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B. C, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1924\nNO. 152\nAIL BOARD CANCELS CROWS NEST TARIFFS\nINDIAN\nS TRIAL\nR HIS LIFE\nWh6   Saved   Squaw\n?rom Drunken Spouse\nFaces Court\nAND JURY BRINGS\nIN A TRUE BILL\nSaw White Negroes\nand White Indians\nroner and Squaw First\nWitnesses; Dominion\nRetains Counsel\n'lANPROOK.   B.C.,    Oct.    14.\u2014On\nfor his life, Casimlr Philip,  one\n. he i local   band   of   Indians,   faced\nJusllce D. A, McDonald, supreme\n\"t Judge, at the nsslzes here today,\n,ged   with   th**   murder   of   Jacob\nTew,   another   Indian,   last   June.\ntrial Is the outcome of a\u00bbdrlnk-\nbout which ended with an alter-\nin with  fatal  results on  the  re-\n*, about  eight  miles  out of the\n, after  two  bottles of liquor  had\nprocured  In  thla city,  the   pur-\nr of which halt already been  be-\nthe   court   ond   sentenced.     The\n*>ner  pleaded  not guilty.\n)is  mornings the  grand   Jury   was\npfleled,   and   after   the   noon   nd-\nJimcnt   brought   In   a   true   bill,\npetit   Jury   were  then   sworn   in,\nthe trial commenced.\n^A.   Nlsbett   of  Nisbett   &   Gra-\nof  this  city* Ih  prosecuting  for\ncrown,  and  A. I. Fisher,  K.C, of\nile,   has   been   engaged   by   the\nPinion government for the accused,\n'lals   of   the   Indian   department\n. also    watching   the   cuse.       The\n>ner  is\" a i well-set-up young man\nood  appearance.\nBlow   an   Front  of   Head\nF.    W.    Green,     coroner,    was\nJ  to  describe  the  nature  of  the\nlea which  he found when exam-\nthe   body   of   the   dead   Indian,\niscribed  death to a  blow on  the\nof the head which fractured the\nlead,  . which    might    have    been\ned   by   a   blunt   instrument.\ne   next    witness   was   Sebastian\none of the pnrty who had  been\nting heavily previous to the trag-\n, who  deaorlbed  the events  lead-\nip to the time when he fell from\n*ior\u00bbe  Just  before the  altercation\ned, and remembered nothing more\nhe next morning,\nulse  Jacob Andrew, wife  of the\niered    man.   was   on   the    stand\nthe court adjourned.\nSquaw Dragged Off Horse\ne told how she had been dragged\nher horse by her husband and\nitencd by him, when Casimlr\np, the prisoner, interfered, and\ncrept away while they fought,\nat that time under the Influence\niquor, she recollected her hus-\nhad been hurt, but none of\nrealized he had been killed till\nprisoner saw the body in the\nting,   and  told  her  what   he   had\ne said they then returned to the\nand   rein ted   what   happened   to\nIndian hgent, by whom it had\nreported to the police, who went\nie scene of the affray and brought\nbody  Of  the dead  Indian\/\ne conclusion of tfte trial may not\neached  for a ample of days.\n* BYELECTION\nBEFORE SESSION\n| Any   Minister   Before\nJiem, It Will Be Odium\nNot Buckham\nfcCTORIA, Oct. 14.\u2014Unless the\nIfrnmentJ suddenly chnngtif; its\nIt, there will bo no byelection before\nj legislature   meets   in   November.\ni was ascertained today, follow-\nthe publication of reports in\nIcouver that the government wus\nlining to take J. A. Ruekham of\njimbia   into_ the   cabinet   immedi-\nLie government Intends to devote\nft he time between now and the\nThing of the house to preparations\nlithe session, it is understood. It\nnot spend any time on bye-\njilons. The only possible change\nIhe cabinet before the session Is\n{addition' of a Vancouver member\nfopt   portfolio.\nItoeral \u25a0 Victor Odium is generally\n'rded nn Premier Oliver's prob-\n' choice if he decides to ask any\nf|;ouver member Jo sit us one of\nadvisors.\nCAPT.   E.   HARDING\nIn   Central   Africa   saw   white   ne\ngroca.     In   Central   America   he   ob\nserved white Indians.    He pronounces\nboth  types  \"freaks,\"  or  albinos.    He\nhas   Just   returned   to   Toronto   after\nyeara  in these two^ countries.      ,\nDETROIT CROWDS\nFAIL TO MET\nDAVID WINDSOR\nPrince Is Locked in Heart\nof Ford Organization\nAll Day\nDISTANT GLIMPSES\nALONE ARE CAUGHT\nLansing Lumbermen Make\nHim a Hoo Hoo While\nHe Sleeps\nK1MBERLEY CAR\nHIT BROADSIDE\nON BYJHRAIN\nTwo Women Jump; Two\nMen Injured; Auto Complete Wreck      f\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct. 14.\u2014A\nbad automobile accident took place\nin the early hours of this morning\nat a railroad crossing about three\nmiles north of thla city on the road\nto Fort Steele, when the Spokane-Son\nfreight train crashed into a cur on\nthe tracks. In the car were two\nmen, J. W. Hayes and a friend. Steve\nKamisky, and two women companions, all from Kimberley. The two\nwomen Jumped when, on rounding\na curve a few yards from the crossing, \u25a0\u2022 it- wan Been an accident was\nImminent, but the two men were unable to get clear nnd suffered some\nInjuries, it b>#ng considered remarkable   they   escaped  nt   all.\nThe car was caught broadside on\nbehind the front wheel, thrown about\n15 feet, and deposited upside down\nand completely turned round by the\nHide of tho road, a complete   wreck.\nTbe car belonged to 1<\\ Lafontaine\nof Kimberley, and an aftermath of\nthe accident is expected from the\nfact that it Ih understood the car\nhad been taken out without the owner's  knowledge or permission.\nThe two women passengers escaped\nwith no injuries.' but the men were\ntaken to the hospital, where they\nwere   being  treated.\nSome two hours' delay to the train\nwas   caused   by   the   accident.\nCoast Judges\nClimb Ladder\n\\   From Elevator\nVANCOUVER, Oil. 14.\u2014.Justice \\V. A. MacDonald and Murphy were held prisoners In the\ncourt elevator \\.v Id mimitrt*\ntoday. Between \"lw\u00ab floors, the\napimrattis Jammed, mul the two\njudges, with a thlVd iMUwenger,\nwere hold up until a ladder\ncould lie obtained, when they\n(limited to liberty.\nDETROIT, Oct. 14.\u2014All of the energy which ciiy of Detroit officials\nplanned to exhibit in welcoming the\nPrince of Wales when his visit to\nDetroit was recently planned was\nturned today to seeing that Edward\nDavid Windsor, a citizen of Great\nBritain! was not disturbed while he\nvisited Henry Ford, a private citizen\nof   the   United   States.\nErect Wall Around  Kim\nAbout  the prince  the  Ford  organisation,   assisted  by a   few   detectives   de-\ntailed   by  the police  department,   erected an unbreakable wall.\nPhotographers, newspaper men and\nthousands of others who believed they\nwould be ntde to accompany the party\nduring the tour ot the automobile\nplants of the Ford company were\nunable to get even close to the distinguished    visitors. . *\nA huge crowd which began to\npat her early in the day around the\nyard* at the Highland park plant\nof the Ford company got the, first\nsight of the prince as he waved\ngreetings from the observation platform   of   his   private   car.\nOnce Inside, the grounds he- was\nnot seen again until a smaller group\ngathered on Woodward avenue got\na glimpse of him through large\nwindows as he passed through the\npower room of the main plant. After\nthat he disappeared, and th>> crowd,\ntired    of   watting,   finally   dispersed.\nThe Inspection of the Ford**cnmpany\nplants took about two hours.\nDint* with Porfl\nFollowing tills the prince was taken\nto the Detroit club, where Ke dined\nwith Mr. Ford and a few Invited\nguests.\nTonight there was a reception and\ndancing at the residence of Mr. and\nMrs.   Edsel  B.  Ford.\nThe prince was made an honorary\nmember of the Hoo Hooh at Lansing\ntoday. Although his royal highness\nknew nothing about it, for he was\nsleeping, the Ofemberi of the organization gathered at the station, where\nhis train,,* en route here, hesitated\na few minutes, snd went through a\nrttuul that made him a member of\nthe lumbermen's society.,\nA crowd of young women from the\nMichigan Agricultural college was disappointed when the prince refused to\nwake up long enough to give them a\nglimpse  of  him.\nBEDOUINS ARE\nPILLAGING THE\nMOSLEM CITY\nMecca   Is  Without   Food;\nAppeal to Britain to\nIntervene\nWAHABIS NOW TO\nEJECT DYNASTY\nKing Ali Sits Up His Provisional Government at\nJeddah\nHIGHJACKERS ARE\nHELD FOR MURDER\nTrio in San Francisco May\nHave  Also  Killed  Vancouver   Seamen\nenty-five Cases\nof Smallpox Exist\nin Vancouver Today\njrAttCOUVBS. Oot 14.\u2014A warn-\nl,r regarding smallpox, and urg-\nI* general vaccination, hag been\nled oy Or. T. T. Underbill, ,\nIleal health officer, who says\nre are 28 owe* In this city, and\n\\\\t np to the end of last month\n> were 376 cues, compared\n183 last year. Of the eases ,\nyear, he save only 83 were\nUaated.\niy-two Entries\nFrom Canada for\nEmpire Fruit Show\nDNDON,      Oct.      14.\u2014(Canadian\nCable.)\u2014A record   number  of\ns  from  apple  growers  In   Can-\n92,    have    been    received    for\nBtour annual imperial fruit show\nwill open in Birmingham on\nsr 24.    This is three times as\nCanadian entries aa there were\nVear. '             \u25a0    .\nVANCOUVER, Oct. U \u2014Throe alleged highjackers , who, Inspector\nCm iekshanks believes, may have been\nresponsible for the murder of Capt.\nW. J. Oillis and his 18-year-old\nson on September 11, were charged\nwith the murder of a police officer\nin Han Francisco today, according to\nadvices received by the provincial\npolice.\nThe men held are known as William Rinehart, Emmanuel Robinson\nand  Patrick Haugh.\nThey are accused of shooting to\ndeath Police Hertft. M. ,r. Brady when\nhe attempted to prevent a highjacking    holdup.\nCaptain Gillis and his son. of Vancouver, wore last seen when they left\nVictoria harbor on September 11.\nTheir launch, Beryl O, was found a\nweek later by a lighthousekeeper In\nSan Juan islands. The cargo of\nliquor which the vessel carried had\nbeen looted, while bloodstains on the\ndeck and bullet holes through the\ncabin walls more mute evidence of\nthe   death   struggle,\nToo Many Cattle\nTaken for Deer,\nSo Close Nicomen\nVANCOUVER, Oct. Id.\u2014Nlco-\nmen bdoml Is closed to hunters^\nfor the shooting season It waft\ndot d red at a meeting of tho Nl-\ncorncii Island <inme association.\nAH sp-iitsmen arc- bnnvd from\nthe Mam! unless able lo show a\nIHM'iult given by the local farmers.\nIt is slated thin action was\ntaken owing in a loss of stock\nthrough hllejied shooting, oik*\nfarmer claiming to have lost 16\nlieiul of cattle within'the last\neight  yours.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nMajestic, at New Yoilk, from\nSouthampton.\nScythia, at New York, from Liverpool.\nAcqultanln, at Southampton, from\nNew York*   .\nEmpress of Asia, at Hongkong,\nfrom Vancouver.\nJKRUSALHM, Oct. 14.\u2014Complete\ndisorder haw reigned In the city of\nMecca since the retirement of King\nAll. his army and government, according to messages received here.\nThe.city is without food, and Bedouins are said to he plundering and\npillaging   private    houses..\nAn appeal lias been sent to the\nBritish government urging that further bloodshed tie prevented in the\nholy   city. \u25a0\nlbn .Maud, leader of the Wahabi\ntribesmen who are now on the out-\nskirls of the holy city warring\nagainst the Hasmlte dynasty, has\nobtained .u'.dillonal support, and now\ndemands the abdication of the entire\nHasmite   family. .\nAll AiTtvoe With  Army       .\nLONDON, Oct. 14.~r.King Alt, Successor to- bill fj|ifc<tr.' ^iin* ^tiss\u00bb-*n,\nas head of the Hcdjus, has established the provisional . center of the\ngovernment at Jedda, according to\nadvices   received   here   today.\nIt was stated that King AH had\narrived safely at Jedda from Mecca,\nhaving left the holy city with his\nforces   fn   order  to  avoid   bloodshed.\nPEKING TROOPS\nAND CHEKIANGS\nOVERRUN CITY\n<4f the National\n\u25a0    .    Council of Women\nSurrendered   Shanghai\nSeriously Concerned\nOver Situation\nIs\nHOSTILE FORCES\nKEEPING APART\nArtillery Brought in From\nFighting Lines; Order\nIs Menaced\nLIBERALS MAY\nSPUTON BEER\nWoodward and Odium Are\nAgainst Licences; Will Be\nLeft to House to Decide\nVICTORIA, Oct. 14.\u2014That the beer\nissue will be settled by a non-partisan vote of the legislature, is the\ngeneral expectation among those close\nto the government. That the government will not Issue beer licenses\nbefore the house meets, nor attempt\nto settle the question without the\nadvice of all ita supporters, has been\nmade known authoritatively, und It is\nexpected that the matter will be j\ntaken   out   of   politics   altogether.\nIt is doubtful now that the Liberal!\ncaucus will he able to reach a unan- i\nimous opinion on beer, as a number\nof prominent Liberals, including\nCharles Woodward and General Od-i\nlum of Vancouver, and Major Colley\nof Kumloops, have come out flatly\nagainst the issuance of any beer\nlicenses.\nIt Is not. likely they will change\ntheir views, as the final count of\nbeer ballots has shown a majority\nof 1704 ballots against beer on the\ntotal  plebiscite vote.\nIRAK DISPUTE'\nGOES BACK TO\nLEAG\u00a3 AGAIN\nBritain and Turkey Agree\nNot to Advance Their\nPresent Lines\nLONDON. Oct. 14\u2014The foreign office announced today that the failure\nof Great Britain and Turkey to rench\nan agreement on the Irak controversy\nover an interpretation of a resolution\non the subject adopted September 30\nby the council of the League of Nations had resulted in a decision to\nrefer the Question hack to tho council for decision. The necessary steps.\nit was stated, were being taken to\ninform the general secretary of the\nleague.\nMeantime, it is understood, neither\nside will advance its forces beyond\nthe   line   now  occupied.    ' *\nThe main difference between the\ntwo governments, according to today's\nstatement, hinges on the question of\nthe exact relation of the status quo\nfrontier to that maintained between\nTurkey and Irak pending final settlement of the frontier by the council   of   the   league.\nSHANGHAI,  Oat.  14.\u2014Chinese  see-\ntiona of Shanghai tonight were overrun with armed soldiers, raising new-\nconcern in the minds of authorities\nof the foreign settlements lest some\nseriou*   disorder   occurs.\nEach train brings additional troops\nto enforce those brought here \\o\nhold the city for the central Chinese\ngovernment, while Chekiang forces\nwho retreated into the city after\ntheir unsuccessful struggle to defend\nIt have added to the seriousness .of\nthe situation. Estimates tonight\nplaced the number of Chekiang troopa\nIn Shanghai and the districts around\nthe city at 10.000. Machine guns,\nautomatic pistols and field and mountain artillery were brought In from\nthe   fighting   lines.\nWar   VIII   On   in   North\nWhile the fighting here seems\nto be at an end, reports continued\nto be received today of fighting in\nthe north, where the central government has crossed swords with\nChang Tsn-LIn, the Manchurian military leader.   ,\nWu Pel Fu, commander-in-chief of\nthe central government armies, today\ntook refuge aboard a Chinese war*\nship in Chinwangtao harbor, after\nhis headquarters had been bombed by\nManchurian   airplanes.\nAnother   Chana   Takes   Over\nSHANGHAI, Oct. 15.\u2014Oen. Ch^njr\nYung-MIng, commander-in-chief of\nthe troops from Hupeh province, who\ncooperated with the victorious Kiang\nau army in the operations again?!\nChekiang at Hwangtu, west of here,\ntook over the Lungwha Yemen, former Chekiang headquarters, fit\no'clock   yesterday   morning.\nChang, who arrived by train at\nthe north station with 1500 troops,\nencircled the foreign settlement oil\nhis way to Lungwha, Tbe soldiers\nwaved * their banners, cheered and\nfraternized with the Chekiang soldiers, with whom they had just been\nfighting.\nThe general retreat of the dispersing Chekiang armies continued without   evidence of disorder.\nDispose  of   Defeat.ed   Troops\nThe Chinese general and the chamber of commerce are carrytng out\nmeasures in conjunction with Wen-\nShip-Tsen, recently appointed commissioner of foreign affairs for\nShanghai by the Peking government,\nfor the d Isposa 1 of t he defeated\ntroops.\nWen-Ship-Tsen and his stuff are\ntaking over the bureau of foreign\naffairs.\nFamily Escape\nMasoniciire    \u2022\n^jnrltight Attire\nVANCOUVER, Oet. 14.\u2014George\nRobinson, hiH wife and two children\njjerrowly escaped death, fleeing in\ntheir night clothing when fire broke\nout in the store of P. D. MacDonald,\nowned by C. G. L. Reid, at 2 o'clock\nthis morning.\nThe store, above which was Park\nlodge, Apclent Free & Accepted\nMasons, was totally destroyed, as\nalso waa the home of Mr. Robinson,\nwho was at the rear of the block.\nTwo automobiles were destroyed In\na garage connected with the store.\nLoss   Ik  estimated  at   $35,000.\nBERLIN, Oct 14.\u2014Wholesale forging of papers authorising emigrants,\nallegedly German, lo enter the United\nStates, are charged ugalftst a I'nited\nStates citizen and ti Pole now under\narrest.\nShares Toronto\nAstronomy Chair\nOfficer and Bandit\nWounded in Battle\nNEW YORK, Oct. 14.\u2014Patrolman\nDavis and an alleged bandit were\nwounded today ina gun battle,\nbetween policeman and a band of five\nrobbers who were Interrupted in holding up a man on West Forty-eight\nstreet. The wounded man wes captured, but the others escaped.\nPROF.   REVNOLD   K.   YOUNG\nHas been appointed associate professor of astronomy at the University\nof Toronto.\nCLAIM QUADRA WAS\nFAR OUTSIDE LIMIT\nOwners of Vessel  Believe\nCaptain's Statement He\nWas Seventeen Miles\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 14.\u2014Officials ot\nthe Canadian Merchant Shipping company, owners of the steamer Quadra\nseized Sunday night at San Francisco,\nstated that, while they had not heard\nfrom Captain Ford, master of the\nvessel, they believed tho story h\u00ab\ntold the British consul and would\nstand   behind   him.\nAccording to Captain Ford, he was\n17 miles out front San Francisco\nwhen seized by federal officers on\nthe   cutter   Shawnee.\nThe owners have retained solicitors\nIn Ran Francisco to get in touch\nWith Captain Ford and arrange to defend him and his crew, as well as\ntho   boat.\nTwo Days Choosing\nthe Delorme Jury;\nTrial Starts Today\nMONTREAL. Oct. 14.\u2014After two\ndays had been taken in choosing\na jury, the third trial of Rev. Ade-\nlard Delorme will be started here\ntomorrow morning, when R. L,\nCalder will address the jury, settipf\nforth what he intends to try and\nprove. The taking of evidence will\nstart in the afternoon. The last\njuror was chosen at a late hour tjils\nafternoon.\nSomething like 2f>0 talsmon were\nbrought down to the court house\nin the two days In order to procure\nthese  12  men.\nMRS. ATHERTON  SMITH\nProvincial 'vice-president for New\nBrunswick of the National Council\nof Women. The organization Is holding its national convention in Toronto. \t\nAIRSHIP SOUTH\nOF NOVA SCOTIA,\nWIRELESS SAYS\nBig Zeppelin From Germany Should Make Lake-\nhurst by Noon\nCHATHAM, Mass.. Oct. 14.\u2014At\n11:25 tonight, the Radio. Corporation\nof America's station here Intercepted\na message from the ZR-3 to the\nnavy station at Bar Harbor, Me.,\nreading as follows:\n\"Now off south point Nova Scotia.\nEverything well.\"\nIt is expected that the navy station\nwill be able to maintain contact now.\nMake Mooring Soon\nAIRDROME, Lakehurst, N.J., Oct.\n]4.\u2014A wireless message from the\nZR-3 to this stntion at 11 p.m. announced that the dirigible expected\n\"at the present rate of travel to\nreach    Lakehurst    before    noon.\"\nPAR HARBOR, Me., Oct. 14.\u2014Naval\nofficers here at 12:30 p.m. estimated\nthe position of the ZR-3 as SO miles\nsouthwest of Cape Sable, southernmost   point   of   Nova   Scotia.\nA message from the dirigible stated\nthat she was making about 65 knots\nIn ideal weather, little wind was\nblowing and that was in her favor,\nthe message said.    The air was clear.\nBecause of the uncertainty of the\nexact location of the ship, the naval\nofficers here could not say at what\ntime she would enter over American\nterritory.\nClose to Coast\nAIRDROME, Lakehurst. N.J.. Oct.\n14.\u2014A message from the ZR-3 intercepted at the naval air station here\nat 12:10 a.m. stated that tho Zeppelin was over Seal Island lighthouse\nIn tho southern part of Nova Scotia\nat   1.1:03   a.m.\nOfficers at the local station interpreted this message to indicate that\nthe dirigible was almost over the\ncoast and from hor latest reported\nposition    was    heading    southward.\nUnder Crow Pact Railways\nFiled Unfair Tariffs,\nSays Ruling\nOLD ONES EFFECTIVE\nFIFTEEN DAYS HENCE\nMcLean Dissents on Powers; Oliver as to Rate\nPrinciple\nOTTAWA, Oct. ' 14.\u2014The Crow's\nNest pass freight rates are to be\nwithdrawn from operation within 15\ndays, leaving railway freight rates\nas they were on July 6, 1324, as\na result of the majority report of the\nboard of .railway commissioners made\npublic here today.\nThe eastbound rates on grain and\nflour which came into effect two\nyours ago are not affected by the\njudgement.    . * .\nThe majority report, which was prepared by Commissioner A. C. Boyce,\nwas concured In by Chief Commissioner H. A. McKeown, and commissioners Lawrence and Natal,\nDissenting reports were made by\ncommissioners McLean and Oliver,\nthe former stating that he believed\nthe provisions of Hhe law involved\ndid not warrant the conclusions arrived at by the majority, and the\nlatter, that the board had 'ho poWer\nto set aside any, provisions or any\nact of parliament,\nthe   majority   of   the   board.    Chief\nIn   summarizing   the  judgement of\nCommissioner McKeown states:\nReduction  Must   Disappear\n\"It therefore follows that the reduction provided for in the Crow's\nNest pass agreement mqst disappear\nas a factor in Canadian freight rates.\nUnder the conditions now prevailing.\nIt la possible to make a fair and\nreasonable adjustment' of rates and\ntolls as between one> loeality \u2022* and\nanother, and aa between shipper and\nthe railroads, on the basis of the\ncontinuation of such reductions, and\nthe provisions of the Crow's Nest\npass  agreement. *    *-v.     .    -V-.\nThis decision will remove as between city and to*vn\" all discrimination bailed on the. Crow'* neat pass,\nagreement, and will eliminate Whatever discrimination has arisen from\nan extension of lines and railways\n*o which the benefit of such rates\nhave not been applied by those responsible  for  the  existing  tariffs.\"\nCommissioner Boyce finds that the\nrates in force on July 6 W'ere just\nand reasonable rntes ns to all companies, and were equitable, uniform\nand   undisciminatory   in   their   effect.