  *s\nAl    New   York \u2014\nCopper- Kas> ;   electrolytic,   spot   and\nnearby   \\2%c to   13c.  futures  13c\nTin\u2014Firm;   spot   uml   futures   $19.75.\nIron\u2014Steady   and   unchanged\nLead\u2014Steady;   spot   $*,\nZinc\u2014Steady;    blast   .Si.    Louis,    spot\nand   futures   16.20.\nAntimony\u2014Spot  $11.\nMontreal List\nMONTREAL. Ort, 7.\u2014Canadian In- .\nlustrlal Alcohol mndi- an advance of j\ni point to in'.. nn today's stock '\nmarket while Montreal Power scored\ni pain of '-a io im; with Brazilian j\ninchanKed at -M V Montreal Cottons I\nwhn the strong spol of the day. up i\n.' to the new high of 107. Cana-\nlian    Car    suffered    the    big    It\nthe   s\nAbitil\nup\nLyall   nff\nMacKa\nup     M\ni li\n4S\u00bbu. I\nUrltlhh Umpire j\nIps   coininim   off j\noff fi. Kiunini- .\nuvntide off '?. I\nnew   low   of   9'^, !\nNational Breweries up\n1 up l. Price HrotluTH\notf %, Spanish Liver off '4, Spanish\nKiver preferred off \\'a and Winnipeg\nHallway   preferred   up   >\u00ab.\nClosing prices: Ahitihi. !i7: Brazil.\n;,! :.; Breweries. 5s; Brompton, 31 :\nLaurentide, Hi'j,; British Km pin- Steel\nsecond preferred, 9V\u00ab; Spanish preferred, 111'-: Spanish common, lf>4;\nSmelters, li'.V Montreal Power. IMS;\nSteel   of   Canada,   7^\n\\\n\u00a5\nw\nis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS\n-Quotatii\nFlrnir\u2014l.'nrbunKod al   1\"'   up nl  J^.-fl\nbarrel\nBran\u2014|L'4.r>\u00ab   \">   I'-1:.\nWheal- No     I     n'TtW. rn,    II l\u00abS    >\"\n1.49V   I'. lubcr. H.17-V  May *l.:.2's\n\" Ni>.\nMil,I\n} I .I\nVANCOUVER WHEAI\nVASfOrVEU,\nYOU have the freedom of the ship\u2014\nbright, artistically\nfurnished drawing rooms\nand lounge, card rooms,\nsmoking rooms and\ndining rooms\u2014spacious\ndecks \u2014 comfortable,\nrestful state rooms\u2014\nwith cuisine atid service\nalways up to the Canadian\nPacific standard.\nfor full particular! ask\nx-V Local At'culs\nJraueleadif\nCanadian\nPacific\nA J.   S.   CARTER,\n-*      D.P.A.,   Nelson.  B.O.\nUSEVWR BANKERS\nv\/ISION WHEN\nYOU BUY SECURITIES\n     Wbtt   you   ara    to   >ujr    a   fconfl    or\n\" stock m an Investment ie\u00ab whether\nlt mM.ra.rts np to the teete enumerated below. U IV measures np favorably   lt Is   a  food  Investment.\nthe\nof   an   invest-\nt.\n4.\nh.\n\u00ab.\nclal,\n7.\nIf).\nHers   s re\nmerit:\n1. Heeurllv   of   principal.\n2. Hlability   of   income\nFair   income   return.\nMarketability.\nValue   as   collateral.\nTax   position   (Dominion,   provin\nlocal).\nFreedom from eare.\nAcceptable duration.\nAreeptuhle    de nominal iuii\n...    Appreciation.\nSom* of these things the average\nman oan measure himself; others require special training in Investment\nand finance. Hnd Inventor should he\naided in judging them by a banker.\nJn toinsr to a banker, however, take\nalong this outline, and ask him to\nexplain whether the security can\nmeasure up well to theae 10 tests.\nHe will be fclad to show you where\nlt does and where It does not\u2014advising you as to whether or not the\ngood ^factors outwetght the unfavor-\n\u25a0iiors in regard to any security.\nsSBBsli IfidUors,\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffict   Smelting   and   Refining   Department\nTRAIL,  BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC,   TRAIL\nUsed Artidet\nReal Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats and\nAutomobiles\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nLive Stock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mines\nClassified Advertising Rates\nLocal Xsadinff aTotloss\u2014Three cents\nper word each Insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals 4c per word.\nBlackface capitals &c a word. Twenty-\nfive per cent discount If run dally\nwlthmit ch.irige of copy for one mouth\nor more. Where advertisement Is set\nnut In short lines the charge is ific\na Hue for tloman type, 20c for blackface and Uf.o for blackface capitals.\nMinimum   3oc,   If  charged  f>0c.\nWant and Classified Advertising1\u2014\nOne and a half cents per word per\nInsertion. If paid In advance 6c per\nword per week, or 22 >\u00a3c per word per\nmonth. Transient ads accepted only\non a cash-in-advance tut sis. Each inl-\ntial, figure, dollar sign, etc, counts\nas one word. Minimum 2!>c, if\ncharged   COe,\nBirths, Marriages, Deaths and In-\nMemorlam Cards\u2014Fifty cents per in-\nsertlon up to 33 words. Additional\nwords    114 c.\nLists of Wedding Presents and\nrioral Tributes at Funerals \u2014 Ten\ncents   per   line.\nMale Help Wanted\n304 MEN WANTED\u2014 We want more\nmen who are willing to quality for\nJobs paying $115.90 to 1300.00\ninontilly as garage mechanics, battery und electrical experts, vulcanize rs, welders, engineers, etc. Also\nmen wanted to learn the barber\ntrade, which is nice, clean, Inside\nworh and pays 125.00 to $50.00\nweekly. Write today for free catalog and our special employment plan,\nHemphill Trade Schools. Limited.\n228 Ninth Avenue East, Calgary, or\n1311 Granville Street, Vancouver.\n  (1.&30)\nM R N\\ W OM EN\u2014To 1 caYn Da rber I niff I\npaid while learning; tools supplied.\nCatalogue free. IMolor College, Vancouver.          (6545)\nLive   slock   sells quickly  when   it   13\nadvsi tised   in   these   columns\nFemale  Help  Wanted\nhoard,    two    perso\n09   Victoria\n(6634)\n\"Live   stock   sells quickly  when   it  is\nadvertised   In   these   columns.\t\nCity Property for Sale\nFor Sale\nSmall     five - roomed     Cottage,\n$1100.     Smalt   cash   payment,\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nInsurance City Property\n(6650)\nFOR SALE\nA six-roomed House on Victoria\nstreet, at less than half what it\nwould cost to build. Immediate\npossession   can   be   had.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nFire\u2014Lif-a\u2014Automobile  and   Accident\nInsurance.\n(6598)\nJto\nr\nFive rooms and bath; cement\nfoundation, basement; garage.\n$1700, terms.\nF.   A.   WHITFIELD\n510   KTAN'I.IOY   ST.\nInsurance\u2014Rentals\u2014Real Estate\n(11529)\nSituations Wanted FemnW\nworl,   ror   f\nApply.  Hi'\nMiscellaneous\nFOR HII'.F,\nrortable;\npoint    on\np.'r   day.\nEupenc    J\n-Steam launch. Kale, com-\npaKBenffcrfl taken to any\nInkr. fishing, etc, \u00bb10.00\nl'hone 1'ilot Bay direct\nlontreull. (0:\u00abS)\n}M00   (IM   TERMS.\nONE   OF   THE   NICEST\nHOMES IN CITY\nLocated close in. on Riliea street.\nDrawing room, dining room, den,\nhardwood floors, two fireplaces,\nkitchen, three bedrooms, dressing\nroom, beautiful large sun room,\nbroad verandah, bathroom, two\npantries, stone basement with two\ncoal bins, new furnace, garage,\nbuilt-in china closet, book shelves,\netc. Three lots. ToxSO, on corner;\nHarden, fruit trees. Magnificent\nview.\nAN   IDEAL  HOME\nfor much less than it is worth.\nApply  P.  F.  Payne, Dally. News.\n(6391)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nGOOD MINING AND LOGGING TIM-\nber\u2014All fir and tatnarae. Send your\norder for mining timber to N. K.\nToohnehoff.   funs more,   H.C. (fifigri)\nFOR BALK\u2014Columbia prafonola, console model, almost new; pictures,\ndishes and Klassware. Room 36,\nAnnuble   Block.  *^6441\nSHOTGUN\u2014Single barrel, good eondl-\ntlon.     Phone   404L. (6616)\nBARRELS, K & G S AND EMPTY\nsacks \u2014 MacDonald Jam Company,\nNelson. (6i61)\nFOR SALE\u2014Cocker Spaniel P\u00abP|jt\u00ab*\nF,   H.   Shields.   Trail,   H.C.   (6439)\nFOR~ SALE\u2014Boatnouse,' $160. J W.\nGallagher. ^(6_4i?)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS, ETC.\nComplete line Pipe mid Fittings,\nall sizes. Special, 1-lnch Pipe, 7c\nper foot. Roofing Felt, 1-ply,\n$1.50; 2-ply, 12.00; 3-ply, $2.40 per\nroll. Kxtra heavy 3-ply Mineralized Surface, 90 lbs. per roll,\nspecial, $3.00. %-lnch Air Hose,\nsuitable for gardens, Bo per foot.\nMixed Wire Nails, $2.00 per keg.\nWire Rope, Canvas, Logging Supplies and all kinds equipment.\nB.C. JUNK CO.\n135 Powell St. Vancouver, B.C.\n(6379>\nLive   stock   sell;\n\u25a0 dvertised   In   the;\nquickly  when   tt  is\n>   columns.