\nHe finds the rates represented by\nhe tariffs filed under the Crow's\nNe*t pass agreement end effective\nJuly 7. \"are unequal, uniust. unfair,\nnot uniform and subversive of a\nstable rate structure. They are the\ncause of widespread nnd far-reaching\ndislocation and disruption of Iterate\nstructure, and are not based upon\nany sound  principle\"\nPower*:  Exceeded. Says  MoLann\nCnrnmi\u00abfdnner McLean in dis\u00bbent-\n(ng 'om the finding of the majority,\ndeals largely with the legal question\ninvolving the jurisdiction of tho\nboard  of railway commissioners.\nThe Crow's Nest pass arrangement\nfContlnuefl -nn   pagp  }\\\nWOMAN'S SCREAM\nUNDOES DOPESTER\nVancouver    Chinese    Gets\nThree Years  and Is *\nFined Five Hundred\nVANCOUVER, Oct 14.\u2014Dong Pong,\na dope peddler, was sentenced to\nthree years in the penitentiary today\non the charge of hiving drugs in\nhis possession. A fine of $500 was\nalso   imposed.\nThe Chinese was nr res ted bv Detectives Kllleen and Raines following\na scene with a woman drug addict.\nThe detectives heard the woman\nscreaming that she wanted her money\nback. They searched the Chinese and\nfound morphine.\nThe woman said she had given\nhim $\". for drugs but he had not\ngiven   her   the   stuff.\nCROWN TO OPPOSE\nBANDITS' APPEAL\nMONTREAL, Oct. 14\u2014 The crown\nprosecutor, R. L. Calder, K.C, will\nvigorously oppose the appeal to the\nsupreme court, of the Banque d'\nHochelaga bandits, abainst the death\nsentence which is set to be carried\nout In Bordeaux jail October 84.\nThis afternoon Mr. Calder said:\n\"I have received instructions to\noppose the appeal by every possible\nmeans left open to me by law.\"\nBeautiful Indian\nGirl Suicides in\nFarmhouse Kitchen\nFORT WILLIAM, Ont, Oct. 14.\n\u2014Ruby Corbet:, 20-year-old quarter-breed Indian girl, was found\nthis morning lying dead in a pool\nof blood in the kitchen of T.\nMoore's farmhouse, just outiide\nof Fort William. It is supposed\nto be a case of self-destruction,\nand Coroner R. M, Boyd ia now\nmaking   an   investigation.\nRuby Corbett was a girl of\nmore than ordinary beauty, and\nsome yesrs ago was winner of a\nbeauty prize. Her father was a\nwhite man arid her mother half\nIndian   blo?d.\nREGINA, Oct. 14.\u2014\"I want to be\narrested,\" declared 84-year old Joseph\nW. Salmon, when caught throwing\nstones at windows from the corner\nof Scarth  nnd  11th avenue  today.\n\"If you don't arrest me, I'll cut my\nthroat or drown myself,\" the aged\nman continued.\nA patrolman took him to police\nstation.\nCAMPBELL, WINN\nAT THE CAPITAL\nSomething in Air With the\nCompensation  Board,\nWiseacres Believe\nVICTORIA. Oct. 14.~The presenco\nin the city of Kenneth Campbell,\nwho resigned his Beat aa - Liberal\nnumber for Nelson In favor of Premier Oliver, and the appearance before the executive council today of\nE. S. H. Winn, chairman of the\nworkmen's compensation board, leads\nthe political prophets to believe thero\nis \"something in the air.\"\nMr. Campbell has heen mentioned\nfor a place on the board, while he\nalso has been talked about as a\nprospective member of the new board\nto superintend the operation of tho\neight-hour   law.\nNeither the premier nor Attorney-\nGeneral Manson will discuss the matter, although the latter states that\nthe new board will be announced\nshortly.\nThe Weather\nThe temperatures' btdow ere for  the\nl    hours   ending    yesterday    efternooi.\nat   5 .o'clock.\nVICTORIA,    Oct,    14\u2014 Nelson and\nvicinity:    Easterly    winds,    generally\nfair and  mild.                        M,in. Max.\nNELSON      41 57\nVictoria         M 58\nVancouver       _.   10 66\nKamloops   .....   44 f>4\nBarkerville     |8 48\nPrince   Rupert     _...*' 42 5fi\nEstevan       1(1 54\nPenlicton     .\u2014 -.   41 58\nVernon    48\nGrand  Forks   _\u201e   43 CS\nKaslo     ._     41 57\nCranbrook     '  IS 64\nSeattle    -    hi U\nTortland          12 64\nSan   Francisco   ...      12 68\nCalgary          SO 66\nWinnipeg  \u201e.._ (   Srt 68\nKdmonton     -   28 5tl\nOttawa    \u201e    58\nPrince  Albert       28 62\n.\u25a0m\n\u25a0M\n\t\n 1.1\u2014.\n'PacgslVs\"\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1924\n\u25a0\nI\ni\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel ol the Interior\nAMERICAN PLAN RATES, S3.50 TO \u00bb5.00\nBooms with Running Water and Private Baths.\nHeadquarters for all Travelling Men, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists.\nROTARIAN   HEADQUARTERS\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER, $1.00\nTHE MOST COMFORTABLE  ROTUNDA IN  THE CITY\nHUME\u2014H. Cowan, K. P. Mamlll,\nJ. E. Hutchlne, N. R. Selwyn, Banff;\nJames Marel, Calgary; W. G. Ran-\nehaw. Spokane; Earl Henderson, B.\nMallett, George A. Seattle, R. P. Pet-\ntlplece, R. B. LeiRh, H. H. Page,\nVancouver; Mrs. Qroge, Molly Gibson;\nw,    A.    Cameron,    New   Denver;    O.\nLlndstrom, Colvllle, Mrs. W. D. Todd,\nVictoria; D. L. Thompson, J. R.\nGlegerlch, Kimberley; V. Z. Manning, A. Field, ancouver; James Anderson, Kaslo; H. J. Woodley. C. D.\nArchard, G. L. Melrose, VV. P. Ball.\nJ. Ross, R. K. Newport. A. H. Broad-\nhead. J. MacDonald, Toronto; R. B.\nSpedls,   Vancouver.\nEUROPEAN  PLAN\nteylight Simple Rooms fee\nCommercial   Men.\nHotel Strathcona\nOnce Yon Get Acquainted With the Strathcona\nYOU WILL STOP AT NO OTHER\n5avo$ Ibotel\nNewly Remodelled\nCompletely furnished with  the beat of everything.\nFor Your Comfort\nI.\n1. A.  KERR, Corner of Baker and Falls Sts\nProprietor. 2 Blocks from Depot\n\u2014LET'S STAT at tho SAVOY\u2014\nSteam   Heated\u2014Hot   and   Cold Running   Water\u2014European   Plan.\nSAVOY\u2014George   H.    Henderson,    R.\nBruin,   Siocan   City;   Miss   M.   McKay,\nTrail; B. Kennedy, F. c. Cormack,\nVancouver; Nelson Larson, Spokane;\nJim  Kerrigan,   p.   Kozokoff,  Castlegar.\nQueen's Hotel\nSteam   heated   Throughout\nAll rooms  with  hot and  cold\nrunning  water.\nIn center of bustnesa district\nOur motto Is \"We aim  to pleas*\nA. Lapointe,\nProp\nOCCIDENTAL    HOTEL\nA.   C.   TOWNER,   Proprietor.\nThe   home   of   plenty.\nFifty  rooms of   solid  comfort\nWe serve the  best  meals ln  Nelson\nIt's the cook\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616 Vernon Street East.\nOnly  brick   hotel   In  city.    Steam\nheated;  hot and cold water.\nEuropean and American plans.\nNEW GRAND\u2014H. W. Adams, Seattle; P. Norberg, Siocan City; Louie\nParkson,   Bonnington   Falls.\nLAKEVIEW\u2014Angus Beaton, North-\nport; B. Guerlettle, Bonnington: A.\nCaskill.\nTHE MADDEN HOTEL\nT.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nSteam-heated   Rooms  by the  Day.\nWeek or  Month.\nEvary   consideration  shown to\nguests.\nCor. Baker and Ward Sts., Nelson\nMADDEN\u2014F. C. Timberman, Spokane; C. Madden. Spokane; John O.\nRoiike, Salmo; H Harshaw, Salmo;\nLeo Sweeney, Vancouver; W. B. Wallace,   Northport.\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nMrs. Malletts \u00ab\\ Son, Proprietors\nVice, warm, comfortable rooms at\n\"asonahle   rates      Open   day   and\nnight.\nCorns*-   Hall   and   Vernon   Streets\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n715   Vernon   Street    East\nSteam heated.   Hot and cold water\nWe  are   here  to  serve  you\nP.  H. BUSH, Prop.\nSHERBROOKE HOTEL\nNear   C.P.R.  Station.\nHooms   at   Reasonable   Rated.\nH. DUNK,  Proprietor\nr\nTRAHBi\nOF TRADE IS\nUP IN ARMS\nScores City Council on Way\nIt Is Doing: Roadwork\nin City \\\nREMOVAL    OP    BANK\nUNDERMINES   HOUSES\nClosing By-Law;  Sale of\nLand Disputed by the\nBoard Members\nTRAIL, B.C.. Oct. 14.\u2014Riverside\navenue road work and the disposa\nof adjacent property by the city was\nthe bone of contention by the mem\nhers of the Trail board of trade at\na meeting held here tonight. The\ncity council was strongly criticized\nfor Its attitude, and in the way the\nroad work was being carried on.\nThe members of the council as a\nwhole, 16 strong, tonight walked to\na point on Riverside avenue where\nstreet work was ln progress and Inspected the work being done. In one\ninstance It was found that in order\nto widen the street the bank had\nbeen cut away to such an extent that\nthe residences on the bank were in\ndanger from sliding over. The banks\nare mostly of clay with tops of rock\nand sand. There was considerable\nseepage. In the same spot the board\nmembers found that after the sidewalk was laid the road had not benefited  in  width.\nLand   Sale   Causes   Comment\nThe disposal of a strip of land on\nIF YOU WANT TO SEE\nTHE   men   who   know\nGOOD  Values,   pick out\nTHOSE who  deal  with  Morris.\nNelson's Best Cafes\nBOSTON CAFE\nand  Furnished   Rooms, 511   Baker St.\nThe newest cafe In the city. Rooms,\n50c per night. Special rates by week\nor month. Special Chicken and Turkey Dinner each Sunday, 50c.\nRegular Dinners and Luncheons, 35c.\nOPEN   DAT   AND  NIGHT.\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic  Restaurant\nRefinement  and   Delicacy   Prevails\nOPEN    DAY   AND   NIGHT\nLuncheon,   11:30   to   2     35c\nSpecial Dinners, 6:30 to 8  35c\nWe  Specialize   ln   Chop   Suey\nand Noodles.\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFinest-equipped restaurant ln the\ncity, OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice cream, soda water\nand hot drinks. Nice, clean, fur-\nnished 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\nPARIS CAFE\n18   NOW   OPEN   FOR   BUSINESS\nNext   to   Tremont    Hotel\nMeals. 35c. Breakfast   6 to  12 a.m\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.\nEverything   cooked   by   electricity\nLuncheon, 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., 35c\nSupper 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., 36c\nSpecial Sunday Turkey Dinner, 60c\nplate. Phone 450\nthe waterfront on the outside of the\ncity entailed a warm discussion. A\nmotion was advanced by L. S. Tyson\nthat the matter be referred to the\nratepayers' association, but an amendment that it be tak<^i up. directly\nwith the council, made by Noble\nBlnns,  was   carried.\nPrevious councils had worked hard\nto obtain this property, and as a\nfuture benefit to the city the board\nmembers failed to see the advisability of selling it for n small sum,\nas It waa probably worth more ln\nother  ways.\nJ. Plester brought up the matter\nof 6 o'clock closing for local merchants. Stores in the Gulch, he declared, were open at all times and\nwere handling all kinds of goods\na,nd merchandise. He advocated separate  licences  for  these  merchants.\n\"'Probably the present bylaws were\nnot'ienforced, hat there does not seem\nto be anyone to enforce them,\" he\nstated.\nA. J; Martin stated that the present'bylaws did not affect businesses\nof all kinds; for Instance, the jeweler.\nThe discussion following advocated\nan amendment of  the  bylaw.\nSpeaking on the matter, Noble\nBlnns stated:\n\"At the last meeting T suggested\nthat a committee be funned and legal\nadvice be gotten to find out our\npowers under the Municipal act and\nthen   let   us   act.\"\nIn connection with the opening of\nthe Memorial hall on November 11.\nJ. R. McLennan was at the meeting\nrequesting a committee to take part\nin a discusBlon to draw up a constitution for the new hall, so that\nit could be made use of for the best\ninterests of the city. A committee\nconsisting of N. Blnns, D. McDonald\nand W. E. G. Moneypenny was named.\nBRIEFS FROM THE WIRE\nZeppelin  Due Today\n\"WASHINGTON\",    Oct.    14.\u2014A    zep-\npelin    Is    expected    to    arrive    from\nGermany tomorrow.\nHundred   Mexicans   Killed\nMEXICO CITY, Oct 14.\u2014One hundred were killed in a bloody clash\nbetween political partisans at Tuxtla,\nGutierrez,   Sunday.\nPrince Drives Assembled Car\nDETROIT, Oct. 14.\u2014The Prince of\nWales sees a car assembled at the\nFord plant In about 40 minutes, and\ndrives it away.\nSteal   Hundred   Thousand   From\nPoultrynwn\nCHICAGO, Oct. 14.\u2014Bandits enter a room where delegates of a\npoultry show are assembled, and\nhold them up for their money and\nJewelry. It ia estimated $100,000\nwas stolen.\nConservatives Xomliinte Faster\nLONDON, Oct. 14.\u2014Ho far the\nConservatives have the largest number of candidates in the field in\nthe   British   elections.\nPacifying Shanghai\nSHANGHAI, Oct. 14.\u2014The new\nCh'nese administrators who have\ntaken over this city are working in\nconjunction with the foreign authorities to avert. disturbances incident\nto the recent war.\nArtificial Sunlight  Improves Chicks\nBANGOR,   Me.,   Oct.   14.\u2014A  Maine\nprofessor successfully tests out artificial sunlight, for improving young\nchickens.\nSenator    Suicides\nWASHINGTON,    Oct.    14.\u2014Senator\nBrandage of Connecticut suicides by\ninhaling  gas  in   bis   home   here,   blowing   heavy   losses   on   realty.\nLoan Taken In Twelve Minutes\nNEW   YORK,   Oct.   14.\u2014The   German   loan  la  over  subscribed   in   12\nminutes.\nAuditor .Tones Found Guilty\nTORONTO, Oet. 14.\u2014Sidney Jones,\nHome bank auditor, is found guilty\nof negligence, by Judge Coatsworth.\nRaise Flasr on Herald Island\nNOME, Alaska, Oct. 14.\u2014Tbe Stars\nand Stripes are raised on Herald\nisland, the Russians claimed Wran-\ngel   Island,   40   mllee   away,   recently.\nSwedish    Cabinet   Resigns\nLONDON, Oct. 14.\u2014Tbe Swedish\ngovernment  resigns.\nValuable1!   Stallion   Burns\nLEXINGTON, Ky., Oct. 14 \u2014\nPrince Palatine, a quarter-million\ndollar stallion, Js burned to death at\nXalapa   farm.\nGovernment to Finance Wool\nMELBOURNE, Australia Oct. 14.\n\u2014The Australian government decides\nto finance tbe export of wool and\nother exports as a state  enterprise.\nShoe   Output   Larger\nOTTAWA. Oct. 14.\u2014The official\nstatistics show Canada produced more\nboots and shoes last year than in\n1021. The value ot the production\nwas     $45,690,607.\nAbattoir   Fire\nMONTREAL, Oct. 14.\u2014The plant\nof the Montreal Abattoirs is partly\ndestroyed by fire; damage in $200,-\n000.\nThe Brown Ranching company, limited, of Altawan. Sask., made a particularly fine shipment of stock to\nChicago through North Portal. The\nshipment consisted of 40 cars or 733\nhead of cattle valued at $48,000. The\nUnited States tarrlf of two cents per\npound made a duty toll of $20,000.\nWHISKY WILL\nKILL GERM UP\nTO IN SIZE\nMrs. Gibbs Reports\nSpeeches at Temperance\nMeeting at Coast\n\"It is the 'ChrfstlaV In it which\nmakes the Women's Chrisyan Temperance union powerful'\/' said Mrs.\nM. Gibbs in opening her report as\ndelegate to the 41st annual \"Women's\nChristian Temperance union meeting\nheld recently in New Westminster,\nat the regular monthly meeting of\nthe Women's Christian Temperance\nunion held in Trinity Methodist\nchurch   parlors   yesterday   afternoon.\nMrs. Gibhs went through the program of the three days' convention,\ntelling of each Hem as she came\nlo it. She spoke particularly of\nthe work of the Women's Christian\nTemperance union, and said the question of admitting young men as well\nas young women had been discussed;\nalso as to whether young men who\nsmoked could be admitted. In the\nend it was decided that they could\nnot.\nMrs. Gibbs spoke strongly on the\nrambllnc: evil, sayinr much of It\nwent nn at th\u00ab fairs, and that,\nwhether it was done there by local\nneople or by outsiders, and whether\nnr not the proceeds went to a Children's  playground,   ft was wrone.\n\"When housie-housfe ran take ln\nJ75 in one evening in M-cent pfeees.\nin Nelson or Vancouver or New Westminster, lt shows up its -evils,\" she\npaid.\nShe told of reports made on the\ncurfew lew. Indian work, narcotics\nand scientific instruction in teniwr-\n\"nce. and said that a resolution had\nhfon passed at the coast recommending that scientific temperance instruction should form part of tbe\ncurricula of the public, high and normal    schools.\nStrong for Temperance\n\u25a0'Mr. Annandale. the mayor of New\nWestminster, spoke, and told us he\nwas strongly on our side for temperance. 1 wish wo could say tbe\nsame here,\"  she went on.\nShe told of a model meeting conducted by Mrs. Paul Smith <>r Vancouver, and of an address on the\nsocial conscience by Rev. Williams\nOgden.\nMrs. Gibbs also pave the Incident\nof a block nf pretty homes at tho\ncoast in which the only uncared-for\nlawn belonged to the family which\ndrank a great deal of beer and\nstowed tho bottle under the sidewalk.\nScientific Temperance Instruction\nTn speaking of scientific temperance instruction; Which she said the\nconference bad agreed the most important work nn hand, she said one\nspeaker said that some people bad\nthe idea that a hit whisky tot\nwould cut-e their colds. It was the\nhot w;it.# in the mixture that caused\nthe cure, said the speaker, and not\nthe whisky, although whisky was warranted to kill any germ up to the\nsize   of   a   man.\nMrs. Gibhs emphasised particularly\nthe report of Mrs. Jackson Sllbaufh,\nn member of the United States senate, on establishing a temperance\nday in the schools In the United\nStates.\nShe also spoke of the race track\ngambling at the coast, a memorial\nservice for women who had gone on\nfrom Women's Christian Temperance\non     work     during     the     year,     and\ngold    medal    competition.\nn    the    election    of    officers,    Mrs.\nGibbs    reported,    Mrs.    J.    A.    Oillesple\nf   Vancouver   became   the   new   president,   taking   the   place   of   Mrs.   T.   H.\nWright  of  Gibson's  Landing,  who  pre-\nied   at   the   meeting.\nIn speaking of tiie work of Cana-\ndUniting foreign women, Mrs. Gibbs\nua id one speaker at the convention\nhad said that it was not the foreigner who was a menace to Canada;\nit was the men who sat in the editorial chairs on subsidized newspapers\nand  who   sat   in   parliament.\nA hearty vote nf thanks was tendered lo Mrs. Gibbs for ber report\nby Mrs. G. Simms, local president,\nat   the   close   of   the   meeting.\nHumane Officers\nHeld Convention\nBONNINGTON NOTES\nBONNINGTON FALLS, B.C., Oct.\n14\u2014Miss Laura Wllley was a charming hostess Saturday at the home of\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs, A. Wllley,\nThe guests played tennis in the afternoon, and after tea, which was daintily\nserved by Mrs. Willey assisted by Mrs.\nW. W. Bell, tbe time was spent In\nplaying games and dancing. Ice cream\nwas served during the evening.\" The\nguests were Miss M. Irvine, Miss M.\nMcKeown, Miss E. Shaw, Miss P.\nHanna. Miss Smith, Miss R, Borden,\nMiss M McLeod, Miss G, Ritchie,\nMiss M. Stobo, Miss K. Ritchie, Miss\nM. Ritchie and Miss K. Robinson,\nof Nelson; Miss J. Somerville. Miss\nP. Williamson, of Vancouver; Miss M.\nHumphry, Miss I. Brown, E. Campbell, J. Jerome, Q, McKay, W. Mc-\nl'hall. B. Nichols, R. Creysnn, V.\nHvidt, J. Riley, (\" Bharpe, w. Lee,\nj>. Kennedy, W, Hanley, L. Wtllicke,\nR.   Harris   and   Mr.   and   Mrs.   W.   Bell.\nThe foreign missions board of the\nMethodist church appointed James\nO. Endicott, M.A., sou of the Rev.\nDr. James Endicoft, lo the Chinese\nfield.\nSome of the Internationally famous\nofficers of the American and Toronto\nHumane society who were In Toronto\nfor the convention of the associations. Upper left, Nathaniel J. Walker,\nsecretary of the American Humane\nsociety. Upper right. Dr. Francis H.\nRowley of Boston. Center, left. Is\nW. K. Horton of New York, president\nof the American Humane society;\ncenter right, Leopold L, Wilder, Albany, N.V., field secretary of that association. Below, John Macnah Wilson, general manager and secretary,\nToronto  Humane  society.\nBYTHREETQTWO\nVOTE OLD RATES\nARE RESTORED\n(Continued from Page One)\nwas an agreement,\" he states, \"and\nif the board hail power under the\ndiscrimination sections to disregard\ntbe limiting powers of such an agreement, what was the necessity for\nsuch legislation ? U seems to me\nthat the enactment of this legislation\nis in sustance a statement by parliament that in regard to the subject matter dealt with in the subsection, the board had not\u2014In the\nabsence of this specific enactment-\nregulative  powers.\"\nThe assistant chief conimissloner\nalso states:\n\"I am further constrained, although\nwith great deUrenee to the opinion\nof the chief cominls\u00bbloner, to conclude\nthat the provisions of the law Involved do not warrant the conclusions\narrived at  hy the majority.\"\nMake   New   Pact   Says  Oliver\nIn bis dissenting judgement, Com-\nmssloner   < diver   states;\n\"This board was < rcated and empowered for the more efficient enforcement of the acts of parliament\nregarding railways, and. therefore.\ncannot set aside any part of the\nprovisions of any suc,h act, but, on\ntiie contrary, is bound to loyally enforce   those   provisions.\n\"While it would bo quite In order\nfor the government to negotiate a\nnew arrangement with the Canadian\nPacific railway in the place of the\nCrow's Nest pass act. I am of the\nopinion that such agreement having\nduo regard to the promotion of trade\nbetween eastern and western Canada,\nshould main tan the principle of low\nfixed rates on basic products established  by  that  act.\"\ncounsel mm\nBANK'S BOOKS\nRULED AGAINST\nClaims Director Smith Not\nConnected With Them;\nFifty Identified\nTORONTO. Oct. 14.\u2014Cordon Waldron. counsel for Clarence F. Smith,\nHome bank director on trial before\nJudge Coatsworth on a charge of\nmaking false statements of the bank's\nfinancial affairs, again took objection\ntoday in the submission of bank\nbooks as evidence unless they were\nconnected with the accused. He said\nthat although the trial had lasted\na week, there was not a tittle of\neV'den-e   concerning   the   accused.\nD. L. McCarthy, crown counsel,\nreplied that the crown was merely\ntrying to get the books in now, an''\nthat other witnesses would prove th'\nTHE  GUMPS\u2014THE  GILDED  CABOOSE\nf  W* \"\\\\i&> OIF TVUTS  KNOCKING ARQ\\)N.t> T>^\nCoufC. RH  UWB   r\\ COMPVB (VF   HOIAtV^SS\n6*?SVtV  ^0\\yftS. P.VV0MS HO&61NC)  TV.\u00a3\nUMfcUGWT  V0H\\VE VhA IVBOXTt to\nUvA?Ot5nf\\KT NS * S\u00ab\\V-erH tflVZCM \\N KUSSIA-\n*!\u00a3*SLN.25 ^w *mv^ c\\wc^l \\M*\\boH\nB\\)T   TC>*  KAS   \\VS   OUST UKE M\\H&\nbW.  \\M sVevrVNQ OVTt OF\nAND Ut\u00ab>A,CH^S\n^2>.\nr>.\n6V\u00a7\\A, Mm-   T>QM'T C\u00abS-   \\ YWOVJ Nou'\\R\u00a3\nnot ufN\\nej mocva ?un fc\\n w*s wo\nCVMCH Vo^ I.AE Bm\\^V- k VQ\\-VT.C\\Av,\nOVTm SM\\V\u00a3\u00ab  TO VW>E VHS fcCVWKj TONSVUs\nm who, \u00bb\\ tor Ma\\>*. SfvKfc - \\ MMT\nNOO  TO   'Revgh m THB VOVUT^-HOUSS as.