\t\nLive Stock for Sale\nAMctlomi  Sale\ntock  pclla quickly whert  It  is\n,1   in   these   columns.\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nW'ANTKP \u2014I\nMust 1\u201e- c\nHox   2\u00ab8.\nNKW\ndret\nD A\nHOT10I.\u2014Wantptl,\nsirs. f.,ur BiacuiM\n<;.    chair,..      Will\nH,,x    196.    Ki\n'\u2022 I. ASS IF IE 11  I\nnrli y.   B.C.\t\nbrinE rcHUlt:\ntfi'li:)\nlulckly\nMachinery for Sale\nPORTABIiK SAWMILLS \u2014 American;\nused mtnlng equipment till kin,Is.\nrebuilt: boilers, compreHtutra, logglnR\nmachinery. Send for aioek list\nNational Mtirliinery Company, T.im-\nIted. Vancouver. <r.r,.|f.)\nC1.ASS1K1EI1\nsuit\ns quickly\nnrtl.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thai\na|,plication will be made to the\nLegislative Aasemblv of the Province\nof British Columbia at the next\nseseion thereof, for all Act making\nprovision for the veatlhg of general\nproperty of the Presbyterian church\nIn Canada, the Methodist Church and\nthe CongreRalluual Churches of Canada,\nin   the   United   Church   of   Canada;   for\ningregat\nnt   lb,\nto\nth\nnil,,n   of  Ibr\nI'nited Chur\nholding   uf   tin\nId\nurchc:\nnnada\nand    generally    for    the    carrying    ol\nsaid   union   into effect.\nDATED at Victoria. British Columbia, this 9th day of .September. All\n1924.\nCI.EAIUHUE * STKAITII.\nU'ls     Langley    Street,    Victoria,\nB.C.,   on   behalf  of   the  appli-\n_      cants. (6342)\nNOTICE   OF  CJIA\u00bbGE   OrKAME\nNOTICE IS MLKKP.V GIVEN that\nat the conclusion of four weeks from\nthe first publication of this notice,\nthe \"Corinth Sliver and Lead Minimi\nand Milling Company Limited\" will\napply tn the Itegistrar of Joint Stock\nt'l-nipanies for a chanire of name to\n\"Corinth Silver Lead Mines Company\nLimited\"\nDATED at Victoria, B.C.', this 2nd\nday   of  October,   1924.\nMAI.HANK   tt   ROBERTBON,\nSolicitors for the \"Corinth  Silver\nand   Lead   Minim;   and   Milling\nCompany   Limited.\" (6643)\nSACRIFICE    SALE \u2014 Unusual   opportunity   (or   party   with   fifteen   bun-\ndi'ed ti, two lllnusand dollars to\ninvest in property which is always\nrented. Bent alone will acluully nay\nbalance of purchase price owner.\nwinding    up    estate,    would    accept\nSecurities. Instead of Initial cash\npayment if necessary. Box 6815,\nDally News. (0615)\nBoats and Automobiles\n>E   FOB  HALE\u2014Ful\n\u201e,d   condition.     Appl\nNews. (6571\nLost and Found\nLOST-mi Tuesday, pocket book containing few private papers. Finder\nPlease  return   to   Daily News.     (6646)\nFOUND\u2014Last week, a pair of horned-\nrimmed glasses. Owner can have\nsame by calling at Dally News and\npaying    for    this   ad. i IP; ill I\nMining, Timber, Lumber\nlll'V\nfeet\nHALE\u2014Small\nWILL\nslxlv\ndcliv\nFOB\nof     tun.I     limber handy.     1\nfrom       railway. Apply,\nMuuter.   Silverton, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014Few ears dry v. i\nNo 1 while spuds. John\nPerry's    Si,line.\nForty head of Pcrcheron-Clyde\nheavy draft type horses, 1-lau to\n1800 His., 4 to a years, the kind\nfor the woods; teams well\nmatched, color, size. Best lot of\nheavy horses that will be offered\nfor some time\u2014the low, thick,\nshort-back kind that stand the\nheavy   work.     All   well   bloke.\nThirty sets Leather TugBr\u00abech-\nIng Harness.\nAlso Holt Caterpillar Tractor,\n66 li.p.; factory overhauled, ready.\ndrawbar  ur  belt.\nTerms, cash. No reserve. Sale\n9:30a.m. Wednesday, OcttB.Ken-\ntucky Ranch. Skiff. Alta.. 50 miles\nS.E, of Lethlirldgu on Foremost\nline, C.p.lt.\n(68111\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   _\nDIRECTORM\n(Continued*\nElectrical\nDEAtfSHAVEW   DEVELOPlTtLEHT  OO\nL?D.,    DEANSHAVEW,    B.    C-\nWcfitinKtu.une   Uadio Het*. Radio Parti\nComplete Super-Heterodyne Kits, MyeiVB\nTubes.      WestinglujUHe    Mazda   Lampi^-\nIronw.   ToMtera,   Ktc.     V.   &   K.   A\u00abt(\nmatic   Kleetflc    i'unlpR.     flmmll\nElectric Plants %  Specialty, (6471^\nHOWS   S&.HCTKXO   CO.\u2014\nPower.   lilght   and  Radio   InatallJ\ntlons.    Buttery    Service    Htatlon,    Dea|\nera   in   Electrical    Supplies.\nOpera   Sous*  Blook\nP. O. Box 928. Phone 63|\n(6r>4if\nTBLL  your  wants   through  Tho  Dalfl\nN'ewa   classified   columns.       ^\nRepairing\nHB.  ZITTO, Onniimlth \u2014 Tenn'\n. Kackets   KeRtrung, and   Repalrel\nBicycle Dealer.   Machine, Works.   (e\u00bbf\nChimney Cleaning\nYT%\nrowLis,\na ner.\t\nChlmnJ\n(\u00ab2\u00abf\nPrinting\nTHB DAILY NEWS\u2014Quality Printit|\nHuliiiti,   Loose   Leaf  Forms,   Ledgl\nSheets   and   Hinders   always   In   atoJ\nInsurance and Real Esta|\nD\nCoal\nPllOIK\nA. McrARLAND\u2014Ileal  Estate,  ll\naurance,   llrcenhlll   and   Bellev\u00ab\nDoom    No.    fi,    K.W.C.    Blocl\n(649f\nRW.   DAWSO\u00bb\u2014\n.   Keal   Estate,   Uiunm\nAnnablc lilk.\nBntsva\nJ'.Oi Box 733. Phone  111\n<664f\nTWO COWS\u2014Six veals old and three\nyears old. freshened October -.\", and\nNovember     13.       I loud    cows'.       Price\n\u25a0 from $3!t to $50. Nick K. I'nobo-\nchot'f,   Winlaw.   H.C.       (0620)\nFOR-SA1 1' (;n. \\:;u< I 1 Idt wel.-l.t\ntwo hundred pounds. Hox 902.\nNelson. _ 10641)\nFOH KAT.IO\u2014One team of work horses\nwetchiiiK 1350. \u00bb and 9 years old,\nsound, Hood limbs; also harness,\nneck cuke, doubletrees nnd waiton\ncni be hniiR-ht cheap. John Dinney.\nIleneral   Delivery,   Nelson. (i',i',l!i)\nFOP.   SALE\u2014Full   blood   A\n2    years    old.    dehorned\nBetter   of   fine   stork   (sc.\ntrade    for    ides,    young\nlone   you    to   trad\n11.0.\nTK.1,1.\nour   w;\nills   thro\n,-rshire  bull,\nand    rineed,\n\u25a0  him),  son;\ncow.     What\nBhrum,   Ymlr.\n(61S7)\nuh  The   Dally\nAgents Wanted\nDiSTP.IKt'TINl\nature pays CI\n(30    lo    $50\nFor Rent\nFI'UNISHKD\nlow\u2014Furnac\nSIX-T'.OO.MF.ll    HI'NOA-\n\u25a0 healed.    Phone .',\"2.\nRoom  and Board\nFPRN1SHKD\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\ni.MFoirr\\m.i: ikiom |.-i\n,n|ily    2a\u00bb     Haker    Slrcc\ni;Nisni\n,   rent    i\nla   lirur\npiniMS    AND\nHOUSBKEKPINI\n\u2014Over   Poole\n(Call I)\nROOMS FOR RENT\nTo Oyt=off=Towo\nSubscribers fj\nOut-of-town subscribers who\nwish to answer classified advertisements In which only the tele-\nphono number of the advertiser\nis Riven, may send their replies\nto Tho Dally News, and The Dally\nNews will communicate bucd replies  to  the  advertiser.\nTo\n11 to\nItEI.IOIOUS   LITER-\nIslian men and women\n-eiklv 5225 Kuaran-\nday's work, commis-\nMnv work snare\ntad. Spadiaa lUiildine.\n(6538)\nHE.    DILI,,    tl'SURAWCB,    I\n.      AND    CITY   PBOFBXTT.\nWard   Street. Nelson,   B.|\n(046|\nMonuments\nCAHTPDEI.I,      Ss\nMENTAL  CO.\nson.   B.C.     Tebphi\nRITCHIE     VOWf\n-P. 0. Box S65, N<\nne  104. (0_54l\nChiropractors\nLLAK   S.   DODDS,   D.C.\u2014Phone   69\nHours.   10-12.  1-4 and by al\nAberdeen Block. Nelson, Bfl\n (60a\nA\"'\nA  tu\nAccounting\nCHAKLES   F.   HUNTER\u2014\nAuditor,   McDonald   Jam   Bnliail\nBox   1191 Nelson,   B|\n(65f\nFlorists\nGKIZZELIES    OKEENHOUSB,    Ull\nson. Cut flowers and Flower dealm\\\n(651\nWM.   S\nPhn\nPlants  and   Floi\nw,\nJOHWSOM \u2014\ns    343    Cut    Flowers.   Poti\nil    Knildems. (64!!\nHAWEB\u2014Hardy \" Perenn|\nNelson. RC   (fi.\nWholesale\n*        MACtlONALD    Si    CO.\u2014\nWholesale <.rneern nnd ProrlHi\nMfreliants. ImporterH of Teas. Coffel\nRnieeH, Pried Prults, Staple and Far!\nOrocerle*.   Nelson,     B.C (65f\nSAIjKSMAN\u2014<'a|\u00ab\u00bbMe nf oarnlng big\nmoney, for htgh-clauH nufdalty line.\nGive referenceH and Htate experience iu first letter. Box r.2ft,\nLondon,    Ont, (fifiOG)\nANY    PEKSON~DEBIROtT8   OF*   MAK-\nIntt Crom Jin to $2(1 weekly in\nPtwre time, without lulerfering with\nTires, tu emplovuient. s-ml fur pur-\ntlculnra or free nample book \"Impersonal     Chrlatraai\nid  Si\nmfactu\nWest,\nTnron\nrouKl\nHieli\n(6S74)\nDaily\nTli\nufttf qulokly\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nPiano Tuners\nHEDLEY  W.  SEHDELL,  Hxpcrt\u2014 Pl-\naiini^ Player Pianos, Organs, P. 251\nMechanical\nELECTRICAL SUPPLIES AND REPAIRS \u2014 Ma,\u25a0bine shop Work\nMechanical Repairs, Oxy - Acetylene\nWelding. Uadio SuimllCs. Tubes ami\nParts. Auto Accessories, TlreH, Tubes.\nDistributors for Prest-O-Ute Batteries.\nBennetts Limited, Masonic Block.\nNelson,     H.C. (filall)\nEngineers\nGtcen Bros., Burden C(\nNELSON, BC __\nCIVIL     AND     MINING     ENGINEER\nB.C.,  Alberta and   Dominion\nLand Burreyori.\nCrown Grnnt Agents.        Blue FrlntlJ\n(Bfil\nII\nD.    DAWSON.    Land    Surreyi\nMining:   and  Civil  Engineer,\nKaslo,  B.C. (65!\nAssaycrs\nEW. WIDDOWSOK, Box All08  NS\n\u2022   son, lit:. Standard western cliargrT\nAuctioneers\nW.\nNelsi\nCUTLER\u2014\nGoods Sold Privately and at anots]\nii   Auction   Marl,   Vernon   titreg\nFuneral Directors\n3.   ROBERTSOIT,   P.D.D.   k   B|\nSOI    Victoria   street.   Phone\nNight   Phono.   157L. (S5|\nD.\nW\nStandard Purniti\nCo. \u2014 Undertakl\nFuneral Directl\nAuto hearse, up|\ndate chapel,\nservices. P r i\nreanonable.      (6lJ\nWANTED\u2014Clean    cotton    rajce.        ifl\ncents  per pound.    The Daily Nei(\nBRINGING  UP  FATHER        -:\n-:\u2014        By George McManu]\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY HORNING,'OCTOBER 8\/1521\nIGAINED 38 LBS\nMING TANLAC\nCanadian Pacific Man Gets\nRelief From Nervous Indigestion.\n\"The best of health and a gain of\nn lbs. in weight Is what the Tanlac\ntreatment has brought me, and of\ncourse I am strong for it,\" *!s the\nremarkable statement of Henri Bru-\nnelle, a well-known painter for the\nCanadian Pacific, railway, who lives\nit   86S Cartler St.,   Montreal,  P.Q.\n\"Nervous indigestion and loss of\nappetite had pulled me down from\n1!)0 to 158 lbs., and my energy and\nstrength went down in proportion.\nAfter eating I suffered from gas and\ncramping spells, couldn't sleep nights,\noh easily tired out, anil felt all In.\n\"Other medicines did me no good,\nnit Tanlac was different and has\nTiet my every need. I have a wonderful appetite, eat what I want,\ndeep well and feel fine. I can tell\nhe   world,   Tanlac   is   great.\"\nTanlac Is for sa le by a 11 good\nIruggists. Accept no substitute. Over\n10 Million bottles sold.\nTanlac Vegetable ['ills recommended by the manufacturers of TANLAC.\n\"Once   upon   a   time\"    Is   a   familiar\nleglnnlng   for   fairy   stories,   and   after\nman   has   been   once   open   a   \"time\"\nia  begins to tell  them  to  his   wife.\nC U N A R D\nANCHOR\nANCHOR-DONALDSON\nCANADIAN   SF.RVICE\n, FROM QUEBEC\nUO  QUEElfSTOWN  AND  UVEEFOOI.\n\u2022aroum    , ..Nn'-l       ('\"mania    . Dee. 15\nFFOH MONTREAL\nTO PlYKOTTTH-CHEllBODIlO-\n10NDON\nAndanla   . . .Oct. 25      Antonia    . .   Nov s\nl.usonia       \u25a0 -Nov. 1 a\nTO GLASGOW\n-thenia     Oct. 24. Nov. 21\nFuBsamlra    Oct 31       Hntiirnin   . . .Nov. I,\nl rHOM NEW YOF1C\nJCO  QUEENSTOWN   AND  LIVERPOOL\nlicythia   ...Oct. IS     Aiirniila   . ..(let. 2,\nLaconla    ...Nov I      Kai-nrta    ...Nov. s\nTO  CHET1BOURG  AND\nSOUTHAMPTON\nRiaurr tarda     Oct. it. Nov. 12. TVc, 3\nJnultnnlii    Oct. 29, Nov. 19, Dec. 13\nfimnmrta   N\"v \u25a0'\u25a0 N\"v'2''\n1 TO LONDONDEBKV AND GLASGOW\nI'olumliia   ..Oct. IS      Assyria    . . .Oct. 25\n\"amcronia   .Nov!      Tuscanls    . . Nov. s\nTO PLTHOUTR-CHEKBOURa-\nLONDON\n.ancastria   .Oct. 1      Baaonia    ...Nov. 8\n.   Money Orders at   lowest   rates.     Mil!\nInformation  from   Afc-ents or Company's\nllfflcea.   C22   Hastings   St.   W.,   Vancou-\ner. H.C.\n| News of Sport\nLANDIS GIVES\nACCUSED MEN\nAN INTERVIEW\nTells O'Conneil and Dolan\nSees No Reason to\nChange Mind\nPLAYERS DIVIDE\nQUARTERMILLION\nSecond and Third Clubs in\nEach League Get Near\nHundred Thousand\nBAN JOHNSON ON\n;    BALL CZAR'S TRAIL\nSays Judjje Cannot or Will\nNot Ferret Out the\nCrookedness\nNEW YORK, Oct. 7.\u2014Washington\nend New York players will divide a\nfund of $24S,.Tlf>.38. it was announced\ntoday after the fourth world's series\ngame, the last from which the players\nreceive a share of the receipts. The\nwinners will net $148,991,63 and the\nlosers   $911,327.75.\nThp Giants have 2G eligible men.\nthe Senators only 23. Exact figures\nfor each man cannot be computed\nnow because of the practice of donat-\nineligibb\nthe   up-\nwill\nSenators*\nMEN AND HORSES,\nHow closely related is man to the\n| more intelligent of the animal* is seen\n[ in many of the ailments to which both\nI are prone and the remedies to which\n\u25a0 they answer.\nI._ Doctors and veterinarians are often-\nItimes surprised to learn of the similarity\nof their methods of handling the ailments of man and beast.\nSprains, burns, scalds, scratches and\nI many other minor injuries, many every-\nIday ailments, too in men and animals\nItake the same course, and both answer\n|immediate!y to the same treatment\u2014\n\\bsorbine Jr.    \"%\nAbsorbine was first discovered by a\n\u25a0very close student of the horse, W. F.\nI Young, and by him, devoted to its cause.\nI Its very exceptional benefits, however,\nIwere   promptly  seized   upon   for   the\nIhuman race and, in a milder form, the\n\u25a0preparation is sold all over the continent\n[today as Absorbine Jr.    It is used for\nj men, women and children everywhere as\nlu   positive germicide\u2014a germ killer-\nland a prompt and certain healer of all\nI .....ri j.    It is useful   not   only for all\n\u25a0 the purposes served by ordinary lini-\nI aents   and  embrocations,   but   as   a\n\u25a0 mouth-wash and for anything else where\nla germicide is needed. Don't wait\nHUntil you need it. Get it in the house\n[today.   Si.25 at your druggist's.\nNEW YOl:K,Oct. 7.\u2014Commissioner\nLandis gave a rehearing today to\nJimmle O'Conneil und \"Cozy\" Dolan,\nbut announced nfterwards that he\nsaw no reason to change his decision\nin the case which expelled from\nbaseball the two members of the New\nYork Giants who were involved in an\nattempt to bribe \"Heine\" Sand. Philadelphia   shojtatop.\nAt the same time Ihe commissioner\nemphiifl\/ed that the door lo further\ninvestigation \\n still open, and that\nhe is piepared to act quickly on any\nfurther evidence of Information having a bearing on  the case.\nThe commissioner denied that either\nO'Conneil or Dolan, In visit Ing him\nat bis hold, had appealed fnr a\nchange In his decision, but, from ai\nreliable source it was reported that\nLandis, after the hearing, informed\nboth men they had given him no\nground on which to base any change\nin   his   verdict.\nTbe commissioner did, however, reveal two of the objects for which\nthe pair came to see him.\nDolan Claims  Innocence\nO'Conneil, he said,, had not received\nofficial notlee of his banishment nnd\n| wanted to have his status definitely\n1 established,   while   Dolan   sought   an\naudience to explain that when he told\nj Landis     he     \"didn't     remember\"     the\n\\ circumstances   related   tn   O'Connell's\nconfession,     he     (Dolan)     meant     be\nknew  nothing about   the   whole affair.\nDolan   has   steadily   maintained   his\ninnocence, but bis newest explanation\napparently   failed   to   move   the  commissioner.\n1-andis tonight declined to comment\nupon the- latest attack on his nd-\nministration by Ban Johnson, president   of   the   American   league.\nSays    Dollar   Mark    Rules\nKANSAS   CITY,   Mo.,   Oct.   \".\u2014linn\nJohnson,   president   of   the   American\nleague, declared here today that \"the\ndollar mark has grown so in baseball\nthat all sense of proportion bus been\nlost.\"\nDiscussing th liitcst baseball scandal in which members of the New\nYork Giants are alleged to have\noffered bribes to an opposing player,\nMr. Johnson asserted \"that baseball\nmust clean up or close up.\"\n\"There's a whole lot ol crookedness\nin the game,\" he continued, \"and\nJudge Landis will not or cannot ferret\nit out. Tbe public wants clean baseball, but. it will have (o be clean in\nevery sense of the word if the game\nsurvives,\"\nWill  Get to  Bottom\nMr. Johnson said that the American\n, league    stands    ready    to    go    to    the\n1 bottom   of   things.