\n?\\SST   IAV\\ OF THE LM>tt>- \"MO\\> \\WRE\nOUST  ^M>E K\u00abi THtVT 00ft - NOO'LU FttL\n&S  MUCM AT HOKAE \\N  VUNSH\\N0)1-ON AS    J\nAM  ItRSMMN*. t>OES \"\" '\u2014'\nIM   t>V)S>UU-\nr oust thvnk- mou\\u hm^ a\n?RWA.-^c ^A-CHT AUWAMS K\\ TOUtt.\nCOMMIVN^-  ^tOMVU CSEtVTE <^LL THE\nNfcVN SVUtS- \\F NQ\\) IWM^T TO \\NFAR\n& ORtEH WMOHI\\ FOfc. |\\, BALU 60WH\nMX THE WOSA^A OF TVW3 \\M0R\\.V> VuU,\\.\n\\OUST TWNfc OF AUV. The FVM MQO '\n\\ \u00bbu HtwE Sv\u00bbo?9\\N& m w^SvwwcvroNl-\n^-j^pvexwa w>mww& souruttie\nVvV^&x^^^^W ANV\nvvTEU,\\Ne> THE CIESV\\\nTo  CWA^GE \\T TO\nTrtE VRSS.^^CT -\n\\ 60ESS THATUC\n\u00a3E BA\\>,EM?\nLadies' and\nChildren's\nAll Lines Complete\nSILK \u2014In    shades,\nCabin, Cordovan, Gre^\nOoze,    Nude,    Pan\nGranite,     Black\nWhite.     Prices   fl.!\nand $2.00.\nSILK-AND-WOOL \u2014 A|\nshades,  $1.25,   SI.!\nand S1.75.\nALL-WOOL AND CASK\nMERE \u2014Very   find\nPrices   $1.10,    81.29\nand $1.75.\nCHILDREN'S   ANll\nMISSES'\u2014Full ranges!]\nMILLINERY\nConsignments of lates]\nAmerican Pattern Han\njust in.   They are cleveij\nNelson Dry Goods\nLadies' Wear Specialisti\nfalsity of them, nnd also that tho I\ncuaed knew about them and the of\nentries..\nJudge Coatsworth ruled that\nbooks should go ln, as ho did\nintend to limit the crown.\nThomas   Gibbs,   who   was   assis|\nohiof accountant, again testified\nhe had suspicions about many of I\nbank's   accounts,   especially  after)\nforest   had   not   been   paid   and\nbeing   added   to   accounts   year\nyear. \u00bb\nJust before adjournment this afl\nnoon.   Ci.   L.   Coalman,   who   was f\nsistant     manager    of     the     Toro,\nbranch,  was  called  to'identify  i\nr,0  hooka  of the  branch,  which .\nwheeled   Into   the   court   room   <\ntruck.     His   identifications   were\nfinished when the court adjourned!\n me.\nConcert at Kaslo\nRaises Funds for\nthe Magic Lant\\\nKASLO,    B.C.,    Oct.    14\u2014The\nlaslum    was    crow tied    Saturday\no    listen    to    a    good    program,\n'odd    of    Toronto    being    the    vlsil\ntar       Mrs.    \\Vr.    P.    Hunt    also\ntrlbuted   BOOKS,   and   A.   J.   Curie.\nlit    nf    the    entertainment    waul\n-e    funds    far    the    purchase    _..\nmagic   lantern   for   the   public  school\n \u25a0\u2014\nThe   association   of   the   First\ngregiUional     church,     Calgary,\nKnox   Presbyterian   church   of\ncity, was finally decided upon by\nCongregational   members.     Since\npassing  of the  Church  Union  ac\nhas  not  been  uncommon  In  the\ntern   provinces  for churches  to  i_\n'heir   forces   in   preparation   for\nconsummation   of   union,    but   li\nbelieved   that   this   is  the  first  I\nof the kind to take place In the\nUnder the new arrangement, the .\ngregational church will remain a\nof the Congregational Church of (\nada   until   the   act  of   union   beoc\noperative,    when    the    members\nmerge   into   the   United    Church\nCanada.\nSOUR STOMACH\ncauses bad breath, gassy ps\ncoated   tongue   and   helchln\nAlways find relief in\nCHAMBERLAIN\nTABLETS\nSweeten   your   stomach   and   brea\nonly  25c\nnnnEjim\nStop drugging!    Rub soothing, j\nI rating   St.   Jacobs   Oil   right\nyour     sore,     j\naching  Joints,\nrelief     comes\nstantly.   St.  Ja\nOil  U a  ham\nrheumatism   ,11\nment   which   in\ndisappoints     a\ncannot    burn\n8k In.\nOet     a     35\nbottle of St.Ja\nOil    at   any   L\n-store,    and    In\nmoment   you1\nfree     from\nsoreneHH and s\nness.    In   use\n\u20225 years for rl\nmat ism,      acla\npouralgia,       1\nhago.   backache,  sprains.\nC U N A R  I\nANCHOR\nANCHOR-DONALDSO\nCANADIAN   RF.RVICE\nFROM QUEBEC\nTO  QUEENSTOWN  AND  LIVEBP\nCfironia J\nCarmanla   (llallfui)    D(\nFROM MONTREAL\nTO FLYMOUTH-CHEBBOUM\nunroot\nAndanla   ...Oct. 25      Antonla    ...N\nAusonla    Nc\nTO GLASGOW\nAthenin    Oct. 24. N<\nCassandra    O.-t 31      Haturnla   ,,\u25a0_!\nFROM NEW YORK\nTO  QUEENSTOWN  AND  I.IYERI\nAuranla  ...Oct.2S      l.aconta   .,.*\n.Samaria    I\nTO CHERBOURG  AND\nSOUTHAMPTON\nAmiltnnta    Oct. 29, Nov. 19, P\nHerengarla    Nov. G   \"\nHnnretsnla     Nnv. 12.1\nTO LONDONDERRY AND OLASC\nAssyria   ...Oct 26     Canieronla\nTuncnrda    . .Nov. \u00ab      Columbia   ,N\nTO PLYMOUTK-OHERBOURO\nLONDON\nLnncastrla. Oct. 25      Saxonia   ...1\nMoney Orders at lowest rates.\nInformation from Agents or Comn\nOffices.  622  Hastings St. W, Va\n\\er, B,c,\n'\n utn\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1924\np^riaNi'\n>OOOOOOsXOOOOOCCO<\nNORA LEE!\nElcnorc Mehcrln'i Greatest Story\nRevealing the Heart and Sou! of the 1924 Flapper'\nf* CHAPTER   XXI.\nA    TRIASGUIiAIl    CLASH\nAndrew dashed toward h's wife,\nJ the move so unexpected she\n(crouched. Crouching, the leveled the\nj pistol, terrlle little animal aoupds\nI coming from her lips.\nHe swerved quickly, backing her\nI against the wall, wrenching the pis-\nItol with sharp, abrupt strength from\nJ her hands.\nShe struggled silently, her lips b't-\nJ1 ten together, flaring red stains pol-\nf iehlng her cheekbones, the bleached\nt yellow hair falling.\n1 Suddenly Bhe began to sob, her\n.hand flinging out in a wild gesture\n, of accusation toward Margaret\u2014\n\"Tqu she devil!\"\n\u2022Andrew clapped his hand over her\nL mouth. His voce struck with aahen\nbdeadness: \"Get up, Lily, you're com-\nJflng homo, Don't struggle. There's\n[no use. Put your hands down. No,\n[I won't release them. I'm going to\nI take you home, now. Come quietly.\"\nI A long, shuddering moan, \"Home!\niHomel\" the beating of her flstR on\nthis chest. She let herself Bink ln a\n|dead   weight   against   him.\nHe lifted her in h s* arms, turning\njito Margaret a glance of agonized\nI supplication.\nShe went over quietly and brought\nfchls hat, lifting the trailing purple\n[cape from under his feet. Doing\nIthls she smiled at him\u2014a 1'ght of\nJ holy peace, like candles glowing at\n|'a shrine.\nHe   lowered   his   head   before   lt,\nI bearing   his   heavy,   sobbing   burden\nJo the  car.  He propped   her  gently\nin the cushions.\nOn the long ride back to Falrdale\nJly  Stewart  huddled   In  the  corner,\n\u25a0 her chok'ng gasps subsiding In mut-\nItered   plaints  like  a  dirge.   \"I'm   the\nI wife\u2014the   one   to   blame\u2014the   wife!\nwarned   you!   I   told   you.     Oh,   I\n|inked you to be kind\u2014to  remember.\n' did I want you to take me with\n,'ou?  To  give  you  a chance  tci  save\n'   soul.     I   knew\u2014that's   why   1\nrjave you the chance.    Take mo wfth\nSave    your    honor!       Would\nf    You were busy!\" A prolonged.\nShivering     cry.     \"You'll     go     back!\nYou'll    try   again!      Don't,   Andrew,\ndon't!\"\n: The shrill fury mingled with the\nI tumult In Andrew's mind booming\n\u25a0of the sea; the roaring of the wind\nlis they sped down the naked road.\n1 Forlorn, puny whimpers they were\n[\"n the vast, pitiless, unheeding song\nt the universe.\nThe moon rode blue and high; its\nImage floated in cold serenity on the\n[{learning bosom of the waters. An-\nllrew looked toward them. They\nlieemed at peace, yet desolate, like\n1 me who bears his breast enduring\nIvvhile the winds of mortality strike\n|igainst   him.\nTo Andrew it seemed  that he was\nTiding out of life;   that  all  had  now\nI lecome   unreal   and   dark.   Through\nI ill the future he would  go  gropingly, feeling neither warmth  nor light.\nLily  had   become   silent.     She   re-\nJ'used to move when he  opened the\n|ioor at Falrdale and watted  for her\nstep   out.     She   made   a   clumsy\nI inge forward, then crumpled in ob-\nItlnate    immobility    in    the    corner.\nHe   said   quietly:   \"We   are   home\nI'lly.     It   is   late   and   turning   very\n|old.   Get   out,   will  you   please?\"\nSobs answered him,\n\"Are   you  unable  to   move,   Lily?\"\nShe   had   her   face   h'dden   in   the\nUshions.     He   finally   lifted   her   to\nMe   ground.     She   slumped    in    hia\nJrms,  dropping her head against his\nleek, her wet eyes touching his chin,\nj He was exhausted when he reached\n(er  room  and  laid  her  on   the  bed.\nI he   remained   inert,   regarding   him\n|\/ith  red,  glaring eyes.\n\"Do   you   want  anything,   Lily?\"\nShe   beat her  two  hands  together,\nbody    shaken    with    hysterical\nsobs. When he drew the blankets\nabout her, she clung to his arm,\nletting her face sink down against\nhim. He was forced to sit on the\nedge of the bed and comfort her.\nHe sat there feeling her f ngers\ndriving into his flesh, till they\nseemed to squeeze at the blood In his\nveins. A sense of appalling doom\nfell   upon   him.\nShe had known of Margaret, must\nhave shadowed him. ln all those recent scenes she had been planning\nthis. She would have shot .Margaret.\nHe loosened her fingers with an\ninvoluntary shiver of repugnance.\nShe mistook ir for co'd and tried to\nwrap the  blanket about  him.\n\"I'm tired, Lily\u2014let me go\u2014goodnight.\"\nShe said fn a frightened whisper:\n\"Andrew\u2014don't leave the house.\nSomething    fr ghtful    will    happen.\"\nHe scarcely heard, but went to hia\nroom and laid tbe pistol ln his grip.\nYesterday he might have escaped;\ntoday  he  was  a  prisoner.\nHis blind reconstructed In a score\nof ways the scene in Margaret's\ndining room. Margaret wh'te and\nbeautiful as a thing of marble; Nora\nLee flinging her arms about her\nmother's neck.\nThen he saw Margaret prostrate\non the floor, blood streaming from\nthat lovely face, the spirit going\u2014\nthis might have happened.\nFear piled on him, heavy and cold.\nSunday morning be was ffo'ng to\nhis office. There was papers ho\nWanted. Lily stopped him in the\nhall. She said faintly: \"Andrew\u2014are\nyou   leaving  me?\"\nHe surveyed her with cold aversion. \"I am returning ln a few\nhours. Don't have me watched,\nLily. For your own good\u2014don't\ncarry thl<* thing any further!\"\n\"No? I am perfectly calm. Andrew. You will never leave me lot\nher.     I  mean  this.\"\nHe  smiled:   \"I   believe  you   do.\"\n\"Then you are warned.\"\nReaching his office, he suddenly\nremembered that his papers were in\nthe safe deposit vaults. He \u00a3ould not\nget  them  until  the   morning.\nHe sat at his desk, his head bured\nIn his arms. Time wheeled on cold,\nlenden feet. He felt his life stretched\nout and these cold, leaden feet beating It Into the sod.\nHe came out of his lethargy to\nopen a small concealed drawer. Here\nwere two letters from Margaret. The\nonly ones he had kept. One she had\nwritten after their first farewell that\nsummer in the mountains ....\na sacramental letter, like their kiss\nof  parting.\n\"Andrew, your coming bus put a\nbeauty in the sunset, a music in the\ndawn. I hold to these as gifts lhat\nmake me glad to live through empty\ncenturies. No matter what the future brings, we have this past. Andrew I see your gentle eyes. They\nare dear things to hold eternally in,\nmine.\"\nHe read this and began to sob, unable to check the storm of grief. He\ntook tho two letters and.burnt them\nand   put   their   ashes   in   his   pocket.\nMonday he came to Margaret. It\nwas noon, but Nora Lee was home.\nShe was standing at the gate. Hhe\nran up and slipped her hand in his;\n\"Andrew\u2014Oh. let me see\u2014you're\nall rght, aren't you? Well, we were\nJust  wondering.\"\n\"I am'going nwny, Nora Lee. I\nhave  come  to  say  goodby.\"\n\"We are not going with you, Andrew?\"\n\"No\u2014\"\n\"What  will   mother  do?\"\n\"Where is she,  Nora Lee?\"\nShe pointed to the living r\nTears rushed to her eyes, but\nput    her    trembling    hands    on\nonm,\nshe\nh!\nsleeve:     \"Andrew\u2014come    out    after-\nENO's is absolutely free from mineral salts\nor artificial coloring. ENO's abolishes\nconstipation by helping Nature keep you\nclean within. Try ENO's\u2014a dash each\nmorning in a glass of water. It gives the\nmental and physical energy that only\ncomes from perfect health.\nSells eXspesssetetuis for JVorlfc Amrteo 827\nHarold F. ROchit & Co., Limited, Toronto\nFRl.IT ' SAlfttMi\nOVER\nPROPERTY IS\nDPICOURT\nMrs- Stoll Loses Action\nOver Property Claimed\nby Herself and Husband\nTwo actions were dIsm seed ln\ncounty court yesterday afternoon\nby Judge J. R. Brown of Grand\nForks.\nThe first was one between Mrs.\nA. Stoll and G. K. Stoll in which\nMrs. Stoll was claiming that Stoll\nheld a certain property on Carbonate street in trust, and that he had\nno right to sell the same property\nwithout her consent. The property\nhad been sold by Mr. Stoll to Mrs.\nA. Fassmore who had the title.\nF. C. Moffat acted for Mr. Stoll. E.\nO. .Matthew for Mrs. A. Passmore,\nwhile the plaintiff. Mrs. Stoll, was\nnot represented. Hoth actions were\nd smlssed with costs against the\nplaintiff.\nMrs. Stoll took the stand first\non   her  own  behalf.\nProperly   In   Steffi   Name\nJudge Brown stated to Mrs. Stoll\nthat she should bo represented by\na lawyer. \"It seems you have a\nhard road to travel,\" he said to the\nwitness.\nThe property In question, Bhe\nstated, was purchased in her hus-\nband's name gome years ago at a\nprice of $800. They paid together\n$600, Bhe putting up $300 and Stoll\na like amount. They had been\nmarried about two years at that\ntime. She stated that she had been\nable to save $45 per month after the\nmarriage because she had continued\nher work at the Queen's hotel. Her\nsavings had been put In the bank\nby  the  husband  in  his  name.\n\"Why didn't you put it in yourself?\"   asked   his   honor.\nWitness replied that she never Intended to draw on lt. Her husband\nhad never shown her tho bankbook\nand because of him drinking heavily she had suggested that they purchase   a   house.\nHusband Paying Over Money\nAfter they had secured the prop-\nperty her husband had stated that\nhe would put it In her name. In\n1922 her husband had left her and\nup to that time he had paid off\n$100 of the mortgage. She testified\nthat she bad paid taxes amounting\nto $192. The property she admitted\nhad been sold for taxes. She stated\nthat her husband was paying her $7\nper month which was not enough\nto live on. He was keeping himself and was not paying her. He\nwanted to live on the street. She\nadmitted later judgment awarding\nher $1  per day from her husband.\nCross examined by Mr. Moffatt,\nwho acted for Mr. Stoll, witness\nstated .that she knew the property\nwat, in her husband's name and\nthat he had never attempted to clear\nthe property. A note sent to Stoll\nby Mrs. Stoll was identified by the\nwitness   and   in   It   she   had   asked\nLegal Forms\nAgreements for sale, deeds, mortgages, etc., carried in stock.\nPer 100 84.00\n50 S2.50\n3 for  25**\nEach   10c*\nTHE DAILYNEWS JOB DEFT.\nPrinting\u2014Ruling\u2014Bookbinding\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)       NELSON, B.C.\nward\u2014you must come out and kiss\nme   before   you   go.\"\n\"Don't care about it, Nora Lee-\nIt  may not  bo  forever.\"\nMargaret ran forward, but seeing\nhis desperate look and hollow\ncheeks, she clasped her hands\nagainst  his  breast,   closing  her  eyes.\nHo took her hands and drew them\nto his heart. Yet neither dared to\nmeet   each   other's   eyes.\nlie said quietly: \"I am leaving,\nMargaret.\"\n\"Where  are  you   going?\"\n\"I   will   write   to   you.\"\n\"And we must part in this way,\nAndrew?\"\n\"It seems the only thing to do.\nI wafted too long. Margaret. I\nnever dreamed that she could know.\nOh.   my  love\u2014my  dear love\u2014\"\n\"No Andrew\u2014do not break your\nheart\u2014sp'eak to me\u2014I want your\nvoce.    Where are you  going?\"\n\"I will write, Margaret. Oh\u2014\nthings   will   be   better,   perhaps \"\n\"You are not telling me the truth.\"\n\"We have had the years of fullness, Margaret. Once you said It\nwas a. stolen thing. I have never\nthought so. Margaret, you have\nbeen wife to mo and you only in\nthought and in heart. There has\nbeen no day in eight years, Margaret, that anv other has had one\nmoment's feeling and no wife, my\ndear loved Margaret\u2014none has ever\nmore sacredly beheld,\"\nShe glanced up to his face. She\nput her fragile hands against his\ncheeks, a deathly stillness in her\nheart. \"Ah, Andrew; are you telling\nme  a last  goodby?\"\n\"I am telling you the beating of\nmy soul. I am giving you my spirit,\nMargaret. I do not. know why I am\nspeaking so, but if it Is a last, goodby, my dear\u2014you will remember the\npast. I can endure Infinity of pain\nbecause   of   this.     Can   you?\"\nShe drew his head down. She\nkissed his lips. Her lips faltered on\nhis   eyes.\nHe raised her in his supple arms,\nand she was strong again. She\nturned that holy smile upon his\nface.   \"Andrew\u2014so   gladly\u2014dear   one\n dear   one.   I   know   you   cannot\nleave   me   long.\"\nHis arms wound against her. He\ndropped on his knees, as he had that\nnight so long ago, and held her for\na* last, long moment, with his face in\nher gentle hands.\n(To Be  Continued)\nTHE PRUDENT\nlays in his coal now. He does\nnot wait until cold weather,\nwhen everybody wants coal at\nonce. He is for preparedness\non the coal question anyway.\nBesides, coal Is cheaper at this\nseason. Why not be 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\nStoll to come and see what the\nnext door neighbors were doing to\ndepreciate the value of \"His\" property.\n'You have had a stormy career,\"\nsuggested Mr. Moffatt, to which\nMrs.   Stoll  replied:\n\u2022Who is to blame? Do you think\na woman could live happy with a\nhusband who was always running\nto a lawyer? I tried all I could\nto help, and he never made any\nsacrifices.\"\nThe witness admitted that she had\nspoiled a sale of the property by refusing to move out.\nCross examined by E. O. Matthew\nrepresenting Mrs. Annie Passmore,\nthe witness stated that Stoll was\nnow receiving well over $80 per\nmonth and had only to support one\nchild.\nBought  House  Himself\nStoll on taking the stand for\nhis defence stated that he was married in 1911 and that he had started to purchase the bouse about December, If It. H\u00ab paid $050 and\ntook  a   mortgage   for   $^36.\nHe had received no money from\nhis wife. He had paid for the\nhouse with a check of $000 and had\nborrowed $50 in gold from his boss\nto pay up the first payment nf $550.\nHe had tried to sell the house several times since to clean up his debts\nbut his wife had knocked the deal\nevery  time.\nHe mated that he had not deserted his w fe but that his wife had\ndriven   him   out.\nShe hit me over the head with a\nrolling pin and cut my head open,\"\ndeclared witness with a broad grin.\nI was afraid to live with her. The\nboy in his custody, he stated, was\n\" t years of age and another w;is\nwith ha sister in Seattle. His wife\nhad   two   children.\nCross examined, he stated, that\nthe only money of his wife's that\nhe had spent was $45 which want\ntoward clothes fur her after they\nwere married. She had no clothes\nwhen we were married and witness\ndeclared that he had taken her to\na  local  store   for an   outfit.\nK. G. Matthew when he arose\nmade a motion that the action concerning Annie Passmore be dismissed. There was nothing in wrlt-\nng to show that Mrs. Stoll had an\nequity   In  the  property.\nJudge Brown Mated that there\nwas no claim against Airs. I'assmore\nand no legal claim against Stoll as\nthe  mortgage  had  been  paid off.\nHe therefore declared both actions\ndismissed with costs against the\nplaintiff.\n .m,%*-\t\nCover German Loan\nFour Times Over\nin Twelve Minutes\nNKW YORK. Oct. 1 \u00bb.\u2014Subscriptions\nfor the United States $110,000.1100\nshare of the $200,000,000 dcrmaii loan\nexceeded $500,000,000, according to official announcement tonight, within\n12 minutes after th* books were\nopened. The subscription was more\nthan 41\u00a3 times as larsc as tin: total\navailable loan, and thousands of orders\nwere still unfilled When the books\nclosed.\nHwamped with the flood of orders\nwhich   poured   in    from    all    parts   ol\nWATER SUPPLY\nNOT SAFE, SAYS\nDOCTOR ARTHUR\nContamination Danger Increases Year by Year, He\nDeclares\nNOT ENOUGH CASES\nTO CALL EPIDEMIC\nAbsence of New Cases Acquits Water of Blame,\nHe Argues\nTo   the   Editor  of   The   Dally  News.\nSir\u2014In your editorial columns today you speak of \"the typhoid epidemic   in   Nelson.\"\nThere is not an epidemic of typhoid in Nelson and there has not\nbeen one in twenty years or more.\nHalf a dozen or a dozen cases of\nany disease occurring in a population of five to seven thousand people  do not constitute an epidemic.\nAgain you say, \"there is no 'assurance that they do not come from\nour   water  supply.\"\nThe fact that new cases are not\ndeveloping' ia all the assurance required by any person acquainted\nwith the spread of typhoid due to\na contaminated water supply.\nTwenty years ago I said our water\nsupply was not safe from possible\ncontamination. From year to year\nsince then the dangers of contamination have increased and will continue to Increase until the city\nowns Its water shed, and until Its\nsupply is piped from such water\nshed well above all established routes\nof   travel.\nEf   C.   ARTHUR,\nMedical Officer of Health.\nNelson,   B.C.,   Oct.   14,   1924.\ntho country, bankers were unable to\nascertain the exact amount of tho\noversubscription, but were certain that\norders ran well over the $500,000,000\nmark.\nHouses which participated in the\nofi'erinss estimated that, on the basis\nof their individual orders, more than\n$1,000.000,000 worth of the bonds could\nhave been sold. Allotments will be\nmade     tomorrow     by    J.     I'.    Morgan\nUnable to supply customers* demands through regular subscription\nchannels, many investment houses\nengaged in active bidding for the\nbunds as soon as they were listed on\nthe New York Stock exchange on\na \"when issued\" basis. Commanding a premium of 2 3-8 points above\nthe offering price of 92 on the initial\nt ransactlon, the bonds throughout\nthe day continued ln brisk demand,\nselling most of tbe time above 93.\nMany blocks ranging from $50,000\ntu $100,000 ch.nged hands, and the\ntotal transactions In the issue in\nstock exchange trading amounted\nto   $4.2r.U,l)0O,\t\nARMLESS ARTIST PAINTS :-      J;\n\u25a0\u2022**irt        ^ \u25a0*    4     \u25a0*>      -   *\ni        * *     \u2014.    .' \u2022    :S ''.\u25a0*   < ** 7-'-?