\n1 \"I am afraid we cannot hope for\n! much help from the .National league,\"\n>be said. \"As for Judge Landis, he\n' is   too   close   to   the   National   league\nand   the   New   York   Giants.\"\nMr. Johnson also charged that\nbaseball In California is \"shot wilh\ncrookedness:'\n._,- ,\u201e mtWa        \u2014\nReddick Gets Draw;\nCrowd Boos Verdict\ning lump sums to certain\nplayers and attaches, but\nproximate shares  follow:\nEach Washington player\nceive about $t*477 If the\nteam wins the series, but only $43111\nif it loses. If the Giants win, each\nplayer will be entitled to ahotit $6711,\nhut the amount will he cut to $1821\nif   McGraWs   team   fails.\nBrooklyn and Now York, second-\nplace clubs in the two leagues, will\nreceive each $84,881.95, to be divided\namong its eligible players.\nDetroit and Pittsburgh, finishing\nthird, will each receive $16,654.02 to\nsplit.\nThe  total  players'  fund  was $331,-\nSENATORS BUBBLE\nOYER WITH JOY\nGoose   Goslin   and   Firpo\nMarberry Are \";. \/\nHeroes\nNEW YORK, Oct. 7.\u2014In the Washington clubhouse after today's victory over the GGiants, the Senators\nbubbled over like college football\nplayers after a great victory. \"Goose\"\nGoslin and \"Kirpo\" Marberry were the\nparticular   heroes.\nWith Walter Johnson ready and\nanxious to pitch tomorrow, the\nAmei t -an le.\\rue champions feel\nthat their fortunes have taken a\ndecided    upward    swing.\n\"We still have that even chance,\"\nwas all Manager Harris would say.\n\"Seven games are easily possible before this th^ng is decided.\"\nLABOR PARTY\nTO EXCLUDE\nVISCOUNT GREY\nSURPRISES BY\nHIS IRISH STAND\nLate Liberal Leader Says\nBritain Bound in Honor\nto Ulster\nPREFERS FACING IDEA\nOF    IRISH    REPUBLIC\nIf   Free   State   Trending\nThat Way, No Purchase\nWill Avail\n51.\nNEHF AND JOHNSON\nWILL MEET AGAIN\nRead the Advertisement*\nKNOW minis TO SHOr\nATLANTA, fla., Oct. 7.\u2014Harry Pay,\nnf Louisville, Ky.. and .Inch Reddick,\nt,f Winnipeg, fought a 1^-rolllid draw\nhere tonight. The referee's decision\nwan booed. 'I'll,' crowd favored Reddick.    The  men  are  lightweights.\nI \u00ab\u25a0      \u2014       -- ssaaig\nKOOTENAY BITTER ALE\nThe   Ale   wit',   the   real   flavor,   $2.20   doz.     Order   through\nGOVERNMENT   LIQUOR   STORE.\nFREE   DELIVERY   DIRECT   FROM   BREWERY.\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY  LIMITED\n(This  advertisement   la   not   publinhed   or  displayed   by   the   Liquor\nadvertisement   is\nni ml  Board  nr  b?\nnt of British Columbia.)\nToday's Game, Fifth of the\nWorld Series, to  Be at\nPolo Grounds\nNKW   YORK.   Oct.   7.\u2014Statistics  of\nthe   world    series   now   are:\nWon.  Lost.   Pet.\nNew    York     :.'        )!        .500\nWashington   :!      -\u00b1      .500\nFourth game.    Total.\nAttendance, paid    4!),M3 1(18.',s:i\ndross receipts....$1111.077.00 JG4H.201.00\nPlayers' share.... $07,755.30 IMl.lM.t1\nChins' share .... $115,170.15 |2\u00bb0.l)28.J4\nAdvisory cnuncll $28,751.55 $07,380.10\nFifth game, Wednesday, at New\nYork, 'I p.m. Probable batteries:\nNew York. .Nehf and Gowdy; Washington,   Johnson   nnd    Ruel.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSan   Francisco,   0;   Seattle,   3.\nSalt  Lake  City.   4;   Vernon,   11.\nSacramento,  :i; Oakland,  7.\nLos   Angeles-Portland,   postponed   on\nccount  of   ruin.\nNEHF HURT HAND;\nMAY NOT PITCH\nMcGraw Says Great Southpaw May Be Out of It;\nBentley or Watson\nNEW YORK, Oct. 7.\u2014Arthur Nehf,\nGiant southpaw, who won over Walter Johnson In the opening game of\nthe world's series, may not be aide\nto pitch any more during the series\nbecause of an injured hand, Manager\nMcCiraw announced today.\n\"Nehf's hand was hurt when he\nstopped a liner In the first game,\"\nMcGraw -said. \"I will use him tomorrow if he is able to pitch, but\nhe could not have worked today, and\n1 have no strong hopes of his playing\ntomorrow. Bentley or Watson will\nbe sent against Johnson if Nehf is\nunable  [o  hurl.\"\nLucien Vidz New\nEuropean Champ\nof Lightweights\nPARIS.   Oct.   7.\u2014Lucien   Vidz won\nthe   European   lightweight    title here\ntonight     when     he     defeated Kred\nHrelonnel  in a   L'O-round  bout.\nBy Overwhelming Vote\nConference Adopts Exec\nutive's Report\nLONDON. Oct. 7 (Canadian Press\nCable).\u2014The British Labor party's relations with the Communists formed\nhe subject of a considerable riis-\nussdon nt the Labor party ennfer-\nnce this afternoon ncfore the ndop-\nioa hy an overwhelming majority\nf the executive's recommendations\nWhereby the Communists are excluded\nfrom any sort of Identification with\nihe   Labor  party.\nPrank Hodges, civil lord of the\nadmiralty, In moving 'the adoption of\nthe recommendations, said the Labor\nparty, with its parliamentary and political ideas of development, could not\nfind any ground of harmony with tho\nthesis or fundamental principle characterizing   the   Communist   party.\n\"We believe In our parliamentary\nittst ilulions as a means of effecting\nour democratic ideals,\" said Mr.\nHodges. \"We hold the view that the\nLabor movement can achieve politically practically nnvlliing that it desires.\"\nMr. Hodges emphasized that the\nfundamental principles of the Labor\nparty must be accepted by Its members, and he urged the Communists\nto go into the wilderness and conduct their own campaign openly nnd\nhonorably, adding that the Communists\ncould not enter parliament without\nhindering the Labor movement.\nEven   Jack   Jones   Pan*   Soviet\nJack Jones, Labor member for West\nHam, delivered a hot attack on the\nCommunists, evoking laughter, for instance when he alluded to ''certain\ngentlemen In Moscow with unpronounceable names and less distinguishable nationalities.\" He said history\nhad proved thai the Communists were\nwrong, No dictatorship had ever yet\nbeen Just flied. Mr. Jones asked the\nCommunists to join the Labor party\nUnconditionally, but he declared that\nthey were not going to dictate to the\nLabor   party   from   tho   outside.\nPremier MacDonald, who presided at\nthe Labor conference today, referred\nto Communism as \"the product of\nezari.Mii   and   war   mentality,\"\nLONDON\", Oct. 7.\u2014(Canadian Press\nCable.)\u2014The feature of the opening\nof the debate In the house of lords\ntoday on the second reading of the\nIrish boundary bill, which was moved\nby Lord Arnold, undersecretary for\nthe colonies, was the unexpected attitude of Viscount Orey of Fallodon,\ntill recently Liberal leader in the\nlords. He said there was an honorable and definite understanding with\nUlster when the home rule bill of\n]f\u00bb20 was passed, with the consent\nof Ulster, that the arrangement should\nnot be altered without her consent.\nAn Honorable Compact\nIf we carried out the definite engagement with the Free Slate embodied in the 1322 act in the sense\nthat the Free State seemed to understand   It,   we   would   be   breaking   an\nhonorable understanding with Ulster,\"\niaid  Lord Orey,\nHe said he would rather fare the\ndemand of the Free Slate to be a\nrepublic than see the understanding\nwith   Ulster   broken.\nApart from the naval question, be\ndid not see what more Britain had\nto lose through the Free Slate being\n\u25a0epubllc. He was quite sure thai\nif there was ti real trend of opinion\nIn the Pre* State in favor of a republic, Britain was not going to purchase avoidance of having to face\nthat Issue sooner or later, by anything she might do now for temporary   convenience.\nAdvises    Passing    Bill\nlie expressed the opinion that the\nnststenco of an amendment limiting the \u2022 powers of the proposed\nboundary commission would raise the\nwhole question of the position of\nihe house of lords. Therefore he nd-\n[>d definite acceptance of the bill\nIn its present form, or rejection of\nthe whole Idea of having a commission. He had with difficulty come\nto the decision that it would be best\nfor a commission to be set up. lt\nmight at least do good 'by making\nclear that no British commission was\ngoing   to   make   tbe   Irish   settlement.\nLord Londonderry voiced Ulster's\nopposition to the bill, contending that\nit was a measure of pure coercion.\nHe advocated   direct   negotiations.\nThe debate was adjourned until tomorrow.\nCanadian Ministers\nTalk With Thomas\non the Conference\nLONDON, Oct. 7.\u2014(Canadian Press\nCable) \u2014Hon. H. S. Behind. Canadian\nminister of health, accompanied by\nHon. E. M. MacDonald, Canadian\nminister of defence interviewed Colonial Secretary J. H. Thomas on the\nquestion of the proposed Imperial\nconference in London this autumn.\nIt is understood the conversation\nentirely   was  of  an   informal   nature.\nIt is expected that S\\>; Thomas, if\nbe remains in office, will confer with\nrepresentatives of other dominions\nwho may be in London, with regard\nto the proposed conference.\nAll   riders   of   hunt   clubs   In   England    will    wear   a    protective    helmet\nj to   eliminate   accidents   nf   the   head\nwhen    thrown    from    a     horse.      The\nskull   cap.   which   can   be   worn   con-\n| vmi'-iiily   under   the   jockey   cap,    la\nj composed mainly of linen and shellac,\nwl h a   thick  felt  padding.    The  he-id\nrests     on     a     crosR-plcce     of     woven\nwebbing,   wiib   Kiifflclcnl   space   from\nthe dome lo take the slunk.\nMi'\n>s in connection  with dhi\n\u25a0i    written   al t   by   a   (\nntist   in  the  17th  century.\nCONDENSED 'WANT' ADS ORDER FORM\nUse this blank on which to write your condensed ad., one word in each space. Enclose money order\nor check and  mail  direct to The  Daily  News,  Nelson, B.C.\nRate: One and a half cent a word each insertion, six consecutive insertions for price of four\nwhen cash accompanies order. Minimum, 26c. Each initial, fioure, dollar signs, etc., count as one\nword.    No  charge   less  than   50  cents.\nPlease  publish  the   advertisement   below     times, for which I  enclose $ - \u2014\nIf desired, replies may be addressed to box numbers   at  The   Daily   News   Office.     If   replies   ara\nto bt mailed, enclose 10c extra to cover cost of postage and allow five worda extra for box  number^\nLITTLE LESSONS IN\nGolf\nAFTER OMUL  l\u00bb HIT-\nSWING\n\\imOUGH|\nHow   should   the   driving1   swing   be\nfinished   after   the   ball   is   hit?\nAnswered   By\nWILLIAM  MEHLHORN\nWestern      open      champion,      1924.\nHolds   lowest   total   score   made   by\nany   professional   competing   in   all   of\nthe  last  three  National  open   champ-\nfonshps.\n\u2022    #    *\nThe most important part of the\ndriving swing is just before the\nball Is hit. At this point, confidence\nis essential. After Ihe ball has been\nhit. however, \"swing through\" at\narm's length, in the direction of the\nline of flight taken hy the ball\u2014after\nthat, nothing matters. Posing nt the\nend of a swing is fine Tor pictures,\nbut It doesn't help to hit tbe ball.\n(Copyright, 1114. Associated Editors,\nIncorporated),\nPRINCE'S MEMORY\nASTONISHES FOLKS\nAt  Victoria   He   Spots   a\nMan He Met at a Mess\nin Belgium\nVICTORIA, Oct. 7.\u2014The Prince of\nWales' truly remarkable memory for\npeople and faces was amply demonstrated at a ball given in his honor\nat i .overnment House last night. He\nquickly, remembered ladies wilh whom\nhe had danced when he was in\nVictoria five years ago. This was\nconsidered remarkable enough when\nthe prince has met thousands of\npeople since his last visit, but even\nhis official party was astonished when\nhe walked up to a Victoria man and\nrecalled that he had met him in\nBelgium  during  the   war.\nIt appears that the prince had\ndropped Into an officers' mess in\nBelgium toward the end of the war\nand had eaten din ner with the Victoria   man   and   his   companions.\nACTING PREMIER\nQUORUM HIMSELF\nOTTAWA. Oct. 7.\u2014\"I am a quorum\nin myself,\" humorously remarked Hon.\nG. P. Graham today, when some\nquestion was raised about a. quorum\nOf the cabinet council. It takes four\nto make a. cabinet quorum, and Mr,\nGraham is now minister of railways,\nacting premier, acting minister of\nhealih, and soldiers' civil reestabltsh-\nment and acting minister of  defence.\nThe Herlon Cricket club, at Haver\nford, Pa., has the distinction of\nhaving two national golf champion?\non its membership rolls at the sam*\nlime\u2014Mrs. Dorothy Hurd. who won\nthe women's golf title at Nayatt\nU. I., and Max Marston, holder ut\nthe   men's   national   championship.\nPresident Coolidge has written a\nletter commending Waller Johnson,\nstar pitcher of the Washington team\nas a fine type of clean American\nsportsman, particularly because he\nhad put his best efforts into one\nof the United States' most popular\ngames.\nI''orty-four polo pontes (belonging to\ntbe British polo players were auction\ned off on Long Island, N. Y., bring\ning a total of Jl 14,300, an average\nof about $1'C00 a head. Lord Wim\nhome's ponies, which sold for $10,-\n500 each, brought the highest  prices.\nAn octagonal boxing ring has been\nconstructed in an athletic club in\nCincinnati, Ohio. This is said to be\nthe first of Its kind ever used in\nthe United States. Boxers say that\nthey can work much faster In this\ninclosure than in the regulation\nfour-cornered  affair.\nWhat Is believed to be the speed\nrecord in billiards Is that made In\n18S4 by W. J. Peall, an English cue\nexpert, who scored a thousand points\nin 42 minutes.\nCLOSING AT 1 O'CLOCK TODAY\nReal Flannelette\nValues\nCOLORED STRIPE FLANNELETTE\u2014Firm weave.\nDurable quality.\n30  inches wide, per yard   25^\n35  inches wide,  per yard   30s\u00a3\nWednesday  Morning  Specials\n150   YARDS   PURE   WHITE   FLANNELETTE\u2014\nHeavy fleecy quality.   35 inches wide.   Worth 45c '\nyard. OQ\u00ab\nSpecial today, per yard  airft\/V\nA Sale of Corsets Today\nTHE FAMOUS \"LA DIVA\" CORSETS\u2014In different\nmodels, with elastic inserted.   These1 are in various\nassorted sizes.    Special today\u2014\nUsually $4.25 and $4.75, <J\u00bbQ QfT\nfor  tyOtVO\nUsually $5.25 and $0.00, (j*A  (\\r\nGIRLS'   CORSETS\u2014In   different   styles.    Athletic\nSri8*nd:D-4550c,70c,95c\nKNITTED WAISTS\u2014In light weight. CA\/.\nPrice    OUL\nKNITTED, WAISTS\u2014In fleece lined. \/Jf*.\nPrice      Odt\nKNITTED WAISTS\u2014In fleece lined. Qf^p\nA SPECIAL CORSET for the big girls, ages 14 to 16\nyears.   Fitted with suspenders. (PQ OK\nPrice  \u00abPaW.^D\nLADIES' CORSELETTES\u2014Especially for those who\ngo in for sports, as they give more freedom to\nthe movements of the bodv.\nCorselettes $1.50 to $3.95\nElastic Girdles  $1.25 to $6.00\nCorsets in Gasmrd and \"D. & A.\" are. carried\nin stock-in a large range, to fit ererg figure.\nA SPECIAL MATERNITY CORSET\u2014 fl\u00bb 4 nr\nPair ty^tLD\nPRIVATE ROOM FOR  FITTING  ON  CORSETS\nfttyuAsoris ]3.ay (Jt>mpany Y\nCHOSEN QUEEN OF PENDLETON\nROUNDUP AND A WICKED BRONCHO\nJOSIE SEDGEWICK AND NO NAME\nTho Los Angeles girl who h\u00ab\u00bb been chosen as qoeon of tho annunl wild\nwest roundup, now in progress at Pendleton, Ore., is shown above with her\napparently docile mount, which, however, has the reputation of heing the\nmost wicked of all the world's bucking hrom-hos. It is so savage that Its\nowner has never been able to fasten a name upon It, and therefore it has\nbeen christened  Xo Name.\nDead Two Weeks,\nNot Buried Yet;\nProbate Lew Witt\nVANCOUVER. Oct. 7.\u2014Two weeks\nwill have passed tomorrow since an\nassassin waited for David Lew, well-\nknown Chinese broker and gambling\nhouse proprietor, and shot him to\ndeath on the street, yet the funeral\nof the victim has not yet been held.\nThe police have become somewhat\nanxious In   the  matter,  but the Chi\nnese friends of the dead man say\nthey are waiting for relatives. Meanwhile probate shows Lew left an\nestate  of  $ti200.\nVANCOUVER. Oct. 7.\u2014Two more\n(livers have been hurried to the hospital as a result of being overcome\nby compressed air. These men were\nworking 80 feet under water In connection with tho new bridge at the\n\u25a0\u2022ootid Narrows, All five divers,\nincluding three yesterday, will re*\ncover.