\ni \u2022 , r\"v  ... *a*TO\nt   --    '\u2022 **\u2022 \u2022\u25a0-\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0. \u2022\u25a0-\u25a0\/\u00abeNH|\n?CaB\u00abi\nf   \u2022 \u25a0 \u2022\u2022-\"* \u25a0\u2022\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 k^pSMi\n-<.  - 'mfiam \u00bb\n\u25a0                HWli^   \u25a0''\u25a0   1\n\\\\m           wmYx***** * \u25a0\u25a0\n^kqiBiVtt\"\n' \u25a0\u2022v''T .HFB#*\"-\u00bbs\u00bb \u25a0s^'\nMMNIp'^fl\"**; '\u25a0\nI\ni        ' , r^^fM\n\u25a0 .,\"*\u00bb.--'          .^aaaaM\ni                        \u25a0 .1 *\nK '*'< i              . .*****%\nMmttft'* >'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0      Ifl\nfcv  vjMWo\n(HI..M *W  '\u25a0 .'.SmsOM\nHH ...s. \u2022 m*U\n,:\u2022\nMil \u00bb - '     * \u2022\u25a0i^.illllllllllllllllSBM\n\u25a0''\u2022W\nfmffii\u00a7M\namaX*sTi'> \u25a0\u25a0 am         m*\n#\n: Jr      f          Jrf}\\\n%\n\u25a0IWft     ' \u2022   *   JH    n\\\\m\\KiaZ\\mm\\\\mmm\n,.',v $8 \u2014-\n>\n%\n*\n\"      ':l.r\u00ab8    -\n'%\n\u2022 '1.\".            ;\n: w.      \\\n.v..    1\n 1\nI 1 1  1   H   aftM-ms \u2014\n.   ' \"        '.    \u25a0!\nE.   EARLE   BAILLY\nQuite unmindful of the artist's disability, the art gallery at the Canadian\nNational exhibition at Toronto this year were admiring two stryiing;,'pic*\ntures which were painted by an \"armless artist.\" B. Earle Ballly is hia\nname, and the picturesque Nova Scotia fishing village of Lunenburg ia\n-where he does his work. Hia latest two paintings were listed as \"Lunenburg Harbor\" and \"Autumn.\" Above, tho courageous artist ia shown at\nwork.\nThe Quality\nof\n\"MAM\"\nTB\nHBM\nis most appreciated in the rich,\ndelicious flavor.   Try it today.\nii\nii\n\"GHOST - CEREALS\nEat them if you will, but they are called\nShadow-Foods\"\n\"Foodless-Foods''\nSpook-Foods\"\nby modern Food Science, because the mineral\nelements, without which the human body cannot be soundly built, have been refined out of\nthem by removing the fat-containing germ,\nthe bran, the rich, brown flour. They contain\nmostly starch, which cannot build either muscle,\nbone, blood, brain or nerves. Rut they can, and\ndo turn the blood acid, a very dangerous and\nun-natural condition, which induces disease.\nDr. Jackson's\nROMAN   MEAL\nis ai real food, made from Roman Meal is the most\nwhole wheat, whole rye,\nflaxin^ and bran. It is rich\nin mineral salts and has\nevery element your body\nneeds in the exact proportions needed, and it has no\nelement that your body does\nnot need. It builds bone,\nmuscles, blood, brain and\nnerves.and aids heart action.\nAdd Roman Meal to\nyour daily diet, in addition\nto green vegetables and\nfruits, and keep gloriously\nfit and well.\nstrengthening and the best\nbody-building food in the\nworld, therefore of the utmost advantage to the run\ndown and to the child from\nthe 10th month, and also\nfor nursing and expectant\nmothers, because of its\ngrowth-promoting properties. It prevents indigestion\nand positively relieves constipation.\nRobert G. Jackson, M.D.\nPhotograph taken in his\n6jth year. A wreck at 55\n\u2014a perfect body at 65\u2014\nbuilt up by Roman MeaL\nKeeps the Family Fit.      AI All Grocers.\nROMAN MEAL\nROMAN MEAL CO. UMITED   .   TORONTO\nstossmem\n\u25a0m\n Page Four\nTHE NELSON DAILY\"NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1923\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sun.\nflay by The News Publishing company,\nlimited,  Nelaon,   B.C.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\n\u2022nd checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing company, limited, and in no case to individual  members  of  the  staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and ABC.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may be seen at the office\nof any advertising agency recognized\ntoy the Canadian Press association\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES '\nBy mall (country), per month ...I   ,\u00abo\nPer   year        6 00\ny.m?\" I\"11*). PC year .... 13.00\nOutside Canada, per month 75\n_ Per  year           j 50\nDelivered, per week   25\nPer year  .        \u201e;00\nPayable In Advance.\nMwaW Audit Bureau of Circulation\n\u2022WEDNESDAY,   0CTOP.ER   15\nPublic Will Support Active\nEfforts to Safeguard\nWater Supply\nThere is a good deal of work\nto be done before Nelson can\nl>e assured of a water supply\nwhich is both adequate in\nvolume and protected against\npollution.\nThe general scheme to be\nadopted must be decided upon,\nsurveys must be made, estimates of cost of alternative\nschemes must be prepared.\nNO TIME SHOULD BE\nLOST TN GETTING DOWN\nTO BUSINESS, and members\nof the city council who are\nactively interesting themselves\nin the matter can depend upon\npublic support in pushing both\npreliminary and final construction to completion.\nTt will cost money, of course.\nbut a'ready a substantial\namount of cash reserve has\nbeen established for the purpose. The balance will have\nto be raised by bond issue.\nNo one will object to expenditure for this purpose. An adequate and properly safeguarded\nwater supply is vital.\nIn a letter to The Daily\nNews, which is published in another column, the medical\nhealth officer, Dr. E. C. Arthur,\nemphasizes the point that the\nnumber of typhoid cases which\nhave developed do not constitute an epidemic. In the strict\nsense of the word, this is quite\ntrue.\nWhen the doctor argues that\nthe fact that new cases have\nnot developed is assurance that\nthe existing cases are not\ncaused by contaminated city\nwater he is on less safe ground.\nIt is obvious that, when the\nwater supply is as open to contamination as is Nelson's, it\nmight be contaminated one day\nand perfectly pure the next day,\nor for the next month. When\ndrinking water runs through a\nfarm, it may easily be polluted\nwith sufficient number of\ngerms to cause typhoid in a\nlimited number of cases, without necessarily being sufficiently befouled to cause hundreds\nof cases. Yet if it is open to\ncontamination, a large number\nof cases might at any time develop.\nDr. Arthur points out that\n20 years ago he nave warning\nthai the water supply was not-\nsafe from possible contamination. He also brings out the\nimportant point that from year\nto year this danger of pollution\nis growing and will continue to\niir'ou- until a properly safeguarded system is constructed.\nWiden!\nbuseh\nLeuru rVKlr>Knvan\n\"OLD  STANDBY\"   CAKK RECIPES\n-                                                                              4.\n|       The Lighter Side       \\\nReaders of The  Daily  News contribute  many  nf  lh,   lx\"t   items  to\nthis column.    Just  mcti your name\nor    initials,    or    nom-de-plume,   and\nsend  in  your brightest  ideas.\u2014Editor,   Lighter   Side\nThe only sun spots that really cause\nanxitcy  and despair arc  freckles.\n,';,%\u00a9\nUsually  ili\u00bb man  with thai  lnmte.\nlook lias \u00bbix daughters who Know how\nt\">   say   \"Chai'Kc   it.\"\nGood neighbors and good digestion\nare similar. You are never aware of\nthem.\nA man never realizes how old he\nKconiH Until some young fellow offers\nhim a scat.\nIf travel doesn't broaden one in\nother particulars at least it broadens\nthe feel.\nSome prodigal college boys blow\ntheir money for clothes when they\nhaven't a single ukeiele.\nTOMORROWS   MENU\nBreakfast\nStewed  Prunes\nCereal\nFried   Liver  und   Bacon\nCoffee pup-overs\nLuncheon\nBaked   Beans,   Catsup\nCole Slaw\nTea Rolls Marmalade\nCookies\nDinner   \u2022\nBeat Hash\nUice Croquettes\nCanned Peas\nMixed fruit Salad\nCoffee Cup   Custards\nLemon Layer Cake\u2014Cream together one-half cup of butler and one\ncup of sugar; add the beaten yolts\nof two eggs and one cup of sweet\nmilk. Sift together two and one-half\ncups of flour, two teaspoons of\nbaking powder and a pinch of salt,\nand add these to tbe mixing bowl.\nFold in two egg-whites stiffly beaten\nand add one teaspoon of vanilla. Bake\n25 minutes in a hot oven and put\ntogether with the following: Lemon\nfilling: Mix three and one-half tablespoons of dry cornstarch with six\nablespoons of granulated sugar; add\none and one-fourth cups of boiling\nwater. Cook two minutes, then add\nme tablespoon of butter, one egg-\nvolk ond two tablespoons of lemon\n\u2022nice beaten together. Let cook till\nhickened (five minutes) and spread\non cake.\nBanana Layer Cake\u2014Make the cake\npart as above directed for lemon\nayer cake, and put together with\nhis banana filling: Mash two ban-\nmas and add two tablespoons of*\n'ligar, a pinch of salt and one tablespoon of cornstarch; put over the\n''ire   and   stir   till   thick,   one   minute\nj after it begins1 to boll; then remove\nj from range and add one-half te.i-\n1 (spoon uf lemon juice, and two table -\nj spoons of sweet milk. Spread between\nj layers. Frost hoth this cake and the\nlemon layer cake with an ordinary\nwhite   uncooked   Icing.\nChocolate   Layer   Cake\u2014Cream   one\ncup of brown sugar with one-half cup\nI of   butter  and   one-half  cup  ft*   white\ni sugar.     Add    one-half   cup   of   sweet\nI milk,  three beaten  eggs, and one and\nj one-half cups ol flour sifted with one\n! leant   teaspoon   'if   ttda    (this   recipe\nI calls   for   no   baking   powder).     Stir\ni In     two     squares    of     unsweetened\n; melted  chocolate  nnd   hake   in   three\nI layers in a moderate oven for 10 min-\nj ntes.    To   make  chocolate   tilling   and\nfrosting put  three cups of confectioners'   sugar   in   a   bowl,   ftdd   two   level\ntablespoons of  dry   cocoa,   mix  well,\nthen add only just enough sweet milk\n(drop by drop) to mak*> a stiff paste.\nFlavor     with     one-half     leu spun     of\nground cinnamon.    Bpreail this on the\nhot  cake.\nBour Milk Chocolate l.<vif -Melt two\nsquares of chocolate, add a piece of\nbutter the size of un egg also melted,\nthen add one cup of granulated sugar,\none beaten egg. one cup of sour milk\nto which one teaspoon <>f soda has\nbeen added, antl one and one-half\ncups of flour. F'-'vor with one teaspoon of vanilla, and bake in a moderate oven. In loaf form for about 3fi\nminutes. Frost with the chocolate\nfrosting given above for chocolate\nlayer cake.\nTomorrow\u2014Crocheting a Rope\nNecklace of  Beads.\nAll inquiries addressed to Miss Kirk-\nman    In   charge   of   \"Efficient   House-\n|.keeping\"   department   will   Im   answered\nj in   these  columns   In   their   turn.     This\nj requires    considerable    time,    however,\n1 owing   to   the   great   number   received.\ni So,   if  a   personal   or   MUlclcr   replv   is\ndesired,   a  stamped  and  self-addressed\nI envelope    must    be    enclosed    with    the\nI question.      Be    sure    to    Use   your    full\nname,    street   number,    and   the   name\nI of your  city  and   province.\nj THE  BDITOB,\nbody always invites the preacher home\nor   dinner.\ntt   seems   strange   that   all   used      j\ncart were driven  by old  men  who\nnever  got  off the  pavement.\nStill, it may be possible that defee- j\nlive glands cause the children to  do-\n\u25a0elop Into alienists. j\nDarwin was wrong,   .Most monkeys die in captivity and husbands     |\nlive on and on. 1\nTA'e knew it would happen. Now.\nnobody can think up a new dance\nnaughty enough to be popular,\nIt is estimated that 93 per cent    j\nof   the   people   never   would   have\ntheir feelings  huurt  if they'd  stop     j\nmeddling.\nto   the   Flathead   valley   coal  and   oil\nlands.\n* *    *\nTaylor   &    McQuarrie   are   selling\ni elegant overcoats wilh handmade\nI button holes, and the latest concave\nj shoulders, at   form   $20   to   $2fi.\n* *    *\nThe   invitation    to   I hose   in (crested\nI In the importation of pheasants, to i\ncommunicate  with  the gun club, has,\nI met with a   very  generous  response,'\nj J. Fred Hume s the originator of the\nmovement.      He    has    communicated\nJ with a firm of dealers in live birds\nat Charleston, W. Va,, ami after\nlearning that the birds can be procured without great expense, and that\nthe prospects of the importation and\nculture of them being successful wore\nexcellent, he brought the matter to\ntiie attention of the gun club, as the\norganization best fitted to deal with\nit.\nWhether it bo a day in town or a\nweek-end away from home makes\nfit tie difference to an attractive dress\nof k;isha. lt feels equal to both\noccasions.\nThe material Is in that new shade\ncalled bois do rose, whicii should be\nadded to the list of colors suitable for\nbrunettes. If you will visulizc old\nrose and add a tinge of brown to it\nyou will have a very fair idea of\nwhat this new shade looks like. It\ncombines  best  with  tuown  hats.\nFur trimmings, too, brown is successful. Here it is combined with a\nnarrow fold of orange to edge the\ncollar and looped sash. The orange\nis repeated in an embroidered motif\nou the sash. Interest is also created\nby the diagonal seam at the waistline. With the long, graceful collar\nand sash, this gives a cleverly slenderizing effect. The back of the\ndress   is   in   one piece.\nCorrect this sentence: \"One thing\n,'ou may count on,\" said tiie bride;\n'I'll never Interfere  with your plans.\":\nTwenty Years Ago\n(The Daily News of October 15, 1904)\np. Lamont   of the Canada  Drug  .v.\nBook   company,    leaves   this   morning j\nTor Prince Edward island.\nAt the Methodist church tomorrow!\nRev, W. W, Baer will give his lee-1\nnrc nn the allegorical bicycle, In\nlieu of a  morning  sermon.\n*    *    * I\nH. Glergerich and D. P. Kane of\n.f Kaslo. and I. N\". Dally of this!\n\u2022 \u25a0ity,  returned  lust night from a visit [\nFloods, owing to the excessive rainfall in northern India, are now\nspreading southward and the river\nJunima is now seven miles broad\nnear JJelhi. and 100 villages are inundated. The East Indian railway\nis badly damaged, there being six\nbreaches between Delhi and Ghazi-\nnbad. The country between Bareil-\nly and Isunagar is entirely submerged.\n\u00bb$ \/avnei W, Btrton. MA\nShoulder and Arm Pain\nLieut, A, E. Alton, carrying the [\nfirst aerial mall from Estevan, Bask.,\nto Winnipeg, encountered engine j\ntrouble when 10 miles east of Kb- i\ntevan, the starting point. Pureed to\nland in unfavorable country, the I\nmachine struck the earth heavily, i\ndamag ng one of the wings. The\npilot  was  uninjured. i\n(Registered   in   accordance   with   the\nCopyright act.)\nOne of the common ailments these\ndays is pain in Hie shoulder and arm.\nIt is called neuritis, muscular rheumatism, and neuralgia. ln the majority of cases it is simple neuralgia,\nor slight inflammatory condition of\nthe nerves, lhat supply the muscles\nof shoulder and arm.\nThe   pain    may    extend    from    the\nA hick town Is a place where some- [\nWE\nARE\nGiving Away Free\n.W1\nThis   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 Kange absolutely free.   You get\nfull value for .your money with your purchase. . 4 ;,,\/,..^j^,\nripF\"*     See This Beautiful Range in Our Window\nNelson [Hardware Co.\nNELSON\nWholesale  and   Retail Quality Hardware\nB.C.\nback of the neck where the nerves\nbegin, right Into the shoulder, and\ndown  the arm  to  the  hand.\nlt Is usually just on the one Bide\nbut may extend from one arm to the\nother. Many physicians are inclined\nto trace its cause to Influenza, as\nthe number of cases has greatly increased since Ihe first influenza\nepidemic, over thirty years ago.\nThe pain varies in Intensity, and\nIn severe cases there is a loss of\npower In the muscle, with sometimes a painful condition of the skin,\nand at other times a partial loss of\nsensation.\nThe patient resists movements\nwhenever possible, carrying his arm\nas if In a sling, by his side.\nI wish 1 couuld tell you the cause\nof the trouble In every case, but that\nIs impossible, and you and your doctor will have Ui find out the particular  trouble  In  your  case.\nAn injury to back or shoulder may\nbe causing some pressure.\nAny inflammatory or infectious\ncondition in the body, such as bad\nteeth,   gums,   tonsils   or  nose,\nIt   might   follow   dipthcrla,   scarlet\nSidelights on a Great Industry\nA New Era in B. C's\nPremier Industry\nKvery day and In every way the\nunique properties of Pacific Coast\nwoods are becoming better known\nIn   the   world's   lumber   markets.\nTbe depletion of other sources\nof supply is attracting attention to\nthe last softwood stand of the American continent, from which big timbers are available, namely, the Douglas Kir area of the States of Washington nnd Oregon and Ihe Province   of   British   Columbia.\nThese forest regions contain the\nworld's sole supply of Douglas Fir,\nRed Cedar, Western Hemlock and\nLarch and the Western Spruces,\nand the tlmberlands of British Columbia are at once the Province's\ngreatest asset antl its principal\nsource   of   revenue.\nDuring the last few years millions\nupon millions of dollars have been\nInvested in the standing timber of\nWashington und Oregon by wise\ninvestors who recognize its full\nmaturity and the superior chances\nIt   offers   for   regeneration.\nOne after another we hear of erection of huge up-to-the-minute sawmills, turning out millions of feet\nof lumber daily and employing thousands of men, many of them, alas!\ndeserters from our own industrial\nranks.\nOn the other hand, there has been\na halt to Investments in British Columbia timber of equal value and\nmaturity to any in existence, and\nno great addition has been made\nto the plant capacity of the. Province, most of the recent additions\nbeing replacements or enlargements\nof  old-time   mills.\nEvery possible inducement must\nbe given to new capital to put fresh\nlife in the British Columbia lumber\nindustry to encourage It to seek\nbigger markets for an increased\noutput and to keep its skilled workers In  the country.\nUndoubtedly the main cause of the\npresent -stagnation and the principal\nobstacle to expansion is the Timber\nRoyalties Act of 1914, which attempts to govern present conditions\nwith pre-war practice and which\nhas developed from an economic\nexperiment into a menace to all industrial   effort.\nWith its repeal will come a new\nera for British Columbia's premier\nIndustry.\nThis series of articles communicated by the Timber Industries  Council  of  British\nColumbia.\nRead the Advertisement!\nTHEY LIGHTEN WORK\nfever, measles, mttmps, typhoid fever,\nand so forth.\nIn the meantime however, you must\ntry and relieve the pain because that\nIs the main symptom.\nIt Is not wise here either, to begin massaging the muscles at first.\nThey need rest more than anything\nelse. i\nAll kinds of drugs, and different\nforms of electrical treatment are\nused, and often to disadvantage.\nHowever, if pain is not too severe,\nthe old-fashioned method of moist\nheaV is the simplest, and most effective measure.\nUse hot towels for twenty minutes\nat a stretch, at least four to six\ntimes a day.\nBetween times apply a hot water\nbag covered with wet towels or\ncloths, to the painful part.\nHeat  then   is  your big standby.\nDon't use morphine. If drugs are\nabsolutely necessary to allay the pain,\nthen aspirin, antlpyrln, acetanilld,\nmay be used.\nAfter the severe pain departs, then\nbegin your massage, as It will help\nthe* circulation, and prevent wasting\nof muscles.\nThe  things  that  make  it  hard   to\nbelieve  the  world  is  growing better\nare bell-bottom trousers.    \t\nMustard ^\n4   Health\nwiU  relieve  a coW    aiWlU\nMuS^d,avltSia ^d other d-gest-\nalleviate dyspep*>\"\u00bb\njve troubles.\nhutitmastkColmans\nBlueRibbon\nTea\nThe   fine   Quallty-of\nBLUE RIBBON TEA Is the\nresult of experience combined\n' with a real desire to produce\nthe best possible article.\nNow that Trade conditions are becoming more\nnormal, the Quality of\nBLUE RIBBON TEA Is\nbetter than ever.    TRY IT.\nBuilding\nMaterial  John Burns & Son\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nLower Night Rates\nFor Long Distance\nConversations\nTVT EW night rates for long-distance service have been\n1 \u00bb instituted for long-distance calls between the hours of\n8:30 p.m. and 7 a.m., on the basis of approximately twice,\nand in some cases three times, the day period, at two-thirds\nthe day rate.   For example:\nFrom NELSON\u2014 DAY NIGHT\nTo KASLO    25c for 2 min. 25c for 4 min.\nTo GRAND FORKS ... 50c for 2 min. 35c for 4 min.\nTo TRAIL  25c for 2 min. 25c for 4 min.\nTo ROSSLAND    30c for 2 min. 25c for 4 min.\nRates to other points are proportionate and will be furnished\nby the rate clerk on request.\n'Try This Service Tonight\"\nBRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE\nCOMPANY\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1924,\nno\nV*g\u00bb Ffva'\nChurch\nBoots\nHere is a real high-\ngrade Man's Boot. ' Made\nby Church & Co.. of England. Tan Calf uppers,\nCalf lined. Full double\nsole.\nPRICE 811.50\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders   in   Footfaihion\nKaslo Naval Boys\nSpend Fall Day at\nHamil Creek Canyon\nKAPLO, B.C.. Oct. 14.\u2014Saturday Dr.\nCalvert U'Oll the boy's naval brigade\nfor an u 11-day trip, starting on tbe\nbnrge to Lardo and Argent a and walking thence to the Hamil creek canyon.\nA glorious day was spent, ind they\narrived back  in  Kaslo about  8 p.m.\n\u2014 ' -aam\t\n- A call hns been extended to Rev.\nJ. Y. MacKinnon of St. John's Presbyterian church, Halifax, to accept\nthe incumbency of ZIon Presbyterian\nchurch, Brantford, vacated by Rev. fl.\nA. Woodside, now s>t St. Stephen's\nchurch, Winnipeg.\nClear Your Skin\nWith\nCuticura\nSoap lo Cleans*\nOintment to fUal\nAfctoluf ly Nothing B\u00bbtto\nBOSWRL TALKS BALL I\nSMALL FRUITS\nGrowers Want a Better\nDistribution This Coming Season\nBOSWELL, B.C., Oct. 14.\u2014There\nwas a capital attendance of members present at the quarterly meeting of the Boswell Fruit Growers\nheld In the Memorial hall Saturday\nevening, President H. Hpence being\nIn the chair.\nThe small fruit season for the past\nyear was under dlseunslon with a\nview to Improving distribution during-   the   coming-   year.\nThree carloads of apples were\nshipped from the local packing shed\nTuesday, two of them being export\ncars-, the Moyie taking the apples up\nto Procter, at which point they are\nloaded on the cars, A. Mackle and F.\nKunst doing  the  loading at Procter.\nORGANIZATION AT\nCRANBROOK DIES\nParent-Teacher Association\nDisbands for Lack of\nSupport\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct. 14.\u2014At a\nmeeting held last Thursday evening\n;it the Y.M.C.A. it. was decided to\nbring the activities of- the Parent-\nTeaeher association to a close. Th*\u00bb\nfeeling was ' that not a sufficient\nnumber of parents hnd signified their\ninterest In tbe organization to Justify\nits continuance, and it. wan therefore\ndecided   to   dlsbnnd.\nlt was hoped, If there had been a\nsufficiently large number present, to\nlaunch out into a vigorous progrnm\nfor the winter, hut the small attendance prerluded this, and the affairs\nof tin* association were accordlnirly\nwound   up.\nThe funds of the association,\namounting to $44 in all, were distributed to the schools of the city\nin   proportion   to   their  attendances.\nHarvest Services\nAre Held in Kaslo\nKASLO, B.C, Oct, 14.\u2014Sunday Rev.\nMr. Heneage held harvest thanksgiving\nservice In St. Mark's church, morning and evening. The boyB of the\nnaval brigade were marched to the\nmorning service under command of\nDr.   Calvert.\nMr. and Mrs. Cliffe of Rlondel are\nvisiting   the   city.\nWalter Kirby. Mr. Tate of Winnipeg and R. Guthrie are In town\nin the Interests of the Sheppard mine\nat   Rlondel.\nExtension\nCurtain Rods\nSG-inch   Round   Extension   Rods,  each    _ X0&\n48-inch   Round   Extension   Rods,  each    * __ 15<\u00a3\nSingle Flat Curtain Rodii, extending from 28 to 48 inches, each..-35^\nSingle Flat Curtain Rods, extending from 36 to 63 Inches, each..~50^\nDouble Flat Curtain Hods, extending from 28 to 48 inches, each....,f$5^\nDouble Flat Curtain Rods, extending from 36 to 63 Inches, each....g5-\u00a3\nExtension    Sections,    26    inches,    each     25\u00ab?\nHIPPERSOIN HARDWARE \u20ac0.\nPHONE 497\nP.O.   BOX  414\nLook for tho  Rod   Hardware Store\nAT\nBesides being the safest of all investments,\nbecause it is guaranteed by the Dominion of\nCanada,   a   CANADIAN   GOVERNMENT\nANNUITY carries with it these other advantages;\nIt commences at any age you choose and lasts as long\naa you live.\nIt may be of any amount from $50 to $5,000 a year.\nIt Is purchasable on very easy teims, easier the\nearlier you commence purchase.\nTt Is free from Dominion Income Tax. It cannot be\nseized for debt.    It cannot be forfeited.\nNo medical examination is required.\nThere ara plans of purchase under which you may\nprotect the interests of your wife or dependents for\na term of years certain.\nFor full particulars, fill out this Coupcr. and address\ntt aa directed.\nMail This Coupon\u2014No Postage Needed\nu        Department of Labour, Annuities Branch,      as\nOttawa, Ont.\nPlease tend me the \"Handbook of Information\" and full partlcalart a*\nt* eoit \u00abf a Canadian Government Annuity. Mr ng* last birthday wu\n, 7\u00abar\u00bb,\n(State whether Mr., Mrs., or Mlai)\nPast Ofllce Address ,\nBoxing and Wrestling Club\nPuts on Bouts; Aid Ball\nFunds\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Oet. 14.\u2014A\nmeeting was held last Wednesday\nnight In aid of the Kimbf-riey ball\nteam, at which there was an attendance of over 400, boxing and\nwrestling   being   the   main   features.\nA few songs were rendered by\nW.   Derbonshire.   which   made  a  hit.\nThe Tunnel football team also rendered a song which wns composed by\ntheir manager, Mr. Kiignur. who also\nspoke on the wonderful time Trail had\ngiven them on their trip aft\u00ab>r <he\nKootenay   championship.\nR.   Creare  acted   as  chairman.\nThe boxing and wrestling program,\ngiven by the Klmberiey 'Boxing &\nWrestling  club,   wan  as  follows:\nBond vs, Dunbar, boxing, ISO\npounds,   drawn, a   very  good fight.\nDe Rosa vs. Wat tern, boxing, ISO\npounds,   draw.\nThor vs. Roope, boxing, Kl) pounds,\ndraw.\nBlack vs. Musser, boxing. iso\npounds,   a   fair   contest.\nLock vs. Bray, wrestling. 166\npounds,   Lock   won   two   fails.\nCunningham vs. Ln Clmppelle. 17fi\npounds.   La   Ghappelle   won   one   fall,\nEgyptian Scout\nVisits Cranbrook; .\nTourinff World\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct, 11 \u2014 Cranbrook has had a visit this week-end\nfrom llelmir Stub, an Egyptian boy\nscout, who is in ihe course of a\ntrip around the world. This portion\nof his long Journey he has been accomplishing on horseback, and he journeys in full scout uniform. Monday\nevening a , meeting was held in the\nKnights of Pythias' hall, at which he\ntold the story of his travels, including\nmany points of interest such as the\nuncovering of the tomb of the Egyptian king. Tutankhamen, recently.\nMany of the local scouts were present at this gathering, in their uniforms.\nAt this point Mr. Stub ffgures lie\nis a little more than half-way on his\ntrip around the world, having\nnow   about   10,000   miles.\ngone\nAPPLE ADVANCE\nGENERAL TREND,\nREPORTSJMNT\nCommissioner Says British\nColumbia Sells in Quebec\nand Ontario\nIn connection with the advance in\nBritish Columbia apple prices at shipping points, J. A. Orant, prairie markets commissioner, pays, in his Markets  Bhlletln:\n\"British Columbia apple prices advance  at shinpjng  point:\nDelicious\u2014Extra fancy, per box. J3;\nfancy, ppr box, fg.BO; C, grade, per\nbox   $2,   per   crate   11.35.\nNorthern Spv\u2014Fancy.  pt>r box, $175.\nStayman's Wlnesap\u2014Extra fancy, per\nbox.   $2;   fancy,   per box,   $1.75.\nRome   Beauty\u2014C,   ner  box,   $1.45.\nJonathan\u2014Extra fancv. per box,\n$1.90; fancy, per box, $1.70; C grade,\nper   box.   $1.45.\nWinter Banana\u2014Extra fancv. per\nbox,    |1.85;   fancy,   per   box,   $160.\nAssorted varieties\u2014Combination, per\nbox.   $1.45.\n\"The    tendency    everywhere    is    for\nhigher    prices    on     nil     commodity\nVTobbera   who   have   been   holding   off\nfor   lower   prices   will   be   disnnpointed.\n\"We are informed that Kootenay\nGems are all sold. Ontario rollers\nare about over. No interest is being\nmanifested in the Ontario Apple deal\nat   nralrle   points.\n. \"The British Columbia apple deal In\nOntario and Quebec is satisfactory.\nThis year more cars have been sold\nthan formerly at firm prices. We\nheard very favorable comments\nthe nacli of British Columbia applet*\nin the east, it being freely stated\nthat British Columbia apples were the\npeer of any that ever came on the\neastern   market.\n\"The following are the f.o h. shipping  point   prices on Ontario  fruit:\nPears, Duchess. De Angllne, per 11-\nquart   basket.   70e.\nPeuehes\u2014Elberta, per 11-quart basket.   II.\nPlums\u2014Blue, per 11-quart basket.\nSfie; Reine Claude, per 11-quart basket.   70.\nGrapes\u2014Concord, per 5-quart basket, :,2c.\nA. O. Gardiner, the well-known\nBritish publicist, writing in the Nation, severely criticized the organizers\nof Ihe visit of the Prince of Wales\nto   Long  Island.\nSocial Happenings\nb Nelson\nngs|\n3\nThla column is being conducted\nby Mre. M. J. Vigneux. v All news\nof a social nature, Including receptions, private entertainments, pergonal items, marriages, etc., will\nappear in thla column. Telephone\nMr*.   Vigneux. ,    .\nMr. and Mrs. C. R. Hamilton,\nHoover street, have as their house\nguests Mrs. Hamilton's cousins, Miss\nA. M. Rlckman of Vancouver and\nMiss Mary Walker of New Westminster.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMrs. A. Murray of Bonnington vr*\u00bb\na   city   aliopper   yesterday.\nMr. Brockman of the Brockman *\nMerry company, Paulson, accompanied\nby Mrs. Brockman, spent yesterday\nin    Nelson.\nMrs. m\\ J, Chandler of Procter wns\na    city    visitor   Monday.\nW. A. Calder of Edgewood Is in\nthe   elty.\nMr. and Mrs. (J, N. Douglas of\nVancouver have taken up residence at\nthe Armstrong home, 510 Hoover\nstreet. Mr. Dour las has taken up\nhis   duties    in   the   Bank   ot   Montreal.\nMrs. Maria Petard. Observatory\nstreet, left liy the Crow bout yesterday morning for Duck Lake. Sask..\nwhere she will visit for the next\nfew months with ber son. Arthur\nPeierll.\nMiss Florence Mat hie of Willow\nPoint spent the week-end in the city\na gueot nt tiie pome of Mr. and\nMrs.    R.   V.   Brake.   Baker   street.\nMr. and Mrs. T.. S. Bradley and\nson, Rov, have taken up residence at\n214   Victoria   street.\nMr. nnd Mrs. Robert M. Burees\u00ab.\nwho have been ranching at Koch\nSiding for the hist year, have returned tn town and taken up residence   ;.t    their   home   nt    Rtfi    Baker\nstreet.\nMiss Mary Sean Ian. Stanley street,\nwho leaves tomorrow marnfn? on the\nCrow boat vis Sent'le for Vancouver\nwhem pHe will reside In future, was\non    Monday   p,Tfnlmr   \"resented    with   e\nK*nd*om* club he** b\u00ab- th\" manaffe*\nw s. K'\"*. on behalf nf fie *ta'f\nof the ftnflson's Way cfttinitvy, \u25a0 Ir\nwhose employ slie has been for snnK\n10 years.\nMrs. A- 8. Horswill. wife of Alderman A. S. Horswill, who has been\nmaking nrepn rat tons for \u00bb trin to\nSelkirk. Man. where she was to attend the golden wedding of her parents, received a wire ystordav from\nWinnipeg that her oldest brother\n.Tr.hn A. Partington, was serloualv\n111, Mr.\" HorawHl leavea this morning  for Winnipeg.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nThe home of Mrs. P. C Rowlev\n<flfl Latimer street, was a. jmiv \u25a0eene\nMontfav nftemoon. when their 11-\nyeor-old daughter. MWja Irene Rowlev\neel eh \"a ted the an n 'versa rv of her\nb'rthda\" dames and music provMed\nthe afternoon's entertainment. The\np- nests were *Tis<f Fre^ees fqrk^r\nMi*\u00ab Eve'vn Wallace Ml\"! Dorottiv\nWallace Miss Pegev WMtehe-ise. Mls\u00ab\nMary Doncri-'e\". MISS Toy Dnncs*e'-\nMiss C've lfariAnek, Miss Vera Shaw\nMiss M\"*-ei>i Towtrnod. Miss N-\u00bb\u00abcv\n.'trvls. M'\u00aba \"Wnrgpfet Ja\u00bbvl*. misp\nHettv Kraft. M<\u00abw Muriel Pool. Miss\nRu'h Rind*!, Mt\u00b0s Vivian Rowley.\nPaloh Maddoek, C. Clri^xello, Oeorore\nKlrby. 1. Poo'. .Tick c.illen. Bohbv\nCarter nnd Dmitris s Carter. Mrs\nRowley Wa* assisted |p ' servlhir the\nyoung   guests   bv   Mrs.    E,    .Smith.\nMr\". C. E. Sutellffe of Rfondel le\nspending a couple of day's in 'own\nthe ffl'eat of her daughter. Miss Marv\nSutCl if fe.\nCol. V Harrington of Edgewood is\nin   the   city.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W W. Powell nnd\nfamily   motored   to   Spokane   Saturday.\nMa J. C. H Garland, a Creston barrister Is in the city for the next\nfew  days,\n\u2022 *    *\nfleV. A. T*. Mclntyre of the Siocan\ndistrict snent yesterday in Nelson\nnnd left for Kaslo on the afternoon\nboat.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00ab\np. L. Thottinaon of the Consolidated\nstaff at Kimberley arrived in town\nlast   evening  by   tbe  Crow  boat.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMr. and Mrs. E. Y. Brake. Raker\nstreet, lutve as their guest Mrs. ,7.\nFrfesen of Bonnington.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nAt the Presbyterian manse, bv Rev.\nF. R G. Dredore. Mondny evening, the\nmarriaee of Minnt Oudielmo and Miss\nKatherine Ansa 1 do, both of North por I.\nWash., was qnfetlv celebrated in the\npresence  of  witnesses.\nTuesdav afternoon, at the Presbyterian manse. A F. Sandberg of\nLumherton and Miss E. U. Johnson\nof Cranbrook were united in marrlare\nby Rev. F. R. G. Dredge in tho presence   of   witnesses\nWalter Garecki of Elizabeth. N\\J\narrived at New York on his honey\nmoon trip on the night boat from\nAlbany. A few minute,-, after he and\nhis bride left the boat they discover\ned they had forgotten $200 they had\nput ln a pillowcase for safekeeping\nthe evening before. When they went\nback to he boat the money was gone\nThe honeymooncrs gave up their trip\nand went home, paying their fares\nwith n $10 gold piepe which had been\na weddinc present tn the bride.\n\"Tay Pay\" O'Connor, who attained\nthe age of 7fi on October 5, sent the\nfollowing message to the young men\nOf England: \"Life is a great adventure. Live every hour of it. Don't\nbe   buried   till   you're   dead.\"\nOld Dutch\nMADE    IM \\   T'~\ncanada   \u2022 ...'  Keeps;\nI everything in\ncleafltfL* on walls, enamel\n1 tubs,bctsins and\n[*\"T\n811 Baker Street. Phone 100\nWednesday Morning   Specials\n(Store Closes at 12:30 Today)\nEight Reasons lor getting downtown early this morning, and every one\na good\nWomen's\nCLOTH SKIRTS\nAt $4.50 Each\nPlain-tailored and pleated\nSkirts, made of all-wool\nmaterials, in a range of\nplain colors and plaids.\nRegular values up to\n$12.50 each. Wednesday\nSpecial, $4.50 each.\nWomen'* CORSETS at 95c\nCorsets for medium and slight figures,\nmade of good Coutil with durable fillings. Mostly low bust styles. Wednesday Special, 05\u00ab? each.\nWomen's BRASSIERES at 49c\nMade in front or back fastening styles,\nof good strong materials, in white or\nflesh color. All wanted sizes. Wednesday Special, 49\u00ab? each.\nWomen's HOSE at 49c Pair\nGood Black Hose, seamless. Good\nweight. All sizes. Wednesday Special,\n49\u00bb* pair.\nreason\n* FLANNELETTE\nBLANKETS\nAt $2.49 Pair\nWhite    Flannelette ff^\nBlankets,    finished Iv\nwith pink or blue jp;\nborders. Single Bed\nsize.    Wednesday\nSpecial, $2.49 per\npair.\nCnrWren's   UNDERWEAR\nAt $1.00 the Garment\nOdd lines of Children's Vests and\nDrawers, made of good quality wool-\nand-cotton mixed. Sizes to 30. Values\nto if 1.90. Wednesdny Special, $1.00\neach.\nWomen's JACQUETTES\nAt $6.50 Each\nBrushed Wool Jacquettes in plain colors\nand mixtures. \u2022 All sizes. Pure wool.\nWednesday Special, $6.50 each.\nSTRIPED FLANNELETTE\n3 Yards for $1.00\nGood quality, full yard wide, assorted\nstripes.    Special, 3 yards for  $1.00.\nVEGETABLES OF\nALBERTA OVER\nBritish Columbia Must Now\nSupply the Calgary Market\nTn his weekly comment from Calgary, in the Markets Bulletin, J. A.\nGrant, prairie markets commissioner,\n\u25a0ays:\n\"Business In the fruit line is dull.\nBrokers are unable to convince jobbers that future prices on apples,\nonions   and   potatoes   will   he   higher.\n'\"Ontario plums, peaches and pears\nare about over. They have made\nvery fast time by rail to prairie\npoints and generally arrived in good\ncondition.\n' ''Frost has cut off the supply of\n.local vegetables, and from now on\nBritish Columbia vegetables will be\nin increasing demand. There is an\n'optimistic tone prevailing, and 12\nwheat Is within the realm of possibility.\n\"There Is much speculation at present on the potato crop on the pralrlea,\nThe present cold snap if intensified\nwould seriously reduce the estimated\ntnttput, as a big proportion of the\ncrop is  still  In  the ground.\"\nCalgary  Wlioltsala  Prices\nRritish Columbia apples, fancy\u2014Mcintosh Red, $2.25 per box, 51.70 to\n$1.90 per crate; Wealthy (about done),\n$1.75 to $1.80 per box. Sl.r.u per crate;\nJonathan, $2.25 per box, $175 per\ncrate.\nD'Anjou pears\u2014Fancy,  per box, $4.\nOntario peaches\u2014 Elberta, per 11-\nquart basket. $1.86. All other Ontario   fruit   prices   same   as   last   week.\nOnions\u2014Pickling,   per  box,   $1.66.\nCelery\u2014Per   lb.,   3o.\nOnions\u2014Per   11).,   3c,\nGreen  corn,   per doz.,   30c  to  4r>c.\nPumpkin\u2014Per   lb..   3e.\nSquash\u2014Per lb., 3c.\nCitron\u2014Per   lb.,   4c.\nTomatoes\u2014Hothouse, per 4-basket\ncrate,  $3.50   to  J-i.\nCabbage \u2014 Local,   per ton,  $30\nPotatoes\u2014Per   ton,   $25   to   $30,\nBritish Columbia potatoes\u2014Per tori,\n$45.\nBOSWELL PLANS\nCEMETERY BEE\nFarmers'    Institute    Has\nGood Balance on Fair\nfor Next Year\nBOSWELU B.C., Oet. 14,\u2014The\nmon t lily meeting of tiie Boswell\nFarmers' institute, with .James Coup-\nland, president, occupying the chair\nit was decided to bold a cemetery\nplot    cleanup    bee    November    6.\nThe fro it fair committee gave Its\nreport on the recent fair, which bad\na record number of entries, over 000\nexhibit!   being   placed.\nThere was a small balance In\nhand, which was carried forward to\nnext   year's   fair.\nA hearty vote of thanks was tendered the committee for its excellent\nwork.\nVast   expanses   of   poplar   in   the\ntimbered districts ot Ontario and Quebec are coming into popularity for the\nfirst time in the lumbering history of\nthese provinces, owing to the competition which has developed recently between the makers of match\naplinls upon this continent. For various reasons it has been found that\nmanufacturers In Canada are now\nable to compete In world markets\nagainst the match makers of .Scandinavia and other places, most of\nwhom are affiliated in combines of\ninternational organizatiin.\nAlittle goest a long wa^\nA return to plain white satin velvet\nor heavy white crepe de chine embroidered by hand In fine silver\nthread for weddinu gowr.s It predicted\nby London dress makers, who state\nthat society brides have been showing\nmore Interest in white dresses than\nthe silver and gold effectB which have\nbeen popular during the last year.\nFurnaces\nA Carload  of\nHecla and Standard\nOld Dutch Silver\nA     new     shipment     includes\nSandwich   Plates,   Cake   Plates,\nus   ge1\nFurnaces has Just  arrived.    Let I . ,\nyou   ready   for   winter. \\ ill   l'-r^ad       Plates,       Candlesticks,\nt%       II       Uinrn 111.   V;1S,'S'     Flower     Baskets     nnd\nR.     H.     MABER ||||   Mustard   Pots\nTinsmith\nWORK  GUARANTEED\nOffice:  Opposite City  Hall\nP.O.  Box 618 Phone 655\nA. T. N0X0N\nYour   Jeweler\nIP,\nGuard Your Mouth\nLet WRIGLEY'S be the\nguardian of your mouth and\nthroat\nIt will combat trouble of\nvarious kinds. It helps to keep\nthe teeth free from food particles that ferment and cause\ndecay.\nIt has an antiseptic effect. It relieves add mouth and thus not\nonly prevents harm to the teeth,\nbut serves to sweeten the stomach.\nIt stimulates digestion and helps to\nprevent tha forming of gas that\ncauses dyspepsia.\nRead from 1 widely known medical workt\n\"Chewing gurri aids tooth nutrition\nand the cleansing action is a definite benefit\u2014it prevents dyspepsia.\nGood chewing gum is excellent for\nbad digestion.\nFoot briflil m\ndilfmnt fli.orl\n\u2014 all msde Iron\nbest infr.tli.ntl\n\u2022btiiaablfl\nSeated ia its\nparity pickafi\n\u2014 fr.lb,   cleu\n\u2022id fall-\n[l.Tored\nR19\nKI B=\nSo we say, after every meal\nWRIGLEYS\nA WANT AD IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT.\n\u2022\n f.fagt SLf\nIE NELSON DAILY NEWS. T72DNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1924\nIE OF\nIY APPEALS\nTO ROTARIANS\ni He Is Trained to Do the\nNation's Work, Urges\nPerrier\niiu\nyou\n2RVICE CLUBS !\nA SPECIAL DUTY\negin With Own.Boy; and\nExtend to the Under*\nprivileged One\n\"The Challenge of the Boy and\nVhat to Do About lt,\" was the\nubjetft of an address which was\n|lven at Monday's Rotary luncheon\nArthur A. Perrier. In ha\npeech,   Mr.   pe>r ei-   said:\nThe   MeanhiK   of   Training\n\"The  old   proverb  says:   \"Train   up\ni child in the way he should go, and\njrhen   he   Ih  old   he   will   not  depart\ntfm if.\"     It  does   not  say:   'educate\nChild,'   but   'train  the  child.'   To\nate the  child  Ih  to  tell  a  child\nto   do,   while   to  train   him   is\n\u00a7o see  that  he  does  lt.\"     'Tniining,\n4ys someone, is 'the nibbing of education   Into   muscle   and   bone.'     If\nvou tell a child what is good, it does\nnot follow   that   he   will   not   depart\nfrom  it,   but   if   you   train   him   into\nffood,  he will not depart  from\niris! Hair Crows\nThick and Beautiful\nIt If you tell him he must be\n\u2022rderly, he may not be, but if you\nsee that he is orderly until he ts\ngrown  up,  he  cannot get  rid  of  the\nhabit   of   being   orderly.\n\"If you tell him that he must\nnot lie, and that he must speak the\ntruth, it is not certain that he will\nobey but If you see that he forms\nthe habit of being ashamed of lying\nthe habit of speaking the truth\nwill be so wrought in his mind that\nhe  witl   never   depart   from   it.\n\"Habits   formed   in   childhood   are\nfaster    than    colors,    dyed     in\nwool,\"    declared    Mr,    Perrier.\nU y Asks fur a Chunre\n\"And so the boy challenges\nto give him a chance, or, us Krank\nlln K. l*ane so aptly pat lt, 'We\nmust see to it that every boy gets\nthe measures of a square deal.' Is\nsociety giving that underprivileged,\nthat disadvantaged, lhat handicapped\nboy a square deal.' Let us study the\nquestion.\n\"There is another tispect of the\nboy problem that Is receiving the\nattention of men everywhere today,\nand that is the attitude of our youth\ntoward citizenship, and our government. Nearly one hundred thousand Canadian boys will become\nvoters this year without any special training in the practical application of self government. The majority of our boys and girls are nut\ngetting the right attitude toward\nthe ideals, the fundamentals that\nlie at the heart of our government\nand nation. May we not ask ourselves what kind of an example We\nati- setting to the boys and girls\nof tmloy when we study the facts\nand find thai a percentage of the eligible voters do not participate in the\nelections of our representatives to\nparliament, and by so doing is contributing to bad government and bad\nexample    to    our   youth.'\n\"Me It said to the credit of the\nradical or the to-called bolshevik,\nas undesirable as he is in practice\nand in viewpoints, be it said to his\ncredit he at least exercised his sacred prerogative, and votes 100 percent on  all occasions.    If  Ignorance\nt'dkea, and culture slays at hom<\nsays  polities  Is   rotten,  the   ne\n85-Cent\nDanderine\"    Does\nWonders for Lifeless,\nNeglected Hair\nA gle.imy mass\nof luxuriant hair\nfull of eb'ss,\nlustre and life\nshortly follows a\ngenuine t o n j n g\n> up of neglected\nalps with dependable . \" Danderine.\"\nFalling h a 1 r,\nItching scalp and\nthe dandruff is\ncorrected immediately. Thin,\nIdry. wispy or fading hair is quickly\nfinvigorated, taking on new strength,\nwdop and youthful beauty. \"Dan-\nJ.derine\" is delightful on the hair; a\nrefreshing, ' stimulating tnni^\u2014 nol\nIstlcky   or   greasy!     Any   drug   store.\n[HEALING CREAM\nSTOPS CATARRH\nsuit   will    be    bail   government.\nHe   Hears   Your   Name\n\"Thp boy who bears your name,\"\ncontinued Mr. 1'errler, \"Is tbe political citizen and voter, lie is bound\nto reflect you in his attitude toward\ngovernment and toward law. Give\nhim a chance to get the right attitude toward his nation, or he will be\nliable to get the wrong attitude from\nsomenne who would tear the very\nheart out  of liberty and  law.\n\"What are we going t*> do about\nthis boy problem? What is tbe remedy? First, what are you? How\nare you living? What is your relation, your attitude, toward your\nown boy? The home is basic. The\npower of the home shows. It never\nlets   go   its   hold.