\n_-..._\n f      Pag\u00ab Eight\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 8,1924\nTUAtk APPLE PRICES\nON THE CLIMB,\nCAMPBELL SAYS\nHa* a lot ot rood Heat ire and\nBanges, coal and wood, new and\neecond-hand. Ruga, Axminster, Wilton, and Linoleum; Hosiery, Ladies',\nGirls' and Boys'; Underwear for\nLadiea, Men, Boya and Girls; Blan-\n\" kets. Quilts, Sheeting, Pillow Cases,\nPillows, Staple Dry Goods. Cheapest\nIn the city.\n\u2022  J. W.HOLMES\n134 Mt  Tuna ttiMt\nWe Specialize in\nCorrecting\nSatisfactorily\nDEFECTIVE\nEYESIGHT\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN\nDelicious, Northern Spies,\nWinesaps and Jonathans\nAH Move\nFOUR CARS WERE\nEXPORTED MONDAY\nDirector   Thinks   Growers\nStrong Suit Here Should\nBe Winter Apples\nWe  Sell and Recommend\nMALKIN'S   BEST\nTea, Coffee,  Baking  Powder, Salmon,\nEtc.\nFLEMING'S STORE,\nFAIRVIEW\nIf you think there is nothing  new  under  the   sun,\nSEE!!\nStarland, Next Monday\nand Tuesday\nThe price of apples went up Monday,\nncfording   to  J.   J.  Campbell,  director\nfor the Associated Qrowera and man-\nHKlng director 'for thin district. Delicious, extra fancy, arc now $.1 a box,\nfancy 12.10; Northern Spies and Stay-\ninaii's Tineas pS, extra fancy, are $2\na box, fancy, 11.75, and Jonathans,\nextra fancy, |1 86 a box, fancy $1.60.\nMr.   Campbell   says   that   cars   for\nexport lire being sent out from Nelson\ncontinually, and that four went Monday. These cars, destined for the old\ncountry contain, principally, Jonathan* and Cox's Orange Pippins. Hut\norders for the car of presentation\napples are coming in ao slowly that\nMr. Campbell thinks It may he necessary to send on the boxes already\nreceived or ordered to Vernon und\nhave   then,   sent   from   there,\nApples   Only   Going   Ont\nWith the exception of a few winter\npears nothing hut apples arc heing\nshipped now. A few of the apples.\nMich as GravenHtcins, Wealthier and\nKootenay (Jems, are going forward\nMill, but lite hulk uf the shipments\nis   made   up   of   winter   varieties.\n\"We have been able to hold back\nthe shipments, and the prairie market\nis therefore much better,\" Mr. Campbell said. \"Hut it is evident that one\nof the great needs in the fruit industry is storage accommodation, either\nlo the hands of the growers or of\nthe local association, so that the market may be fed only what it phows\na healthy demand for rather than by\nthe need for picking and packing.\"\nStrong Suit Winter Apples\nIn speaking of the fruit situation in\ngeneral,  Mr. Campbell   said:\n\"It Beams clear to me that the\ngrowers in this part of the country\nshould not be growing any mor-\nDuchess or Yellow Transparent than\nthe local market can absorb, and to\na less extent the same applies to\nWealth tea and Greve.nsteins. No matter bow good the quullty, they come\non the market at a time when it\nis filled with Mcintosh Reds; and\nthis makes it bard to get full value\nfor I hem. I tl. ink our stmng suit\nhere    is   winter   apples,\"\nFIRE TRUCK\nON PARADE\nLocal Brigade Takes Part\nin  Propaganda  of  Fire\nPrevention Week\nThe fire truck, filled with firemen\nend decorated with flags, and preceded\nby Fire Chief Maloney In his car.\nmade a round of the city's street**\nyesterday afternoon in celebration of\nFire Prevention week. Leaving the\nfire hall about 3:15 the car nnd truck\ncame down Ward street to Baker,\nthen along Baker toward the Canadian\nPacific railway station; then back\nalong Vernon street and out to Fair-\nview, back along Water and Front\nMreetB, through Chinatown, and up\npast the city hall to Ward street\nand  back  to the fire hall.\nChief Maloney said last night that\nit had been anticipated that Mayor\nL, H. Choquette would ride with him\nthrough the city, but at the last\nminute   the   mayor   had   been   detained.\nThe chief said, in connection with\nFire Prevention week, that he had\nspent Monday in the schools getting\nin touch with tbe principals and\ndistributing information aUjut the\nessay competition for pupils of ali\nschools on the subject of fire prevention, for which the Dominion government   is   offering   prizes,\nA great deal of literature on fire\nprevention had been distributed\nthrough the city lu the last few\ndays,   Chief   Maloney   said.\nAlso, he said, he himself would\nexamine the furnaces in every public\nand private building he could cover\nduring  the  week.\nM'DONALD NOT\nTO EAT OUT OF\nLIBERALS' HAND\nAddresses Labor Party in\na Grimly Combative\nMood\nTURNS HIS GUNS\nON BRITISH PRESS\nChurchill Says Labor No\nLonger to Grab  the\nLiberal Fruits\nQan McLeary\nOPENING\nPopular\nDance\nFriday, October 10\nEAGLE   HALL\nGood   Music\u2014Good   Eats\nTickets  $1.00,  from   Members   of\nCommittee\nCLASSIFIED    AD8    BRING\n\u2022ULT8   EVERY   TIME.\nRE\nSEIZED SCHOONER\nCARGOMUABLE\nSixty-three Cases of Bourbon and Seven Hundred\nSacks of Whisky\nVICTORIA, Oct, 7.\u2014When ihe Eva\nII.. I'nited States schooner, cnught\nhy the Canadian patrol boat Mlnimae\nin the Gulf of Georgia, and held in\na pitched battle ;i little later on,\nwhen highjackers, hot knowing it won\na government vessel, attempted to\nsteal its cargo, reached here today,\nil unloaded HI! eases of Bourbon and\n7t)0 sacks of whisky of all   kinds.\nThe customs are awaiting Instructions from Ottawa as to tin- disposal of the boat, which will llkelv\nbe   sold   at   auction.\nThe   two   men   captured   aboard   ii\nWill   he   deported.\nPRINCE TO BE\nGUEST OF FORD,\nDETROIT VISIT\nArrives in Vancouver;\nDances at Jericho; Goes\nEast Today\nDBTKOIT, Oct. 7.\u2014Tentative plans\nmade by city officials to receive the\nPrince of Wales when he. comu to\nDel roit. October 14, were set at\nnaught today following receipt of a\ntelegram from acting Mayor John C.\nLodge, staling that the prince would\nhe h guest of Henry Ford, Detroit\nautomobile manufacturer, during the\nday.\nOn   Regular   Boat\nVANCOUVER, Oct, 7.\u2014The Prince\nnf Wales returned to Vancouver this\nevening at 7:15 o'clock from Victoria,\ntraveling as a passenger on the regular run of the Princess Douise. He\nWill spend the night at the Hotel\nVancouver, leaving tomorrow at\nl p.m. for Banff, Calgury and the\neast.\nW. 1!. Howard of .Montreal, assistant general passenger agent. Canadian Pacific railway, is here to accompany the prince east through the\nmountains.\nAt fl o'clock the prince left bis\nhotel nnd took a taxi limousine to\nthe Vancouver club, where he dined.\nAfter dinner he adjourned to tin'\nlerii ho Country club, where n dance\nhad been arranged in his honor.\nToronto Next Week\nTORONTO, Oct. 7.\u2014The t'rince of\nWales will visit Toronto on October\n)\"., a con-ding to ofi'icial word re-\nreived at Government limine today.\nThe exact time of his arrival has not\nbeen announced, and plans for his\nreception  are  not  fully   prepared.\nWIFE LEFT HOTIL\nTO HER HUSBAND\nCourt of Appeal Gives Interests Back to Holden;\nReverses Judge\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 7.\u2014In a decision in the appeal court today, William Holden regains his interests in\nthe Pender hotel property, which was\na subject of litigation ami which the\nsupreme court had decided had been\nwilled by Mrs. Holden to her mother,\nMrs. Marie Busoombe.\nThe estate led to a sensational trial\nIn Ihe supreme court last February,\nIn which it was alleged undue Influence had been brought to bear on\nthe wife.\nThe proper! y involved is worth\n$100,000.\nPlumbers' Brass Goods, Fix\ntures and Supplies, Tile and\nSewer   Pipe.\nBC. PLUMBING &   .\nHEATING CO.\n>si,so>, b.o.\nBRIEFS FROM THE WIRE\nMaeDonuM Confirms Defiance \u2022\nLONDON, Oct. 7. \u2014Premier MacDonald, addressing the annual conference of the Labor party In\nQueen's hall, confirmed overnight\nindications that the government\nproposes  resisting  both  votes\nLONDON,' Oct. 7.\u2014(Canadian Press\nCable.)