\n\"It was O. Henry who said: 'A\nmother has often reeled in a boy\nby the line of love, and a father's\nmemory has brought many back.\nFather, reach that boy at the adolescent age!'\nCharacter tin* Basis\n\"Ktuerson has well said: 'Character is higher than intellect; thinking\nis the function, living is the functionary. A great soul will be strong\nto live as well as strong to think.\nThinking   Is   a   partial   art;   living   is\nbe\ntotal    o\nAddressing    himself\nis   a   Rotarlan\no    hi\nMr,\n\"I have been talking about your\nown boy because 1 believe thai it is\nthe first duty of the citizens and\nthe Rotarians, and again because I\nbelieve ti man who has the right atti\ntutle    toward    his   own    boy    Will    See\nunfortunate boy\nproper home influ-\nthe boy who lias no place to\nplay, whose only playground is the\nalley, whose only pals are the corner gang, geis the measure of a\nsquare    deal.      These    are    the    boys\nence,\nCloggeT'Air -Passages Open atjt; \u00ab ^f^n\"\n[Once\u2014Nose  and Throat  Clear\nIf your nostrils are clogged and\nI your head stuffed because of catarrh\nI or a cold, get Elys Cream Halm at\nL any   drug   store.     Apply   a   little   of\nthis pure,  antiseptic,  germ-destroying j who   fill   our   courts;   these   are\nI cream  into  your   nostrils  and   let   it\nC-penetrate   through   every   air   passage\n.,\u00a9f   your   head,   and   membranes.     Instant  relief.\nHow   good   it   feels.     Your   head   is\nclear.     Your   nostrils   are   open.     Vou\nbreathe    freely.     No   more   hawking\nor snuffling.    Head coldB and  catarrh\n.yield   like   magic.     Don't   stay   stuffed\nlip,   choked   up  and   miserable\nIs sure.\ntht\nboys   who   challenge   us   to   arise\nsee to it  that they have a chance.\n\"And so we must give n large\nplace to the spare time agencies,\nas a real solution for the boy problem, particularly the underprivileged\nhoy. The boys' clubs, the Hoy\nScouts, the Big Brothers, all of them\nhaving the support and backing of\nBelief j Rotary, are keeping the boys who\ncome   under   their   Influence,   steady\nIGOQDIIMORNING\nm&Siwknmserre\n^HKEuSANBORHS\nSUPERIOR\n!    IN'\/2\n,    AND\nI LB.\nCARTONS\nI BLACK\nBLACK\nTEA\n\u25a0\"ijgiia\n8^^%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\nPain\nHeadache\nToothache\nNeuralgia    Lumbago\nNeuritis       Rheumatism\nAccept only \"Bayer\" package\nwhich contains proven directions.\nHandy \"Bayer\" boxei of 12 tablet!\nAliio bottlei of 24 and 100\u2014 Druggiita.\nABBlrto I the tr.Se msA (eef!st.rri to Cstsdt) of Bayer MsoMsctoKe ot Monoscetle-\n\u2022HdMtn<*Kslirau\u2122d\"lCAcvTrl Ksllcjllc Add, \"A. 8. A.\"). Will. It Is well kuu\u00abn\ntot \"\",!?\u201e 0-i\u00ab.B..r\u201e.^.etie. lo a\u00abl\u00bbt'Hie public .nlnst Ualtailon.. toe Tal.leU\net oeyie Ooejiwi. will la. atuoued Willi tWlr general trade Bark, U~    asset Cross,\ne^\nRULES ARMIES OF CHINESE REPU3LIC\nCEN.  WU   PEI-FU\nriitureil above,\nLin, ward lord of\nward affata a faint\n:>f Canuwi and lias\nhas ruled\nManchuria\ni   Poking.\nmilitary  power  in  C\nIn   Ull    Hut   after   two   >\ninset   is   l>r.   Bun   Fat   Bei\nned all foreigner* In the clfy t i i\nas\nnf  prepa\n\u25a0    In   tht\n1    iU.ieu,,\ned the armies of Marshal Chang Tso-\nMnraha] Cham is on his way soulh-\ni,   is   threatening   io   bombard   ihe   .-ity\nand straight. They are teaching\nthem Canadian ideals, consideration\nfor others, and moulding them into\nIhe fine parts of a complete, a dependable and a reliable manhood.\n\"Kvery man should find some\nwork among boys, not only as a\nItotarian, but as a citizen. The\nchallenge of the boy is | challenge\nto find your place alongside of him\nas a friend. Antl as a counselor, for\nllie boy is more important than all\nthe money that passes through youi\nbanka and ihe material fhal paaaes\nthrough your own iiisiitution's, mid\nwhy?\nWill    Sit    In    V ur   (hair\nHe is the person who is going\nto carry on What vou havo started.\n\"He Is to sit  right where you\nare  sitting,  and attend to   those\nthings  you  think  are so  Important,   when   you   are  gone.\n\"When you get (lone, all your work\nis   going   to   be   judged   and   praised\nor   condemned    by   him.\n\"It is the boy who will amend your\nrules, alter jour creeds, laugh at\nyour mistakes. He may think kindly of you, and say you 'did the beat\nyou could, or he may not, Wo watch\nyour   step!\n\"All   your   work   is   for   him,   and\ntiie   fate   of   the   nations   and   of   lui-\nanlty     is     In     his     ban.Is.     So     il\nmight   be   as   well   lu   pay   him   some\nttention.\nCaptain or Ills Destiny\n\"A man makes his own destiny.\nHe rises or falls In accordance with\nhis own works. Tbe successful 111:111.\nbe it in business or otherwise, Is\nthe man who lives and learns and\nworks and acts until the last fading\nbreath ebbs out  life's little day.\n\"Hotary has started well, and in\nher legitimate and proper sphere\nHotary as a propagandist enn lead\nthe world In ushering in Ihe new\nday; \"Let us therefore look eastward   10   the   rising  sun.\"\ni .\nNovember will not take off (\nnext March, antl will tut 1\nregular session until Decemhe\nA year .and on.\u25a0-half Will |i\npass before there is any uc\ntiie waterways project hy the\nStates   congress.\nTHIRD AUTOPSY\nONNOYAKOTiAN;^:.\np->wl  more  than a  week i.fjn,  weighed\ndown  with 70 pounds of iron.\nThis autopsy,  tbe third  to be held\ns tire   Ihe   body   wan   I'm! ml   by    I'luill-\nmer's young brother while fibbing, is\nlataed on the man's claim that Uis-\nth by striking his head\nek   when   lie   fell   during\n1    the   WOOds.      The   COin-\n\u2022   mi Id   iii   ins   confession.\nn     Klsteen's    acitisat.ion\nfamiliar wl.h   Mr*,   P.la-\n\u25a0 teen   ni\ni againsl\nat.\nlie;\nilillll\n('\u25a01\nSI\nConfessed Killer Says Pal'\nDid It;  Phone  Wire\nWound Around Neck     j\nHKVKHLEY, Mass., Oct. 1 4.\u2014At th\nrequest of counsel defending Mrs,:\nMarion x. Rlsteen and ' George W.\nI'lutnmer. .Ir., 11 lodger at be- home\nwho co nf eased that he killed the\nwoman's husband In n qnurrel. and\nsank the body In Norwood pond,!\nNorth Beverly, another autopsy lias:\nbeen ordered on the bod) of Kred\nR.  1:1steen,  whicii  was  found  in   the\nii'y, ot   lieverly had found, thai   d*\n|,.wftH due |o strangulation.' A plea\ntelephone wire waa found wo\ntightly about tbe neck when Ihe b\nwns  taken  from  the water.\nTen Years Ago\nrta'es W. O. Martin, ol the Venus\nmine, wfce. has made observations of\nthe body. Tills fhows, he says, lhat\nthe fsU of t'-p body is ahmttML--\nI'OO\/Kf,   miles   long.\nA (on err In aid of Ihe Nelson\nbri'nh o! the CanidiaitvTMtrio.i'- fund\nwPl If given by the Knightn of\nGohimb\u00bbt-i Wedncr'.ay evening, in the\nparish  hi.ll.\n*   1   \u2022\nBom* time between Vo.i^iv, Thanks- ,\ngjvirg day, and Tueidav morning, a\nfreight cur containing butter, eggi and\niheeu\\ consigned to tbe A. ftlacDon-\nc.!d company, vha.esa'e grocers, waa\nbroken into white it w.ts standing on\nFrrnt stree*. Tuesday morning it waa\nfound that t'tree .H-poJtid boxes and\ntwo DC-pound ho::** of butter and one\ne.i:e   of   C\u00a3irs   ha'l   been   stolen.\n.cm\u00bb thy. t end t..c, purn'e s' ados are\nin favor with (he New York debutante, us well as with oliie.'.women,\nmany ol the evening frocks having\nMmmliifts of shailel oatrtrh 'fringe\nstudded with hrtllUmta, and metal\nbandings with design in matching and\ncontrasting brllhtlnta, pearls and tiny\ngj.\u00ab and f.i.V-S ' l.e,j:u!.\nj    :  Noted for ita great age and mellow\n;. .v'' maturity. \"Awa!:cn!iolc!rr.en-.o^ic3.*,\nj$$v 26 oz. bottle\n,:.v\/.-y. ^.,.\u00bbo *- cz* kottla\n(The Dally News of Octo\nA cornel plainly visible\neye can be seen in tW 1\nevening about 7 o'clock,\nthat hour as the stars be\nrt cu\nGranite mountah\nrr 15,\n. tbe i\n\u25a0i vens\nshow.\nin,I\nThis  advertisement,  is   not   puhllnhwi  or  (lisnlnved  bv\n.lOUOli CONTROL BOAItn or the Government of B.C.\nthe\nHis Body Found\nin the Gatineaa\n\u00a3\u2022:*\u00bb:&\nm^xM^mmimi\n-\n\u25a0..\nSIR   WILLIAM   PRICE\nHc;iil of the Quebec lumber, pulp\nami paper firm. I'rlce Brothers i-om-\ni.any, who \u00bbas kllleit by u slide al\nKenogaml, ami whose body was not\nretowred till four days later.\nPACT ON WATER\nIS REGISTERS\nREAL PI\n6RESS\nNo Prospect for Congress\nAction for Year and a\nHalf, However\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 14.\u2014(Canadian Press.)\u2014The United Statra government expects in llie near future\nanother communication from the\nCanadian government In reference\nto the proposed si. Lawrence waterways. The two governments have\nbeen In correspondence n recent\nmonths over certain details of the\nwaterway with special reference to\nwhat matters should lie referred to\nthe engineers. One of these is the\ndiversion of water from the lakes\nto the Chicago sanitary district. The\nruited slates government made a\nproposal to the Dominion government several weeks ago, the dcta is\nof which were not given out. and a\nreply  Is awaited.\nIn a genera! way. officials today\nsaid steady progress was being made\ntoward a complete understanding between   the   two  governments.\nIt lias heen the hope of Ihe waterway advocates la the United States\nthat sufficient progress would he\nmade In the negoliatlons w th Can-\nads, so that an effort could he made\nlo secure the necessary legislation\nat this winter's session of congress.\n(\\mihur   Session   (('(>   Short\nIt was said definitely today, however, that no attempt will he made\nto have legislation of that k nd\npassed at the coming session, as the\nseHHion will last hut three months,\nand the time will be too short.\nThere Is no prospect of action until\nthe   new   congress  Is  In   office.\nXiifi c.cr.ftr\u00a355 to fcs elected in\nM '\nLIKE the insidious attacks of\n4 disease are the silent, unseen\nravages of moths. Millions of\ndollars' worth of damage is done\nevery year by this noiseless, almost\ninvisible household plague.\nWhat a relief it is to know that\nin choosing a Chesterfield suite\ntoday you don't need to run the\nslightest risk of moths. You simply\nask for Snyder's Sani-Bilt.\nMoths can't live or breed in material treated by our process. We\nguarantee Snyder's Sani-Bilt\nLiving Room Furniture to be absolutely mothproof. The process is\na closely-guarded secret. No other\nfurniture firm in this country has\nthe privilege of using it, although\nmany imitate it. But shrewd Canadian women realize that imitations\nnever satisfy.\nBuilt For Strength\nSnyder's Sani-Bilt Furniture is made\nto last. It is constructed on a heavy\nframe of selected hardwoods. It is put\ntogether with an eye to strength and\ndurability. Its joints are dowelled and\ncorner blocked. The corner blocks are\nscrewed as well as glued.\nThen the steel coil springs are oil-\ntempered and japanned so they won't\nrust. They are fastened into place with\nheavy cord. There are at least 67 springs\nin the hack and seat of a Sani-\nBilt Chesterfield, not counting\nthose in the arms and the Marshall Spring Cushions. This\nis far more than in ordinary\nChesterfields. Similarly comfortable are the Sani-Bilt Living Room\nChairs.\nThe springs arc supported by inter-\nstrapped Scotch webbing, stretched taut\nand securely anchored lo the frame, thus\npreventing the seat from sagging into\nunsightly hollows. A tightly drawn,\nheavy steel wire connects the front row\nof springs and supports the edge of the\nseat.\nEvery bit of material used in stuffing\nSani-Bilt upholstery is new and sterilized. The outside coverings you can see\nand judge for yourself. We scour Europe\nand America \u00a3or fresh designs and beautiful shades.\nMake Sure of This Tag\nAttached to every piece of Sani-Bilt\nFurniture is the tag bearing the Snyder\nGuarantee. This protects you absolutely.\nRead it. It guarantees Sani-Bilt not only\nto be safe from moths, but to be free\nfrom imperfections in construction. Ask\nyour dealer to show you the label sewed\nin underneath the cushion. Make sure\nit is there before you close the purchase.\nOtherwise it is not a genuine Snyder's\nSani-Bilt suite.\nSNYDER'S, LIMITED\nWATERLOO, ONTARIO\niitir\" \"\n.r* t  Snyder's\nSANi*bi\n\u2022^viNG KOOM FUBNitu\n: .0 -\u25a0\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1924\nFage BeTMf\nNews of Sport\nSALMON TROUT\nAND TERES1NA\nMAYNOTSM\nJNearly    Seventy    Entries\nStill in List for Today's\nCesarewitch\nI ,\n' LONDON, Oct. 14.\u2014(Canadian\niPreaB Cable.)\u2014The Newmarket second October meeting opened today,\nrjhe feature of the meeting, the\n\u25a0Cesarewitch stakes, the most Important of the autumn handicaps,\nkind one of the most coveted trophies\np the English turf, will take place\ntomorrow on the historic Cesarewitch course of two and one-quar-\nl.er miles.\n'j Indications today are that the field\nwill be quite up to the average, both\nLu quality and quantity.\np Of the 109 entries that had been\nreceived when the lists closed August\n',), all but 32 are included in the\n[Ists, with Aga Khan's 3-year-old\nSalmon Trout, the winner of the\nponcaster Ht. Leger five weeks ago,\n\u2022leading the list with an impost of\n128 pounds.\nNamed after the then heir to the\nRussian throne, the Cesarewitch\n.takes has been run continuously\njince  1839.\nNeither of the two top weights,\niga Khan's Salmon Trout, and Te-\n\u2022eslna. are mentioned as probable\ntarters, and last year's winner, Rose\n\u00bbrince, will carry topweight with 125\n>ounda.\nProbable Starters\nThe probable starters with Jockeys\nand weights follow: Rose I'rince\n(Beasley) 125; Keror (Archibald)\n124; Eastern Monarch (Elliott), 122;\nAbrl (Jennings), 120; Jazz Band\n^Taylor), 119; Norseman (Wragg),\nU7; Ceylonese (Sm'rke), 116; Bolet\nSatan (Bullock), 113; Flint Jaek\nWalsh), 118; Roi Solomon (Leach),\n:12; Caibonaro (Lister), 109; Har*\nfenden (Jones), 109; Charley's\nMount (Prior), 108; Arcade (Fox),\nM)7; Bellman (Ferryman), 107;\nSewing Machine (Lane), 100; Miwani\n\u25a0 Rucarda), 106; Scapino (.Marland),\n05; Korseti (Donogue), 105; Xanadlu\nlSmfth), 105; Splthead (Weston),\n03; Port Light (McLachlan), 102;\nHrlsl (Vatard), 101; Voltol (Doyle),\nTOO; Invercauld (Orme), 98; Zarape\ni Leach), 98; Boddam (Lynch), 97;\n.adadene fS'rret), 96; Hosemead\nAlford), 96; Vic's Choice (Barber),\n\u25a07; Savcrnake (Burns), 95; Border\ntanger (Gilchrist), 93; Mark Mar-\nen (Robertson), 92; Vionnet (Moris), 87, and Fair Charlotte (Berry),\n7.\nCaptain of Giants\na Hero of Series\nRRAY TAKES\nUP DESIREAU\nREINSTATEMENT\nWill Vote for Whitewash of\nLocal Hockey Player He\nTells Watson\nYEAR BRINGS\nIN NEW STARS\nSeason Uncovers Some Excellent Material for Future Games\nKELLY TIED THE SCORE IN NINTH\nFRANK   FRISCH\nWas the hero of (he third game\nIn the world's series. The Uiant\ncaptain pulled two remarkable running catches In center field by taking\nthe ball over his shoulder running\nat top speed. Metlraw attributed the\nGiant win to Frisuh's \"great defensive play.\"\nIttcGRAW FIGURES\nFOR FIFTH FLAG\n|\u00bbiant Manager Plans on a\nStronger Team Than\nEver; Young Talent\njNKW YORK, Oct. H.\u2014John Me-\nrfraw, veteran manager of the New\nfork Giants, alrady is figuring on\n'1925 campaign, and a bid for\nfifth    straight   National    league\niennant.\nTemporarily    the     Giant     chieftain\n'ill   take   a   well-earned   vacation   in\n\"onnectlon   with   the   European   tour\nC  the   Giants  and   White   Hox,  after\ne of the most strenuous campaigns\nhas  ever   had,   but on   his  return\nle Intends to  1 ne  up  his  forces  for\n|,'ie coming year.\n' He left  tonight for Quebec,  where\ne   will   join   the   tourists,   and   sail\nInnorrow night on the steamer\niount Royal for Liverpool. They\nxpect  to return  November  25,\nDiscussing his 1925 prospects lo.\nUf, McGraw\/ expressed confidence\n.iat his team would be even more\nbrmidable than this year, w'th new\nilent developing rapidly. The Giants\nnlshed the season and went fhrough\nis world's series with two rookies,\nIndstrom and Terry, in the in-\n!eld, and another, Wilson, in the\n| utfield.\n' In addition, McGraw figures that\nTic!* newcomers as Dean, Maun and\nBaldwin in the pitching staff, will\n[ rengthen his hurling corps for 11125.\nFurther efforts to secure the re-!\nInstatement of Hid Desireau as ali\namateur In the hockey world, started\nby the Nelson Amateur Athletic association this month, has brought\nresults as far as the officials of the\nBritish Columbia Amateur Athletic\nunion  are   concerned   in   the   interior.\nGeorge Murray of Trail, chairman of the West Kootenay and\nBoundary local hoard of the British\nColumbia Amateur Athletic union. In\na communication to Percy Watson,\npresident of the above organizations,\nhas again Indorsed the action of local\nsport  followers.\nIn his communication lo Watson,\nhe says in  part:\n\"The Nelson people *are beginning\nto'agitate the Desireau case again.\nPersonally I wish there was some\nway of giving him a card. If' you\ncan find a way out I would vote\nfor It. as he has heen out of hockey\nfor some time. Was anything done\nabout Lou Grant at the annual meeting? If he plays In Alberta this year\nagain, I wouldn't be surprised to see\nnelson drop out If Desireau Is kept\nout.\"\nMoynee' Case  Up\nMr. Murray has also referred the\ncase of Sinclair Moynes to Mr. Watson   for   action.\nSinclair Moynes, who used to work\nIn Trail before he turned  professional.\nFinal Senior Football Game SJSSS, lLT.B,\u00abri\"diir VSS!j Si\nof  Season  Brings  Two \u00ab*-*\u00a3 \u00a3\u00bb\u00ab* ^\u00a3>*\nChampS    Together and should be decided  by  the execu-\n. i tive.\nTiie last football game of the sea-' Moynes obtained a card in Hus-\nson will he played this afternoon j katchewan in 19111 and played there\nat the Recreation grounds, when the a few years, Me holds a Canadian\nTrail Outlaws will meet the Nelson Amateur Hockey association card to\nst. Saviour's aggregation, The game I the Trail club, and played in 1!\u00bb19 and\nis scheduled for 3 o'clock  sharp. | IBM    for    Weyhurn.    1921    and    1921\nEach   of   the   above   teams   hold   the   for   Indian   Head,   and   in   the   season\ncity     championships     of     their     home   of 192:1 he did not play at all.\ntowns.     The   Outlaws   carried   ofT   the'     Mr.    Murray    stakes    no    responsl-\nTratl   city   league,   while   the   Saints (billty In granting Moynes a card.\nwon   here.     This   playoff   is  an   annual '\naffair,   and   was   played    last   year   in\nTrail.     Today   being   a   half-holiday,   a\nlarge   number   of   fans   is   expected   out\nto   see   the   final   game   of   the   season\ndecided.\nFollowing the game the local team\nwill be the hosts at a banquet and\ndance   In   honor   of   the   visitors.\nTRAIL OUTLAWS\nPLAY SAINTS\nHERETODAY\nBylvlo Cator, of Haiti recently broke\nthe broad jump record of France\nwith a leap of 7 metera 3u centimeter   (23 feet 11.4  Inches).\n\"Iron   Man\"\npitcher  t,f  the\nand   of   other  i\nclulw,    will    ci\nuniversity   pitch\nuck   Coon\nI'hllailelpli\nc\\l\ni>s,   former\na Athletes\nle haseluitl\nriilieeton\neasun.\n\\PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nOakland  6,  San  Franmisco  1.\ni Salt  1-ake  4,  Sacramento   It.\n[i Only two games scheduled.\nStaging a lion or tiger hunt between\npunds of golf In California, Instead\nf going to Africa or India for big\name of the jungles, is one of the\nlims of tho Pacific Coast Sportmen's\nlub. It is planned to establish a\n5,000 acre hunting preserve and\nountry in central Califirnia, and to\n(ock the preserve with lions, tigers,\niopards, pumas, bears, buffalo and\n*hcr game.\nWhile various forms of polo are\nplayed in different countries, with\ndifferent kinds of mallets and halls,\nthe game has heen standardized tn\nthe I'nited Htates and England. A\npolo field is 300 yards long and l\u00bbJU\nto 200 yards wide. The mallet is\ncigar   shaped   with   a   long   handle.\nCourses for the three national golf\ntournaments next year will be as\nfollows: Men's amateur will be at\nthe Oakmont Country club, Oakmont,\nPa., the open at the Worchester\nCountry club, Worohester, Mass.. and\nthe women's at the St. Louis Country\n\u2022 dub. The dates will be selected\nlater.\nArgentine has developed into one of\nthe leading polo countries In the\nworld and at the present time they\nare considered tiie greatest rival to\nIhe I'nited Stales for supremacy In\ntho game. It is reported that the\nspeedy South Americans will be. represented in the United States next\nseason in the contest for (he International   Challenge   cup.\nDuring the recent grand American\ntrap shooting tournament at Dayton.\nOhio, a total of 404,845 targets were\nthrown. A field of 515 gunners took\npart, marksmen from all parts of the\nI'nited States \"and Canada taking\npart. According to tbe official figures\nthere was an average of 78.r>\ntargets thrown for each marksman\nparticipating.\nTelephone Your Classified\nAdvertisements\nOur. Classified Advertising Department is just\nas close and handy to you as your phone. If you\nwish to insert a Classified Advertisement, telephone\n144 and you will receive the same courteous attention\nas if you were in our office in person.\nThe rates for Classified Advertising are V\/*c\nper word per insertion, or lc per word per insertion\nif the advertisement is inserted for a week or more\nand cash accompanies the order for insertion.\nNKW YORK, Oct. 14.\u2014Watching\nstar outfield make a brilliant catch of\na difficult fly ball is one of ths\nbis   thrills   of   the   baseball   pastime,\nFandom likes to see the batsman\nget a long drive. A hard-hit ball\ncalls for the best that Is In the outfielder In the way of Judgment and\nperfect   mechanical   execution. j\nFor nearly 20 years Trls Speaker, |\nnow managing the Cleveland club,'\nhas been rated the perfect fielder.\nUncanny Judgment, good speed and\nnearly perfect mechanical ability have\nmade   Speaker  the  master outfielder.\nTy Cobb, generally regarded as the\ngreatest player of nil time, has not\nonly been a star In the field but.\nfvery other department of -the\ngame. Throughout his career' he lias\nteemed   with   color.\nThen along came Ruth. Right now\nthe Babe Is baseball's most-talked-\nabout individual, has been for several\nyears. First a pitcher, then an outfielder, now baseball's premier slugger, Ituth Is the Idol of fandom.\nTonr Stairs Are Pawing\nEddie Roush of the Cincinnati Reds,\nwhile perhaps lacking the color of\ntbe above-named trio, Is none the less\nvaluable.\nThese four great players arc going\ntbe other way. .Speaker and Cobb,\nat the very best, only have a few\nyears   left.\nWho will take Hie place of these\nstars?\nThe National league already has In\nnomination two recruits. Hazen Cuyler\nof Pittsburgh and Hack Wilson of\nthe   New   York  Olaats.\nThe American league presents Karl\nCombs, who unfortunately for himself and the Yankees suffered a\nbroken leg In mid-season. Combs is\nregarded as tbe best-looking young\noutfielder that has broken Into the\nAmerican   league   in   10   years.\nIt Is rather unusual that one season should produce three such likely\n^tars as Cuyler, Wilson and Combs.\nBookies Displace VeloraM\nCuyler and Wilson did the unexpected by displacing star veterans\nin their first year. At Pittsburgh\nHtgbee gave way to Cuyler. while\nWilson for a while beat out Iho\nbrilliant Billy Kouthv.orth for the\nnter field position at New York.\nAlthough Wilson was benched recently he Is expected to recover\nfrom his temporary slump soon and\nget  back  la  the game.\nWhile Combs was injured before he\nhad won a regular berth lit the\nYankee outfield there wajj no way\nof keeping him out. At the time\nof    bis    injury    he   .was    leading    the j\nThis si:ap Is from the second game of the world series. Kelly of the Giants Is shown scoring on Wilson's\nsafe hit to right, tielng the score with the Senators. This run was scored in the ninth Inning, but Washington   came   buck   in   its   half   und   won   the   game   4-3. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>,,;\/\nLITTLE LESSONS IN\nGolf\non MASHIE or\nTEE \u2014\n'Don't tee\nit vp high .\nresult of a close study of the slow-\nmotion films he startled the golfer\nby declaring that the hands, and not\nthe clubhead, as was popularly supposed   did   the   lending.\nPhotography clearly showed that\nwhilo the clubhead remained mure\nor less stationary behind the ball,\nthe hands had moved backwards from\nsix to nine inches. Duncan traveled\nsome way on the road to elucidation\nwhen he said that the whole complex movement of the swing was\nstarted by a push of the left shoulder, lie was partly right, but some\nof the essentials escaped him. At\nthat time it was doctrine practised rather than preached; in fact.\nIt was regarded as too dangerous\nfor golfing babies and sucklings, and\nthat In the rearing stage, at any\nrate, they should know nothing\nabout lt.\nTell tt to Eeveryone\nThere was no earthly reason why\n\"hands leading\" should remain a\ndoctrine for champions only. If it will\nmake golf easier and pleasanter for\nthe countless thousands of men and\nwomen who, from one year to another toll laboriously with little (tr\nno success, then let tbe knowledge j\nget proclaimed wilh a clarion voice,     i\nIn the \"solving of the riddle\" Mr. j\nHeld am has alighted upon a new\nword as applied to golf-the \"frail.\"\nRverything Is dominate to the application of the flail, an implement\nused by farmers for threshing grain\nfrom the ear before machinery took\nits place. < )n first page of M r,\nBeldam's \"Key Hook\" to what he\nterms the \"new light,\" as disclosed |\nby  the champions  in  a series of\n'GOOSE\" GOSLIN SCORING ON HIS HOMER\neompanylng books, is the skeleton'\nAmiTiuan league In baiting. He hud' figure ot man hulclinc a driver In\nal\u00bbo showed great fielding ability , tho fingers of the left hand nml It\nand enough speed lo be rated one | looks as If he stumbled uuv.it-\nof   the   fastest   \u201elc\u201e    ln    u,e   gam(, t,n|t,y     n|j(|n     Bom<,    |MI\u201eU(.|ll    ,,.,,.,,,\u201e,.\n..;\u00ab..r'. .       ?   aml   ClJ\"ibs   to'm  an 1 but   perusal   ot   the   subsequent   pages\noutfield   trio   that   any   major   league   showed the neeessilv of depicting the\nThese\u00b0r\u201efw|W '\\a\"\"\u00b0'       ,   . xMetw \"'\"\" '\" \"dor to displav more\nas    theZ\u2122    \"    \". \"7. K?'nl!. \">\"\"\"' Uonvln.-Hi.rly    the   movements   of   the\nKoush   and   n,,,h      u b'    ?\"\u00ab\u00bb\"\"\u2022    human    body    from     the    anatomical\nInorf Zt   oTU-HlaTrto'de^   \u00bb'ttndl'ttd \",\"\" !!\" 7\"^ \u00b0' \"\"\"\"\"\n\u00bbr,   hikfc  \u00ab,   \u2022.*\u25a0.\u201e. 1C1  '\u25a0 | as   applied   lo   the   human\nso   high a  rating.\napplied lo the human machine.\nThe flailing movement is written all\nover the pictures of those famous golfers\u2014 Hagan, Mitchell. Roger Weth-\nered and his sister, Miss Joyce Weth-\nered, Sinizen, Havers\u2014each of Whom\nhas tt book to himself or herself, with\nthe most wonderful set of photographs (36 in alii of a single golf\nstroke, from the address to the finish\nof the swing, when the hall is hurtling on its journey, eve:1 published.\n  ; What the F|aM ls\n'\u25a0\"\u2022\"\u2022B\u00ab*   W    HeUlani    wlh.   for   years j      ,Vrhll|m    ,,    w,\u201e    bp    (.xp[,lieil,     ,\u201e\nhas been exploring   he secret of the   explain  what  the  flail   in    This  old-\ngolf  swing,   principally  by  photerra-   fashioned  instrument   wns  formed of\nns of  the  ultra-rap- | two 8t,,.kHi ,\u201e,\u201e Ionger than   [he riln,T,\nleather   thong.     The\nDiscovers Art of\nthe Golf Champions\nWith Speed Camera\nThis picture shows \"(loose\" Qostin of the Senators scoring on  his homer\nin the fourth game of the  world series at the  Polo grounds, New  York.\nclubhead, via tbe arm above the] 1921 he socked out 31, In 1922 he hits\nelbow joint, the forearm and wrists} 32, and in 1!>23 he repeated 33, His\n(the thongs of the flail). The thongs! record for this season passed the\nthen  flail the swiple  (in tills case the    -r>0   mark.\nhands,    lingers   and    the    club    itself)  *m\nwhich    in    turn    beats    the    ball      In    ^71     nAIJI    Tf\\   JUVV'F\nsimple   language   all   lhs   means   that   Ji.   rAUL   IU  IflCCl\nif   you   use   your   feet   und   turn   from I\nthe   ihiBlj   without   thinking   nf   any-J\ntiling    else,    (he    left     shutlMer    IS    Imliml!  .\nki come round, automatically the ST. PAt'L, Minn., Oct. M.\u2014The\narms go wilh it. and the flailing j St. Paul Haseball club, champions of\nmovement has commenced. It Is all the American association, and winners\nso    very    simple    that    \"head    down,\"! of    the    junior     world's    series,     will\nCOAST CHAMPIONS\nphy,  has  by  nr\nid camera\u2014l!f.O separate pictur , \u201e,,\u201e _,,.\nclear and distinct, pass the lens in! shorter\none second\u2014discovered what he is j\nconvinced is the art of the world's!\nchampion golfers. Writing in tho]\nLondon Daily Telegraph, George W. I\nGreenwood says by his valuable con- |\ntrfbution In the unraveling of the I\ngreat   mystery   of   golf,    Mr.   Hcldnm j\nIhe   l>\nthe  resl   of it\ntheir   signiflcai\nhall.\nClare\n..f  rori\nrun   Id 1\nall.\"   \"do\nIf.\nand I\neh   nf!\nstart tmnnrpiw to play the champions\nuf the pacific Coast league, probably\nlate this week, it was announced to-\nday.\nHig   Hoy\nHi.   T\nthe\n,\\:i'\nj The L'ruguay soccer team, Olympic\nj champions, arc planning a tour of the\nI I'nited States and Canada, during\n; March, April and  May,   lil^5.\noi    lh'\nsticks,\nloaded\n\"swiple.\" was loaded at the end. as I\nIhe golf club is. and its function was j\nlo    beat     nil!     ihe    ears     nf    the    corn.\nMotive power was supplied  by a  turn\n<>f   the   hips   and    shoulders,    inducing\nthe   upper   stick    to   turn,   a   twisting]\n1    tautenhjg   of    tl\nWhen   the   tee   shot   is   made   with\nan   iron   or   mashie   should   the   ball\nbe  teed   up or  merely   placed  on   the\nturf?   Why or why not?\nAnswered  By\nGEORGE   DANIEL\nWestern   Canadian   open   and   professional champion.\n*    *    *\nWhen a short one-shot hole if\nplayed with an iron or mashie, very\nlittle sand should be used for the tee.\nA high tee Increases the difficulty of\nthe shot and lessens the ehannco- of\nsuccess. The player, in constructing\nhis tee, should use barely enough\nsand to raise the ball above the level\nof the ground, The shot Is much\nsimpler from either a turf or a mat\ntee when a small amount of sand is\nused. Tbe average golfer doesn't use\nproper care in building his tees. His\ntees are never the same height for\nany two shots. This forces him to\nemploy a slightly altered swing for\neach shot and makes it harder for\nhim to \"groove\" his swing. The\nconditions for all shots from the tee\n(with the same club) should be made\nas nearly uniform as possble. Selecting level stances and teeing the bait\nat the same height each time are the\nchief means to this end.\n(Copyright, 1924, Associated Kditors,\nIncorporated.)\nSox and Giants\nPaste the Pill;\nFormer Get Game\nQUKBEC, Oet. 14.\u2014Thirty-one hits\nrattled off tho bats of the New\nYork Oinntft and the Chicago White\nSox players In tbe first of their\ntwo exhibition games played here today, before 4000 people, when the\nWhite Sox won  10   to  8.\nBoth teams play again tomorrow\nafternoon, after which they will sail\nfor Europe. R. H. B.\nChicago      10   16     1\nNew   York      8   15     2\nHatterfes\u2014Robertson and I'lclnich;\nScott,   HunUinger  and   llenllne.\nA national athletic field covering\n10 acres in under construction near\nTokyo. Japan. A stadium holding\n200,000 spectators will be the largest\nof Its kind In the far east. The\nstadlm will cover baths and dressing\nrooms, with dining and sleeping\nrooms for athletes.\nhas \"exploded\" the centures old ing the swiple to he slung back, very\nleaching that Ihe initial movement much in ihe same man nee r in which\nnf the swing comes from the hands a salmon rod thmws back the line.\n\u2014ln other words, that the hands start Applying the analogy nf the flail tn\nthe club in the backward swing. 1 golf, we find that initial motive power\nDuncan had a glimmering of the is supplied by the feet. legs and hips,\nidea   when,   a  year  or   so   ago,   as  aLwbJch  is translated Into speed of the\nKOOTENAY BITTER ALE\nThe  Ate   with   the   real   flavor,   $2.20  doz.     Order   through\nGOVERNMENT   LIQUOR   STORE.\nFREE   DELIVERY   DIRECT   FROM   BREWERY.\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY   LIMITED\n(This   advertisement   Is   not   published   or   displayed   by   the   Liquor\nControl  Board  or by  the (Jovcrnmeiit  of British  Columbia.)\n\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u2014 *f\nThia advertisement is not published or displayed  by theLIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or the Government of B.C.\n Page Eight\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1924\nSTOCKS BREAK IN\nSPITE OF LOAN\nGerman Loan Four and a\nHalf    Times    Oversubscribed, but Bears Raid\nNEW YORK, Oct. 14.\u2014Stock prftMS\nbroke sharply In today's market despite the overwhelming success at-\n1 a inert In the flotation of Ameriei's\n*110.00ft.\u00bb00    shore   of    the    $200,000,000\nARGENTINE NEWS\nADVANCES WHEAT\nSharp Recovery Also Owes\nMuch- to the Big Buying\nfor Export\nCHICAGO, Oct. 14.\u2014Wig sftpoft business, together with serious crop damage news from Argentina, had much\nto do with brltmiiig about a sharp\nadvance   In    wheat    prices    today.\nGerman loan, which was approximately ! tpme transactions the advance amount-\nfour and one-half times oversubscribed. I **a to fully r.e a bushel compared with\nSelling   pressure   originated   with   bear j Saturday's  finish.\ntrsders.    who   took    advantage    of    the\nrVldesiiread   dlsnnpotntment   caused    hy [\n\u2022 'losing\ntiled,\noaotatton:\nI*\nfor   wheat   were\n4 '4e    net    higher;\n\"    the   failure  of   the   ma-ket   to  rally   on '\u2022 December,  t\\M%   to %l.H%, and  May\n*1.U%    to   HM%.   with\nup,  oats  showing\nand   provisions\ncline  to a   ris<\nvarying   from   20c   dc-\n\"  2e.\nSterling Exchange\ncounter    rate\nsterling\u2014\nthe success of the Cerman offerini\nand the uneasiness of Investors and\nspeculators over the pnlttte*! situation. So sreat was the desire of\nmanv traders to convert their r-n.ru. r\nprofits Into cnsh that th\" marknt\nwas unable tn absorb the large volume of offerings exeeo* at ^'ibufintlal\nconcessions in n*ioted values, net\nlosses In the nctlvp Issues ranging\nfrom   1   to   6   points. NEW   YORK,   Oct    14.\u2014Sterling\nUnited   States   Pteel   enmmon   onened i change    firm    nt    $4.46%     for    00-day\nunch-'njred    at    107    and    then    sttnped \\ bills   and   at   $4.4\u00bb>4   fnr   demand,\nstesdl'v   tn   1*4%,   cln*t\"g   Ju-t   \"bove i     Canadian   dollars\u20149\u00bb SI-32c.\nthat   flrure   for  a   net   Ices   of   2>^   on i     French   francs\u2014Demand.   8.115c.\nthe    day. :     Italian   lire\u2014Demand.    4.46.ic.\nOils   Rhowed   the   h<-st   pm'stanc*   to I     f-\u00bbrman marks\u2014Demand,  per trillion,\nps41tOg     pressure       BtftftdftH     Oil     of < 23.875c.\nNew    Jer^y,    Standard    OH    Qf    Call- ' \t\nfornin.    Texas    Company    and    -Farnf3- j     Nel\nriall   B  were  nmont the   relatively   few j $4.49 9-16\nIssues    to    close    higher   on    the    dav. j \u2014\nbut    the    net    gains    were    fractional\nOne of the snjfrtHM of the ses-\nwlon was the vulnerability of the Investment rails to selling pressure.\nl*ackRwannn dropping fi^ to 130 hnd\nlosses of 2 to nearly 4 mints tiklng\nplace, ln Ki.lttmore & Oltio, cThe^a-\nnenke He Ohio, Tipi^wsre Jfe Hudson.\nNew York r'en'nit. Louisville & Nashville,   and   Reading.\nThe heavy rtev.nftn' for fund:, inel-\ndente.l to Increased market nnern-\ntlons and the German finpne'nir resulted in tho call rite being advanced frrm ?\u2022\u00a3 to 3 ner cent. A\nfirnvr \"one \u00ab'\u25a0\"> was noted In the\ntims money mn-ket. Commercial paper\nra+es   were   unchanged\nTotal  stock  sales.   1.037.400  shares.\nClosing   Qnota*lons\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA.   Oct     14.\u2014Quotations   are:\nMontreal\u2014Jobbing, extras 4fie, firsts\n39c.\nOttawa\u2014Jtbbing. extras 50c, firsts\n38c   to   42c.\nWinnipeg\u2014Jobbing, extras *0c to\n4.r;C.    firsts    34c    to    37c.\nSaskatchewan\u2014Jobbing, extras 3l\u00bbc\nto    41C    firsts    37c.\nVancouver \u2014 Jobbing, extras 51c.\nfirsts  54c   to   56c.\nChicago\u2014Spot, 3Cc to 41c; October.\nJ6Vic; November, 39c; December, SDVae.\nNew York\u2014Refrigerators. 39c to 41c.\nBUtish Cables\nLONDtiN. Oct. 14.\u2014Fair demand\nQuotations   are:\nEnglish\u201422s   to   27s   per   10  dosen.\nIrish\u201422s   to   25s  per   10   dozen.\nDanish\u201423s   to  26s   por  10  dozen.\nRupslan\u2014I3s   to   16s   per   10  dozen.\nPoultry   market   unchunrged.\nMontreal List\n'MONTREAL, Oct.  14.\u2014The most   Important    stock    on    today's    featureless\nsession    of    the     local     exchange    was\nMontreal   power   at   183**,   a   net   loss;\nwhite     Canadian     Industrial |\nUnd Article\nRtalEtUta\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoat* and\nAutomobiles\nCL ASSIFIED\nADVERTI\nClassified Advertising Rates\nL-orn    ^4c   tn\ntu   %c  nain j AleohoT  aol.l   unchanged\nSpan-\nLocal Beading JToticeB\u2014Three cents\n|mt word each Insertion. In blackface\nnr machine capitals 4c per word.\nBlackface capitals 5c a word. Twenty-\nfive per cent discount If run dally\nwithout cllaiiKC of copy for one month\nor more. Where advertisement Is set\nnut in short lines the eharae is 15c\na line for Koman type, 20e for blaek-\nfe.-e snd ar.c for blackface capitals.\nMinimum 35c, If charged 50c.\nWant aid Classified Advertising\u2014\n,\u201e>,   n_   .1.   m\u201e,.i    B    in   1(1\". |Ono   and   a   half   cents   per   word   per\nIsh   Liver  declined   If   to   >\u00bb!>.- insertion     If  paid   In  advance   6c  per\nHank of  Commerce  registered a new   \u2122\"\u2122\u2122;     \"   '\u00ab\"\" iV, \u201e, WOrd  per\nhlfih    tt   IM.    \u2022    net    advance    of    \u00bb ^ lf\"C,,C     afl     \u00abP\u2122   .!f\nby    British    Columbia    rithinr.    off    J ( jHJJ   s,Rn    <tt|   C0U\u201e,B\n'llthV'chan^:       Asbesins.    off    1;    -     0^=     word.       Minimum     25c.     If\n-'   \u2022\u25a0     Atlantic  *\"S\u00bb^fH     Births,   Marriages,   \u201e,\u201e\u201e,   \u201e\u201e   ,\u201e.\nKeniorlam  Cards\u2014Fifty   cents   per  ln-\nI sertlon    up    to   33    words.      Additional\nI words   l'^c\nLists    of    Wedding    Presents    and\nFloral    Tributes    at    rnnerals \u2014- Ten\nCanada Bonds\nKrazilian.   off   %.\nferred    off   1;   Canadian   General   Electric   preferred,    up    1%.   Steamers,   up\nt;   Steamers   preferred,   UpHi   Dominion\nTextile.   Up   I:   (Soodyeir   preferred,   UP |\n1    to    the    new    hlRh    of    81;    Lauren- i\nSSfttaS    UP    zf'guebecUPrower.'''ofti\u2014   W   \"**\nIV,;   Sherwin-Williams,   un   1 \u00bbv;   Hhaw- I -^j , i   i..\u2014 i \u2014\nItdfllH, up 1. and Twin City, off 1. ,\ndosing pries; Abitibi. r\u00bb7; Brazil,\n| f-0>\/i: Breweries. 5*; Brompton. 29.\n! Laurentlde.   SS;  Spanish   preferred,   114; 1 \u2014\niSpanisb      Common.      102%;      Smelters, j 200    MKN    WANTED\u2014We   want   more\n\"%;     Montreal     Power,     l8*tt,     Qur   ..----\nMale Help Wanted\nI bl\nPower,    IS*;    Steel\nCanada,\nWINNIPEG,  Oct.   14.\u2014Dominion  war ;\nIssue  prices: I\nWar   loans\u20141925,   $1(10.50   bid;    1931.\n1101,10   bid,   $102   asked;   1927,   $103.50\nI bid\nRefunding   Joans\u20141928.    HOO 50    bid;\n19J.1.   HOI 35   bid.   1102.40   asked.\n!     War loan renewals\u20141927. 1101.70 bid,\n$102.20 asked;  1932,  $103.55  bid,  $103.hO\nasked.\nVie'nry  loans\u20141924.   $100  bid:   192\nToronto Board\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nC   P. R\t\n.   147\n146'4\n146 V.\nC. M. * St. P.   . .\n.    11%\nHH\nUN\nOners!   Motors\n.     58\n56\nHU,\nInt.  Nickel   \t\n.     1SX,\n18V4\nn%\nMo.  Pac.   .......\n.     19M,\n19H\nitm\nMo.  Pac.  pfd.   ..\n.     E4H\n641),\nu%\nRock Island \t\n.     30 U.\n30\n30\nHtudebnker    ....\n.     38%\n37H\n374,\nIT. S. steel   \t\n.   108\n107'4\n107'4\nWillys-Overland\n.       8\n7%\n1%\nllll.l\nbid.   $106.75   asked:    1934,   $104 15   hid.\n$104.25   asked;   1937,   $108 80   bid.\nTORONTO, Oct 14.\u2014Bank stocks\nheld iheir recent advances ami further gains were made by the Standard\nand Union issues. Commerce and\nDominion closed steady st Ultt and\n187 V,.      respectively.        Standard\nhid.   $10.1   asked;   1912,   $10\u00ab \u00ab0 \\ traded   fn   at   17'..   and   Union   at   102.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Oct.  14.\u2014Quotation\nare:\nFlour\u201410c.   higher   at   JS.10   to   $5 1\na  barrel\nBran~$2r,   to   $25,5'),\nWheat\u2014No.    1    northern,    11.-11%    to\n$1.45%;       December,       |1.*4%,       May,\n$1.49%    to    I1.49S.\nCorn\u2014No    3    yellow,    $l,l0'-i.\nOats\u2014No.   3   white.   4fi7\u00bbc   to   $47^c.\nFlax--No    1.   $2.50%    to   $2.53%.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Oct. U.\u2014Quotations\nare:\nBar   Silver\u2014Foreign.   71 %e\nCopper\u2014Firm; electrolytic, spot and\nnearby   13c   to   13Vfec,   futures   13!,4c   to\nlitte.\nTin\u2014Firm;   spot   and   futures   |G0.\nIron\u2014Irregular;   No.   1   northern   $21\nto   $22,    No.    2    northern    $20    to   $21.\nNo.   2   southern   $18   to   $19.\nLead\u2014Steady;   spot   18.\nZlnr\u2014Firm;    East    St.    Louis,    spot\nand    futures    |8.30.\nAntimony\u2014Spot   $11.\nAt   London\u2014\n,    Copper\u2014Standard,   spot   \u00a362   12s   Cd,\n| futures   E\u00ab!   12s   fid:   electrolytic,   npo:\n\u00a3M   10s.    futures   \u00a367.\nTin \u2014 Spot \u00a3215 7s 6d, futuruK\nI \u00a3247   168,\nLead\u2014Spot   E35,   futures   \u00a334.\n1     Zinc \u2014 Spot     n:t     7s     6el.     future\n\u00a3iJ3   2s   fid.\nThe  log  sd'-anoe  among  the   tndus-\n! tr'al   Iss-es  wl.s   in   the  case  of Western     Canada     Flour,     which     recovered\n' frnm   Its   recent' decline   of   3   points,\n1 sell in?    today   a I    105.      Monarch    preferred     registered     nn     advance,     of     2\n; points   to   75.     British   Columbia   Flsli-\n\u25a0 'r\\s    sold    at    is.      Abitibi    closed    at\n[ H%   and   Brompton   at   29.     Spanish\nwas    quoted    at    10'!    to    lOlty.      Bra-\n! zilian    sold    at    50U.    off    %,    while\nToronto    Rallwav    was    down    \u25a0%    to\nI lOHVi.      Twin    Cltv    sold    at    40'*}    to\nj M %      Winnipeg   Railway   was   sllghlly\nfirmer,    tho    common    at    30    and    the\nI preferred    at    82%.\nGeo -Rt* Karl t'nrv. n veteran of lh\nR.N.W.M.P. and of the Rlel rebelllo\n; died at   Vancouver.\nmen who are willing to qualify for\njobs raying $125 00 to $300.00\nmonthly as garage mechanics, bat-\nterv and electrical experts, vulcan-\nizers, welders, engineers, etc. Also\nmen wanted to learn the barber\ntrade which Is nice, clean, Inside\nworH and pays $25.00 to $50.00\nweekly. Write todny for free catalog and our special employment plan.\nHemphill Trade Schools. Limited,\n22.S Ninth Avenue Fast. Calgary, or\nUll  Granville Street, Vancouver.\n(6530)\nRoom and Board\nF17KN1HHK1)\nPhone   339L.\nBOOM \u2014 With\nboard.\n(6632)\nTKLL  your wants  through  The  bally\n*,'nw\u00ab   elaiopifled   cnluirmx\nMachinery for Sale\nPORTABLE SAWMILLS \u2014 American;\nused mining equipment all kinds,\nrebuilt; boilers, compressors, logging\nmachinery. Send for atock list.\nNational Machinery Company, Limited. Vancouver. f\u00ab546>\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nNEW HOTEL\u2014Wanted, to buy: 10\ndresnera, four sideboards and five\nD.A.C. chairs. Will pay a good\nprice if you have one or more to\nRpare. Wr'te at once. J. Peterson,\nBox   496.   Kimberley,   B.C. (6642)\nCLASSIFIED ad* bring results quickly\nand eronomf-riltv.     iiAr a word.\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nFURNISHED      HOUSEKEEPING\nrooma  for  rent\u2014Over  I'oole  Vruo.