\u2014Premier MacDonald's speech\ntoday before the conference of the\nLabor party really left it no clearer\nwhether there will be an early election or nol. He wns most careful to\ngive no indication what may happen\nin the house of commons tomorrow\nWhan motions hostile to the government wMl be Introduced.\nRut the whole manner of the pre*\nmie.r ui grimly aggressive, his references to bis leading opponents heing\nparticularly    interest ins?.\nBitter Toward Lloyd George\nHis most bitter phrases were\nreserved for Lloyd George. The\npremier seemed particularly resentful of what Lloyd Oeorge said\nin a speech Saturday about MacDonald being led away by party\nextremists, and referred to the\nLloyd George efforts as \"wild endeavors to overwhelm the nation\nin earthquake* and tidal waves\nof heaving. Ignorant emotionalism.\"\nBooh a sentence, it |h pointed\nonl, might well have come from\nLloyd George himself in his boat\nform.\nToward the Conservative leader,\nStanley Baldwin, the premier was\nquite gentle, and Bpoke indeed of his\n\"commendable courage\" when, in the\nlast election, he produced his tariff\nproposals regardless of the fate they\nmieht bring upon  his  party.\nEven ho, the premier could not refrain from describing mull proposals\nas \"nostrums\"\u2014always a hard-worked\nword when tariffs are under discussion.\nAsquith Intended Ito Control\nAs for the Liberal leader, Mr. As-\nQUtth, the premier said in effect lhat\nhe realised from the beginning that\nthe elderly statesman Intended lhat\nthe Labor ministry should be under\nhis thumb. \"To eat out of bis band,\"\nwas Premier MacDonald's actual\nphrase: but the time had now come\nto make a. definite stand against,\nthis, he said.\nPerhaps the most pointed of the\n'emier's criticisms was reserved for\nthe press, which he accused of using,\nin the lasl two months, fluctuating\narguments to upset public opinion\nand turn popular government into a\nrule  of  mob   passion.\nIt is true the premier was referring only to criticisms concerning ihe\ngovernment's treaties, and he absolved certain criticisms of the \"better type of journals.\" Nevertheless\nIn February last, speaking of the\npress, Mr. MacDonald declared that\nthe ministry's efforts were being received In a sympathetic spirit of fair\nplay, while other ministers roundly\ndeclared that no government had ever\nentered office with better support\nfrom  the  whole  newspaper  world.\nThe MacDonald speech today, however, in Its most essential features,\nwas n bitter railing against Liberalism as at present presented In Ihe\nhouse of commons.\nChurchill Sizes It U;i\n\"Now we shall see with some precision how many disciples Carl Marx\nhas In Britain,\" said Winston Churchill, in an interview relative to the\nprospective  election,\n\"Hitherto the Ijabor party has followed In the wake of some powerful\nLiberal radical movement, ami lias\ngrabbed a share of others' frill's of\nvictory. Now they have to firht in\nisolation. This will 'be Ihe firrt election where Socialists have hid to\nstand on  their own  feet   unaided.\"\nPrince Having a\nReal Good Time,\nVeterans Learn\nMONTREAL, Oct. 7.\u2014That the\nPrince of Wales is having a thoroughly enjoyable holiday In Canada\nis the assurance conveyed by Captain Lascelles, secretary to the royal\nrancher, to Captain Colebourne, Dominion secretary-treasurer of the\nArmy and Navy veterans. Acknowledging the greetings of the organization, Captain Lascelles has Bent\nthe following letter to Captain Cole-\nbourne:\n\"1 am desired hy the Prince of\nWales to acknowledge your telegram\nof September 21). His royal highness niuch appreciates the kind message which you have conveyed to him\nfrom the convention of the Army\nand Navy Veterans held in Winnipeg.\nHe is, as last year, having a thoroughly enjoyable holiday In Can?\nada.\"\nWinter Is Coming\nBE PREPARED\nHave   your   Heating   and   Plumbing   Overhauled   before   Jack\nFrost catches you asleep.\nNelson Plumbing & Heating Co,\nP.Ol   Box   174 -   N\u00abl\u00abon,   B.C.   \u2022 Cor.   Bak\u00abr   \u00bbnd   Kooteniy   Sti.\nBRITISH INCOME TAX\nDUE TO RECENT LEGISLATION CAN NOW BE RECOVERED\nby person* reiidino in Canada. Retroactive to April 5, 1920.\nIf   you   are   affected,   think   of   y our losses in  th\nthrough   British   In\nleading    British   Cu    .\nand    DeducWd   from   Saving!\nTax.   and    write    me,\npany   collec ting   refund\nCur\nP. G. EBBUTT\nI past four years\nI    represent    the\nCharges   moderate\nNo   Pay!\nCRESTON, B.C.\nWe Have a Fine Stock of\nMcCLARY AND STEWART\nHEATING STOVES\nand would be pleased to have you look over our\nassortment before you buy.\nAppearance\u2014Service\u2014And Prices Right\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON, B.C.\nRETAIL\nadvanced in the commons.\nindicated the government would\nshrink from a dissolution or a gen-\ne ( I election. The premier also denounced Communism as a product\nof Czarisni and war brutality. Labor will put 235 candidates in the\nfield at next election, 34 fewer than\nlast   time.\nBungklang Falls\nSHANGHAI, Oct. 7.\u2014Sungkiang, an\nimportant city 22 miles southwest of\nthla city, has been captured by General Sun Chuang Vu, and the defenders  of  Shanghai   withdrew.\nStanleys Park's\nSquatters Beat\nDominion, City\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 7.-\u2014By a ma\njority judgment of the court of ap\npeal, Alfred Gonzales and Miss Ag-\nne&s Cummings have succeeded in\nestablishing squatters' rights against\nthe solicitor-general of Canada and\nthe city of Vancouver to their holdings in Stanley Park, nnd it is believed the judgment will be accepted as applicable to other Stanley\nPark squatter appeals now pending.\nThe park is owned by the Dominion\nof Canada, and is leased to the city\nfor   i*!l   years.\nG. E. McCroasan, counsel for the\ncity and Dominion, conceded that\nif the judgments turned on law\npoints and not on evidence, the\nother three squatters also will succeed.\nISLAM IN INDIA\nDOESN'T DESIRE\nTHE EMIR ALI\n.mi\nCentral Caliphate Committee Blames Hussein Family for Troubles\nALI TAKES OVER;\nHUSSEIN LINGERS\nEgypt Decides to Remain\nNeutral in the Hedjaz\nDispute\nDELHI, India, Oct. 7.\u2014Replying (to\na cablegram from the National Society\nof Hedjaa proposing that Emir Ail,\neldest son of former King Hussein,\nsucceed his father, the central caliphate committee has replied thnt All\nis not acceptable because of the\nmisfortunes j of Islam during the last\neight years largely due to the Shere-\nfian   family.\nIndian Moslems believe, the reply\nstated, that Hedjaz as the center of\ntbe Moslem world should not be governed by sultans or kings but should\nbe under the charge of a republic\ngovernment.\nThe statement of tbe committee is\nlooked upon as significant here, as\nhitherto Indian Moslems have always\nurged that the caliph alone should be\nthe guardian of holy places. It was\nbelieved to indicate that the Moslem\nminds are now moving in the same\ndirection as those of the Angora government.\nAbdullah  la Cairo\nCAIHO, Egypt, Oct. 7.\u2014The Egyptian\ngovernment has decided (o maintain\nabsolute neutrality in the Hedjaz dispute, and does not intend to send a\ndelegate  to  Jeddah.\nFormer King Hussein's second son,\nAbdullah of Transjordania, le reported\nto  have  arrived  here.\nStory at Jedda\nJEDDA, Oct. 7.\u2014Emir AH, eldest son\nof former King Hussein of the Hedjaz,\narrived in Mecca Sunday to take the\nthrone   abdicated   by   his   father.\nHussein, despite his promise to\nleave   the city,  still  remains   in   Macca.\nIt is not known whether lbin Saoud,\nloader of tbe Wahabi tribesmen, has\nrecognized   Ali   as   ruler.\nThe New\nFall Shirts1\nTHE new Shirtg in\nEnglish woven fabrics are absolutely guaiv\nanteed fast colors, and\nunder the Forsyth insurance policy you are guaranteed satisfaction or a\nnew shirt free.\nCome in and see these\nnew Shirts, in neat stripes\nand plain colors.\nMade also in different\nsleeve lengths and for\nstout men.\n82.00 TO 35.50\nAnother   (attic   slaughter\nHOUSTON, Texas, Oct. 7. \u2014An additional 1800 cattle were destroyed\nyesterday   in   the  Texas   fight   against\nHold flunk Official hi Hum Pirn\nNEW YORK, Oct. 7.\u2014An officer\nof a Canadian bank may be arrested in connection with a rum running\nplot  in  which  $1,000,1(00  is involved.\nTo  Roiurn  <i<*rman  Railways\nBERLIN,,   Oct.     7.\u2014France     and\nBelgium    are    to    agree    to    return\nGerman   railways   in   occupied   territory  on  October   lit.\nTurkey  Permits  Foreign   Schools\nPARIS,   Oct.   7.\u2014Turkey  agrees   to\nthe  reopening of  ull  foreign  schools\nin Angora.\nZaffloti! Leaves JJisupiKtintrd\nLONDON, Oct. 7.\u2014Said Zaglonl,\npremier of Egypt, leaves for home,\nand announces he has been unable\nto effect a settlement of Egyptian\ngrievances with  Britain.\n(iorky  Recovering\nPARIS, Oct. 7.\u2014Maxim Gorky\nRussian novelist reported dying\nsome time ago, is now said to be\nrecovering   at   Sorrento.   Italy.\nAirship    Starts    Tour\nLAKEHL'RST, Oct.  7.\u2014The United\nStates     naval     dirigible     Shenandah\nleaves for  a  continental  trip   to  the\nPacific.\nThirty New Booze\nChasers Are Built\nfor Pacific Coast\nSEATTLE. Oct. 7.\u2014By December\n15, more than 30 new liquor chasers\nbeing built at the Puget Sound naval\nstation at Bremerton, Wash., and\nSeattle, are to he assigned patr'ol\nwork in Pacific northwest waters, it\nMas learned here today.\n- Tw*ity of the new craft are to\nprevent liquor running and smuggling on Puget Sound, while seven\nothers   are   to   patrol   Oregon   waters.\nOwen Reorganizes\nVancouver Police\nVANCOUVER, Oct. I 7. \u2014 AnnouMde-\nmenl that internal reorganization is\nproceeding in the police department\nwllb a view to defining more clearly\nthe ehain of responsibility from patrolman to chief constable was made by\nMayor   Owen   today.\nIn future every patrolman \u25a0 will be\nheld responsible for conditions on his\n\"heat.\"\nPOINT GREY CAN'T\nOVERRIDE BOARD\nCouncil Finds Police Commission  Supreme in  Its\nOwn Field\nRESTAURANT STAFFS\nMUST BE HEALTHY\nVancouver  Legal   Department Investigates Power\nto Demand Certificates\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 7.\u2014Whether the\ncity health authorities have power to\nrequire stores, restaurants, and all\nplaces offering food for sale, in post\nnotices to the effect that a certificate\nof health is required <>f all employees,\nIs being Investigated hy the civic\nlegal  department.\nThis suggestion, the health officer\nsaid, was preferrablc to sett inn Up\neleborate machinery for compulsory\nphysical examination of all employees handling foodstuffs  for sale.\nVANCOUVER,   Oct.   7.\u2014\"This   was\nthe most bungled police case I over\nheard of in Canada,\" slated Councillor\nH. O. McDonald, at a meeting of the\nPoint Grey council, referring to the\npolice handling of the Janet Smith\ncase. McDonald was a member of\none of the Scotch societies which\nhave been urging police action all\nnlong,\nAfter considerable discussion as to\nthe reorganization of tiie police, the\ncouncil found that it cannot act over\nthe head of  the  police commissioners.\nA suggestion that a private detective he hired also was rejected, as the\ncouncil has no authority.\nWanted Money Bach\non Stolen Trinkets;\nKid Starts Early\nMOOSE JAW. Sask., Oct. 7.\u2014A 10-\nyear-old Rush Lake boy has shown\nparly adaption for business. Rldinft\na freight train from his home to\nSwift   Current,    he    entered   a   depart-\nental store there and \"borrowed\"\nseveral small trinkets. The next day\nthe pangs of hunger became acute,\nand he endeavored to return the\ntrinkets to tbe store and get his\n\"money   back.\"\nHe was returned promptly to the\nguardians at Rush  Lake.\nPattullo Will Meet\nCommittee Tomorrow\non Timber Royalty\nVANCOUVER, -Oct. 7.\u2014Hon. T. D.\nPattullo will be in Vancouver Thursday, to meet the royalty committee of\nthe timber industries council. The\ncommittee was appointed at the minister's request, following a full cabinet\nhearing of representatives from the\nallied timber interests of the province,\nurging amendments of the Royalty\nact at the coming session of the\nlegislature. Members of the government have concurred In tiie lumbermen's view that the act must be\nrevised, and the committee is to meet\nMr. Pattullo Thursday, to lay before\nhim  concrete  suggestions.\n1\nSneeze Again!\nEverybody's Got\na Cold\nNo doubt caused horn\ndamp weather and worn-\nout soles\nMoral: WADE RIGHT\nIN and get your Shoes Repaired and prevent those\ndoctors' bills.\nWhy is a shoemaker like a\ndoctor?\nBecause he can heel (heal).\nWADE'S SHOE SHOP\nWard   8tr\u00abtt\u2014On   your  wiy  \u00abo\nth\u00bb  Poit  Office.\nTo Advertisers\nIf you wish to obtain ths\nmaximum results from your\nClassified advertisement, be surs\nto insert your name and address.\nA telephone number only is\nnot sufficient for out-of-town\nreaders. They, in most cases,\ncannot communicate with you by\ntelephone. If you do not wish\nto have your name and address\npublished use one of our boxes\nfor replies \t\nSecond Brother\nto Drop Dead\nin a Fortnight\nREGINA, Oct. 7.\u2014The second mont-\nher of the family to drop dead suddenly within the past three weeks,\nWilliam Gilbert Smith expired this\nafternoon.\nHis brother, .lack Smith, died in\nthe same manner while duck shooting September 21. He died at ttje\nedge of a slough just as he was\nabout  to  fire  at  a  duck.\nThree  Payrolls  Robbed\nDETROIT, Oct. 7.\u2014Armed bandits\nin three holdups get payrolls containing   |25,000.\nPrince Leaves   Victoria\nVICTORIA, Oct. 7\u2014The Prince\nof Wales leaves here this evening\nfor  Vancouver   en   route  to  Calgary.\nDebt  Drops  to  Thousandth\nOTTAWA, Oct 7.\u2014The net debt\nof Canada dropped $2,110,786 during September, and now stands at\n$2,3SM06,8&1.\nSOVIET EXECUTES\nCONVICTED SPIES\nLENINGRAD. Oct. 7 .\u2014The deatn\nsentence has been carried into effect\nagainst the former officers LouUeko\nand Jillnskl who were convicted by a\nmilitary tribunal here last month of\nfurnishing information regarding the\nRed army to Polish and French military   authorities.\nSentence Tares Mors\nLENINGRAD, Oct. 7.\u2014M. Rosten-\nfeldt, secretary to the Esthonian council; Rommenlkoff,. a former officer,\nand Funks, a photographer, have' been\nsentenced to death after trial for\nespionage  on behalf  of Esthonia,\nWets Now Lead\nby Forty-one]\nEnd Tomorrow\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 7.\u2014A lead of\n41 votes has been established by the\nwets over the dries in the-recount\nof ballots conducted by W. D. Balfour,   returning   officer,\nThe contents of 207 ballot boxes\nhave been examined, and there remain  40 boxes to count.\nMr. Balfour expects to finish\nThursday.\nNelson News of the Day\nWanted   \u2014   Greengages,\nMcDonald Jam Company.\nDamsons.\n(6624)\nCUMMINS  TAXL    PHONE  44,\n(6452)\nWanted At Once \u2014 160,000 pounds\norchard run apples. McDonald Jam\nCompany,   Nelson. (6610)\nIf you want good eats come to\nthe sale of home cooking in St. Pattl'l\nChurch Parlors Friday afternoon from\n3 to 6, auspices of Mrs. MacKenzle's\nCircle. (6639)\nW.   W. Ferguson,  Barrister, Solicitor,\nNotary Public, Gilker Block. (6544)\nRotnry   Tuberculosis   Clinic,   Recreation  Club,   12   to  2  o'clock  today.\n(6648)\nCome to Methodist Church tonight,\n8 p.m. \"Japaa\u2014 In Song and Story;\"\nMrs. Saunby, lately returned from\nJapan; also Ptgeant, \"The Spirit of\nChristianity.\" Free - will offering.\nSoloist.,- Mrs.  J.  T.  Andrews. (6652)\nBahy  Clinic  at  Hospital  today,  3:80\nto   5:30. (6664)   V-\nSTARLAND\n7 and 9 p.m.\nCorinne\nGriffith\nSTARLAND\n7 and 9 p.m.\nYou'll want to\nhold on tight,\ntoo, when you\nsee this great\nromance!\nfr Elinor Glyn\n.   \u2014SHORT FEATURES\u2014\n\"THE HOLLYWOOD KID\"\nPathe Review\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1924_10_08","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0402068","@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":"1924-10-08 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1924-10-08 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\/1.0402068"}