\n(6694)\nFURNISHED      RCSflWlV I N G\nrooma\u2014Over  Muck's   Billiard  Hall.\n   (1698)\nAgents Wanted\nWANTED\u2014BxMrtMced    niElit    porter.\nApply, P.O. Box 89^ City.\nWOMEN\u2014To\n(6\nMEN, WOMEN\u2014To lefirr. oarberlnsr:\npaid while lenrninrr: tools supplied.\nC&latfMnH free. Molcr College. Vi\u00bb-\ncouvor. (6545)\nSituations Wanted Male\nYtH'NfJ MARRIED MAN\u2014Ten years'\nex nf rlor.ee \"pncral office work, typewriting, \u2022\u2022\u25a0horthand. sho weird; three\nlanffuaffea, ref\u00bbrttice\u00ab best, surety.\nsalary no object: also experienced\ngrocery, general trade, lumber business.    Open  for engagement city or\nronntrv,   office  or  store.     Write.   Hox\nR'in  iniiv News. mini\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Oct. 11.\u2014Eggs higher,\nbutter   and   cheese   firm.\nCheese\u2014Finest westerns. 17 %c to\n17%ic;   finest easterns,   17%o   to   lT^c,\nButter\u2014No. 1 pasteurized, Zi}%c to\n3fiVac; No. 1 creamery, 35%c to 35'\/ic,\nseeonds,   .14V4n   to   341*-c,\nEggs\u2014Storage extras. 44c; storage\nfirsts 3ile; storage second:*. 3 3c; fresh\nextras,    lie;   fresh   firsts.    42c.\nPotatoes-\u2014Per   hag,' car   lots,   \"uc.\nVancouver Stocks\nConsolidated\nCork-Provinc(\nDouglas     , ..\nIndian   Mines\nInt    Coal    ..\n.Silver i\nest\nWINNIPEG  GRAIN  QUOTATIONS\nClnse\n159 'A\nWheat-\nOpen\nGet.     . ..\n. ins ti\nNov.    . ..\n.  157 V.\nDee.    .. .\n.  15! tf\nMay    . ..\nOal\u00bb~\nOct.     . .\n.    68\u00ab\nNf V     . .\n*;r.\nDec\n.     B3'-4\nMiv    ..\n.      66 \u25a0\u2022;\nBirley\u2014\nOct.     . .\n.    (<\">\nNov.    ..\n,    93\nDec      . .\n9i si\nMav    ..\n9 3\" i\nFlax\u2014\nOr'\n.   237 li\nVov\n.   332\nD.C.    ..\n2\"7Vfc\nMiv    . .\n.  211%\nRy.\u2014\nOct\n.   1!H(\nNov.    , .\n.   1371',\nDec\n.   126\nMav\n129\nf Ink\nSpartan Oil\nSweet Grass\nTrojan  Oil   .\nHid\n.$42.00\n.001-16\n.1.0 1-16\nDominion Live Stock\n-Ueoriti;\n15.\".\n63'4\n6 IS,\n\u00ab;:p.\n232\n64 Ut\n\u20226'j\n94\"\nS2Vi\n93',\n$:::\n!\u25a0-'.\",\nU.I\n\\(\nt> n e v\nBrief   bnt   Important   Leaione   la   Finance,    Markets,    Shocks,    Bonds    and\nInvestments.\nWINNIPEG, Oct.   14.-\ntotaled     1100    cattle,    40(1    cal\nhoga   and   200   sheep.\nSteers\u2014Choice,   $!>   to  %5.2T>\\\nButcher   heifers\u2014Cliolce,   J3.\n12 75  to  $3.50.\nButcher     cows\u2014Choice,\n$2.50.\npulls\u2014Good. $2.26.\nOxen\u2014Good, $3.\nStocker    steers\u2014Choice,\n$2.25   to   $8.\nStocker  b e If era\u2014Choice,\nr-\nFeeder    steers\u2014Choice,\n$3.\nCalves\u2014Choice,   $5;   good.   !\nHogs\u2014Select    bacon,     $10.4\nsmooth,    $3 50.\nLambs\u2014Fair   to   good,   $t0.\nSheep\u2014Fair   to   good,   $5.\nCalg*ary   Bscripts\nCALGARY,   Oct.   14.\u2014Receipt:-   \u25a0\nwere    US    cattle,    16    calves,    SI\nnnd   13S  sheep.     No market  wan i\nI is lied,    and    only    a    few    sales\nrecorded.\nSteer--\u2014Fair   to  good.   $4.'J5.\nHeifers\u2014Fair  to  good,   $2.75   to\nCows\u2014Medium, $1.76  to $2.75.\nCalves\u2014Fair   to   good.   $L'..\"j0   to\nNo   hogs   were   sold\nSheep    market    steady.\nKOfVl,\nWHY THE POPULARITY\nOF PUBUC UTILITY\nBONDS\nSTtADY OLI^AND FOh?THE.|fc\npfSODUCTb\nFREE FROn LABORTROUQLeS\nIjftRdE FIELD FOR EXBW^ON\nYOU have the freedom of the ship-\nbright, artistically\nfurnisheddrawingrooms\nand lounge, card rooms,\nsmoking rooms and\n7 dining rooms\u2014spacious\ndecks \u2014 comfortable,\nrestful state rooms\u2014\nwith cuisine aTid service\nalways up to the Canadian\nPacific Btcndard.\nfor fall parlleMlors ask\n>\u00ab^ tomMeerlo\nJrwlearlift\nCanadian\nPacific\nK\n3.   8.   CARTER,\nD.P.A.,   Nelson.   B.O.\n.\\U\\ AND WIFE WANT JOB COOK-\n1HH for not more th^n thirty men.\nWrite for further information Pox\nfir,;;. Daily Newt. t\u00ab67t)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nDEPARTMUKT OP LANDS\nTIMBER  SALE   X5745\nMAN OR WOMAN\u2014To travel and appoint agents. rosltfon permanent.\nYearly guarantee, $1092 (being $21\nweekly average) and expenses. Experience unnecessary. Winston Company    Toronto._ (6169)\nDISTRIBUTING\" RRLIC.10U8 LITER-\nnture pays Christian men and women\n$30 to $f,n weekly. $225 guaranteed for 9fl day's work, commission hesld*1*. May work snare\ntime. Mr. Conrad, Spadina Bulldtnc,\nToronto. (653S)\nFemale Help  Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 An    oxpmienred    ChMlllMir'\nmnid.      Apply,    Hume    Hotel.      (6707)\nBusiness Opportunities\nFOR HALE\u2014Oil lt-a\u00abeii offaettintr pro-\nductfli welll in Kovin field. Dandy\npropoiltlon for live promoter. We\noffer the inventor gre^i possibilities In oil royalties and our coni-\noinvv Rtock. The Hoidlni A\nRoyalty Company, 323 Ford RuHd-\nInj\".   Qroat   Fa 11a.   Mont. < fi704j\nCity Property ifoir Sale\nHdp Wanted\nPoiition* Wanted\nLett and Found\nLire Stock\nMachinery\nFann fmfPf\nTunber and\nNEW BUNGALOWS\nLiving Boom.  18\u00bbJ5 feet.\n2   Bedrooms,   l4\u00ab:H.\nWhite   Bathroom-       -\nCement   fonndatian;   A  lots.;\n(3000.      Small     cash     payment;\n. balance   mon thly.    .,\nc. w. appleya&d ,\nIniiiranct City Prop\u00abrt\u00bb\nBVSINE,\nElectrical\nwa.,   WMeVUMAWaa,\nWhy Pay Rent\n$200.00 Cash\u2014 Bungalow. 2 bedroom*, bath, etc.; 2 large lots.\nBalance as rent.\n$250\u2014Bungalow, 2 bedroom*; 4\nlota, in garden; shed. Balance\nan rent.\nWeatinghouue Radio MeW, Radio\n(8712)   Complete Super-Heterodyne K(t*,\n\" > Tubes.     Westlnghouse   Masd^\nIrons,   Toastera,   Etc.     V.   ft K.\nmfttic   Electric   Pumps.    ImaU\nSUotrto Plants a Bpaolaltr.\n$350\u2014Six-room House, bath, Btone\nfoundation, full basemept; 4\nlots, corner. Property close In.\nBalance easy payments.\n$500\u2014House, 3 bedrooms, bath.\nporcelain fixtures; all newly\ndecorated Inside; full basement.\nClose In; no hills. Balance easy.\nF. A. WHITFIELD\nInsurance\u2014Rentals^\u2014Real   Estate\n510   STANLEY   ST.\n(0703)\nFOR SALE\nA six-roomed House on Victoria\nstreet, at less thnn half what it\nwould cost to build, ^mediate\npossession   can   be   had.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nFire\u2014Life\u2014Automobile   and   Accident\nInsurance.\n(6598)\nLive Stock Wanted\n| WANTED\u20141 fresh cow. or about to\nfreshen. Must be heavy milker.\nApply,   Boi   6TU5,   Daily   News.\n(671)5)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nTenders\n.\u25a0ill   be   received   by\nr,  Nelson, not later\nn on the 23rd day of October,\n1924, for the purchase of Licence X571\"\nHealed\nlu- Dlntr\nHo\nSinii'ii\n700    board     feet\nlit :.S0   lincnl   feet   I'ol\nOne year will he\nmoval   of  timber.\nFurther particulars\nTHE DISTRICT\n<e7!t)\nLardo,\n'   Hawlftgs\nFORESTER.\nNelson, B.C.\nNOTICE\nPLAYER I'lANU\u2014Brand new Instru-\nmeni, cost one thnusand dollar*',\nwin pell at a great sacrifice.\nMontli 1 v payments accepted. Box X,\nDaily   News. _    (6676)\nBARRELS. KEGS \"AND EMPTY\nflacks \u2014 MacDonald jam Comoany.\nNelson. . (6161)\nFOR    SALE\u2014Cocker    Spaniel    pupp^s.\nF.   H.   Shields.   Trail,   B.C. (6439)\nFOR    SALE\u2014Boa tr.ouse,\nGallagher.\nJ    W\n(6437)\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\napplication will lie made to the\nLegislative A\u00bb\u00abembly of the Province\nof Hrlttsh Columbia at the next\nsession thereof, for an Act making\nprovision for the vesting of general\nproperty of the I'reshyterian Church\nin Canada, the .Methodist Church and\nthe Congregational Churches of Canada.\nin the I'nited Church of Canada; for\nthe holding, use and administration |\nof the property of congregations entering the union of the said churches\nto form the United Church of Canada,\nand for tha holding of the property\nof concrecations voting not to concur\ntherein; for the trusts relating to\niT^neral mid congregational property,\nand generally for the carrying of\nsaid  union  into effect.\nDATED at Victoria, British Columbia, this nth day of September, A.D\n1924.\nCLEARIHUE &\u25a0 STRA1TII,\n1218     Langley     Street,    Victoria,\nRC,   on   behalf   of   tiio   applicants. (6S43)\nPIPE AND  FITTINGS, ETC.\nComplete line Pipe and Fittings,\nall sizes. Special, 1-trich Pipe, 7c\nper foot. Roofing Felt. 1-ply.\n$1.50; 2-pIy, MM; 3-ply, $2.6r\u00bb per\nroll, Extra heavy 3-ply Mineralized Surf nee, 90 iba. per roll,\nspecial, IS.25. %-M\u00bbch Air Hose,\nsuitable for gardens, 6c per foot.\nMixed Wire Nails, S2.00 per keg.\nWire Rope, Canvas, Logging Supplies* and all kinds equipment.\nB.C. JUNK CO.\n135  Powell  St. Vancouver, B.C\n(6379)\nMiscellaneous\n$5000   ON   TERMS.\nONE   OF   THE   NICEST\nHOMES IN CITY\nLocated close In on Silica street.\nDrawing room, dining room, den,\nhardwood floora, two fireplaces,\nkitchen, three bedrooms, dressing\nroom, beautiful large sun room,\nbroad verandah, bathroom, two\npantries, stone basement with two\ncoal bins, new furnace, garaue,\nbuilt-in china closet, book shelves,\netc. Three lots, 75x80, on corner;\ngarden, fruit trees. Magnificent\nview.\nAN   IDEAL  HOME\nfor much less than it is worth.\nHOW!   BLBCTUO   OO.\u2014\nPow.r.  Light and  Radio InXalla- I\ntlona.   Boltery   Serylca   eutlon.   DM)* ]\nara   In  Electrical   Supplies.\n.   . Optra   Xc-ttia  Blook\nT. O. Boa 938. Hums Mt. I\n(66\u00ab> I\nTgLL your wants  through  Tha Dally I\nNuws classified  column*. \"\nRepairing\nHB.  ZITTO, Ooaamltk \u2014\ns Rackets   Reatrung   and   ~\nBicycle Dealer.   Machine Works.\nChimney Cleaning\n- Tenolgl\nW*c\nTOWLBS,     Otllqlal    CI\n^\nPrinting;\nTKB DAIJ.T IfBW\u00ab\u2014quality Wit\nRuling,   Loose  Leaf  Forms.\nSheets   and   Binders   always,   tn\nInsurance and Real Estat\n  \u25a0 \u25a0- \u25a0' .I., 'i'\"\"\"' '\"^\nDA. If ora.RI.AtTD\u2014Real Estate, \u00bbn- I\n.    sumnco,   Oreenhlll   and   Bellevua I\nOqal       Room\nPhone  49.\nNo.    6,    K.W.C.\nW.   SAWBOB\u2014\nBaal   Bltata,   Insurance\nAnnable Blk.  I'.O. Box 133. '\nR.\n\u2022,  SaattU.\nPhona tft. 1\n <\u00ab5*T)\nh. **3rWy\u00ae\u00aeM*m\n508   Ward  Street. NelsOn,  B.CX\nMonuments\nApply F.\nF. Payne, Dally News.\n(ft891)\nLive Stock for Sale\nFOR HirtE\u2014Steam launc.i. Sate, comfortable; iiassenBers taken to anv\npoint on lnke. flshinsr, etc, 118.00\nper dny. Phone Pilot Bay direct.\nEugene    Montreull, (62SS)\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffice  8melting  and   Refining   Department\nTRAIL,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSmelter* and Reiiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold. Silver, Copper,  Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC.   TRAIL\nOld Papers\nUSEFUL FOR PACKING, ETC.\n4c Per Pound\nTHESE ARE OLD NEWSPAPERS AND ARE\nPRINTED\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nNELSON, \u00ab. a\nFOR SALE \u2014 Seven-weeks-old Yorlt-\nshlreK. IS.90 each. Cameron, (.iranltr\nRoad,  Nelf-on.   (It08)\nYOrtKSHIRR   PIGS\u2014Seven weeks,  five\ndollars.     Jo'.vett   Druthers,   Edgewood\n(GCS7)\nFOR    SALE\u2014l'ure    Ayrshire    cow.    1\nyears,  due   to   freshen   February,   $-r>0.\nN   I.  HokanH.   411  Creek, Nelson,  Tl C.\n(66Ho'l\nsix~WKEK's^oiTlf\"YOliKSHIRF. 1'IGS\n\u2014\u00a35  each.    Groom,  Siocan  Park.\n(6665)\nFOH SAlThi^Yorksh ire-Chester White\npics, 6 weks old, V> each f o h.\nEdgewood.    It.  Ho].i). Edgewood,  H.C.\nint.)\nCLASBfriSP ada brtnx rasulfs ouickly\nand eonnmifillv.     1 V:C a word\nCampbbi.1.   *   mncKia   MOinr.\nMBHTAJi  CO.\u2014P.   O.  Box  165,  Nel-\n.\u25a0on,  H.C.    Telephone lfil. (<5<S)\nChiropractors\nALIAS   S.   DODDS,  S.C.\u2014Phone   68\u00ab.\noffice Hours. lo-12, 1-4 end by an-\nnointuient.    Aberdeen Block, Nelson. B.C.\n (6528)\nAccounting:\nCkaki.es r. huhtu\u2014\nAuditor,   McDonald   Jam   Sulldlu,\nBoi   1191 Nelson,' &.S.\n  <\u00bby)i\nFlorists\nGKIZZELLES   OXBBHHOVS1,\nson. Cut flowers and Flower\n(66S0)\nxvm. s .?OHirsoit\u2014\nIT    Phone   342   Cut   Flowers.   Potte*\nlliMJ\nPlnnts and  Floral  Emblems.\nWH.    lUWll- Hardy   Perenn!\n\u2022 Plant Grower.  Nelson. R.C.   (665\nWholesale\nla]\nFor Rent\nTWO ACRES OF GUOUNll, SMALL\nfurnished house f.T rent or lease\u2014\nTnp end of Josephine Street. Robert\nSnarkes.   Nelson. _ (6706)\nFOH REV?\u2014Five-roomed bungalow,\nfully modern,    rhone  J37R3.    (6668)\n'       XACDOITALS   *   OO\u2014\nWholesale   Grocers   and   Provlaloa\nMerchants. Imnorters of Teas, CoffeeA\nSpices. Dried Fruits, Staple and Fan<\nGroceries.  Nelson.    B.C (1WI\nEngineers\nfree*\nBto\u00bb.\u00bb Burden q{\no.\nHEI.SON, BO.\nOITO.    AMD     MIHIMO    EMOIKBBWI\nB.O., Alberta and Dominion\nLand Snrvejrors.\nCrown Orant Agents.       Bine moMM*.\nDAVSOK,   Land   lurTejot,\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nPiano Tuners\nTransfer\nAIKUrSOH    TRAMSrEB \u2014 Cool    and\nWood.     Phone   421. (6671)\nHBDLBT W. BBBDBLL,  Expert\u2014Pianos, Player Pianos, Organs, P. 251\n(6162)\nMechanical\nEX.ICTF.ICAX SUPPLIES AHD BE.\nFAIPS \u2014 Machine Shop Work.\nMechanical Repairs. Oxy - Acetylene\nWelding. Radio Supplies^ Tubes and\nParts. Auto Accesi\nDistributors for Pr.\nIlennetls Limited.\nNelson.    B.C.\nTires. Tubes.\nst-O-I.lte Batteries.\nMasonic      Block.\n(6493)\nH.  Klntss and civil Bngtun,\nKaslo. B.C.         ' '\n6854)\nAssayers\nE.\nW. WIDDOWSOB, Box A110I Nsl-\nson, B.C. Standard western charges.\n(6555)\nAuctioneers\nW \u2022 Goods Sold Privately and at auction\nNelson   Auction   Mart,\nernon   Street.\n(6556)\nFuneral Directors\nDJ.   BOBBBTSOV,\n. 801    Victoria   street\nNight  Phone,  167L.\ni.d.d. * a\nPhone   Ml.\n(\u00ab657)\nfPIr\nCo. \u2014 UnderUkeri,\nFuneral Directors.\nAuto hearse, up-to-\ndate chapel. Bast\nservices. Fries*\nreasonable.      (6558)\nWANTET>\u2014Clesn    cotton    fairs.       1\nrents per pound.    Ths Dally Nsws.\nWhat are the con.rib'ntiiic factors\nlo the present popularity of i-ubUc\nutility   bonds?\nFirst uf all. public utility bonds arc\npopular bsejKWS there II a utcatly demand fur their products. Kven i\u00bb\ntimes of marked depreHsinn the public utilities are much Hh hard hit\nthan   industrials.\nSecond, tiie public utilities companies\nhave their operating expenses well in\nhand.\nThird, public utilities companies are\npractically free from labor trouble\naa    compared    with    industrial    com-\nPftn1*8 ,        *, ,j\nFourth, there In a tremendous field\nfor increased growth for such com\npanlea.\nThe annual gross earnings of such\ns-nmn*ni>* in the ITnited Btates have\nIncreased from |8<t,000,000 to |1,000,-\nvs,\u00abw\u201eu uUruiK the pa\u00bbt 20 years,\n(Copyright, \\$2i. Associated Editors,\nIncorporated )\nBRINGING\nFATHER        -\n\u2014        By George McManas\n \u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0\"\u25a0'\n\/\/\/\u25a0\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1924\n\u2022sib.\nPsgeNlne\nFRUIT TREATMENT\nQuick and Permanent Relief\njy Taklttt \"frull-a-liVts\"\nWhat a glorious feeling it ia to be\nwelll What a relief to be free of\ncathartics, salts, laxatives and purgatives that merely aggravate constipation and are so unpleasant to take\nand so weakening in their effect I\nWhat a satisfaction to know that\nIhe juices of apples, oranges, figs and\nprunes will absolutely and permanently relieve constipation. By a\ncertain process, the juices of these\nfruits can be concentrated and\ncombined with tonics\u2014and it is these\nintensified, fruit juices that correct\nconstipation, relieve headaches and\nbiliousness, and make you well and\nkeep you well.\n\"Fruitatives\" are sold everywhere at 25c. and 50c. a box\u2014or sent\npostpaid by Fruil-a-tives Limited,\nOttawa, Ont.\n_.4L\nPRAIRIE IS UP\nIN AflMS OVER\nRATE DECISION\nWinnipeg Board of Trade\nCalls an Emergency\nMeeting\nPREMIER BRACKEN\nSEES HARD  FIGHT\nRepresentatives of Alberta\nand Saskatchewan Also\n11 \u2022      Aire Angry\nLONDON WONT SEE\nTHE\nConservatives and Liberals\nBbth Out foi- All Seats\nin Metropolis   ;\nLONDON, Oct. 14.\u2014(Canadian Press\nCable.)-rTh\u00ab Conservatives are ready\nto admit that So far as electoral organization is concerned they would\nhave, preferred to have the election\n\u2022Some later, when the final tuning up\n' of the party machinery, which was\n' sanctioned In the Conservative conference at Newcastle some time ago.\nhad become effective. However, they\ndeclare that not a single constituency\nIs now unprovided with a'Conservative . candidate where a fight tn\ndeemed advisable. This, of course,\nis not denying that some, of these\ncandidates are fighting palpably forlorn  hopes.\nConservative   Lineup   Full   One\nIn   London,   CI   out   of   %A   ridings\nare being contested by the Conservative party.\nNo accommodation between the two\nold parties is, likely in London and\nsuburban districts, and a fight between the Conservatives and Liberals\nis  expected.\nThe much-talked-of Conservative\nworking man candidate will hardly\nmake an impressive appearance * in\nany part of the country. The Conservatives were Intending to make a\n\u25a0big show with him, but the time\nhas been too short to organize properly. One such candidate has been\nnominated in Preston, .arid there may\nbe a few others.\nGeorge A, Mountain, chief engineer\nof  the  railway  commission   Rince   its\n\u25a0i appointment in '1904, is retiring from\nactive   duties   because   of   ill-health,\n[' ,--and\u2122i\u00ab -expected to he succeeded hy\nT. L. Simmons, acting chief engineer.\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 14. \u2014 From all\nsections of Winnipeg's commercial\nand agricultural organizations came\ncriticism tonight of the board of\nrailway commissioners' decision on\nthe Crow's Nest Pass agreement. Th**\ndecision was received a% an injustice\nto  \"Winnipeg  nun\"   the  west   in   general.\nJ. A. Hanfield. Dominion president\nof the Retail Merchants\" association,\nsaid: \"I can't see how the railway\nboard could arrive at such a decision, and I think it has taken advantage of the most fllmsv excuse\npossible. In my opinion, the board\nIs setting a. very dangerous precedent.\nIt seems that the railways can do\nas   they   like   with   Impunity.\"\nPremier John Bracken said: ''It\nwill be extremely disappointing to\nthe west. It looks as though we are\nIn the for the hardest light which\nthe west has ever engaged tn.\"\nHeavy Blow, Says McMurray\nHon. E. J. McMuvrr.y, solicitor-general for Canada and member for\nNorth Winnipeg, said: \"If the Crow's\nNest Pass agreement with wetter*\nCanada is tn be abrogated, lt Is\nundoubtedly tbe heaviest blow that\nwestern Canada has ever suffered. If\nthis contract is not sustained In\nparliament, lt will be a breach of\nfaith with   the  west.\"\nJohn W. Ward, secretary of the\nCanadian Counell of Agriculture, declared: \"The derision no doubt will\nbe appealed, and possibly reversed.\nThe matter should be dealt with at\nthe   next   session   of   the   house.\"\nAn emergency meeting of the board\nof trade has been called for tomorrow afternoon to consider the situation, and representatives of all businesses nnd shipping interests in the\ncity have been invited to attend. The\ncouncil of agriculture will consider\nthe judgment at a meeting on October   24.\nBlow at Sacred Contract\nREGINA, Oct. 14.\u2014\"This is a blow\nat the sacredness of contracts,\" declared Oeorge P. Edwards, president\nof the Saskatchewan Orain Growers'\nassociation, com men ting nn the ruling\ngiven by the railway commission canceling the (\"row's Nest Pass agreement.\n\"Abrogation of the Crow's Nest Pass\nagreement will mean a tremendous\nloss to tbe farmers of the west,\nwho are already heavily discriminated\nagainst anothur commodity besides\nwheat owing to the absence of water\ntransportation.\n\"It   is   difficult   to   understand   how\nFor Baby's Burn\nJ. V\\ and\n^rBobbys Bruises\n\u2014for a jagged cut\nor nasty sprain\u2014for\na lame back, a sore\nthroat or an aching\ntooth\u2014\nAbsorb ineJ[\nTHE   ANTISEPTIC    L I N I M E N-T\ngives ready relief from pain and suffering, and\nprevents serious consequences.\nABSORBINE JR. is both liniment and antiseptic. It\ncleans as it heals. It destroys the germs of infection as it\nre-builds tissue. It renders raw wounds antiseptically clean\nas it starts healthy healing.\nIts aromatic pungency, and the fact that it contains no\ngrease or stains, make it a pleasant remedy to use on\nwounds that require bandaging.\n$1.25 a bottle\n\u2022t most druggists or sent postpaid by\nV. t. YOUNG INC.     \u2022    Lyman Building, Montreal\nah \"ftereetfrtrnt '*nTer?a,*\"1hlo' Trf 'gooT\nfaith hy two parties can be set\naside Without the, consent of hoth\nparties  to the agreement.\"\nPremier Punning said he waa pleased\nto see that apparently the ruling of\nthe board, of railway commissioners\ndid not affect grain rates on which\nthe first round of the battle for\nreduced rates was won.\nThin Edge of Wedge\nEDMONTON. .Oct. 14.\u2014\"It is most\nunfortunate that the' decision has\nbeen given, amj although, as at present handed down, the decision la not\nas great Importance to the west, it\nwould be a very serious matter if it\nmeans the overriding of the agreement aa regards the eastbound grain\nrates.\n\"The west \"hopes that thfr Judgment\nis not the thin end of the wedge to\nset aside tho present special rates\non grain and flour,\" declared A.\nChard, freight and traffic supervisor\nof the Alberta government, in commenting on the finding of the commission in connection with the Crow's\nNest Puss agreement.\nRailways  Win   First   Round\nWINNIPEG, .Oct. 14.\u2014Under the\nheading \"The Beginning of a. Big\nFight,\" tho Manitoba Free Presa has\nthe following comment on the Crow's\nNest   judgment.\n\"The railways have won the first\nround of the legal fight over the\nCrow's   Nest   Pass   rate   agreement.\n\"The western provinces will appeal\nthe decbslon, and no doubt the question will go to the final court of\nappeal. The position of the west\nwill be that if the Crow's Nest Pass\nagreement Is not now statutory, It\nis the duty of parliament to make\nit so.\nUse  Political   Action\n\"The attack upon the finding should\nbe twofold: first, on the legality of\nthe finding by way of the courts,\nand then on the score of policy, by\nan appeal to the government, to be\nfollowed by the necessary political\naction. A political struggle of grcai\nbitterness and Intensity may be foretold.\n\"We rather think ibo Crow's Nest\nPass agreement will constitute the\nmajor politics of western Canada\nfor- the   next   10   years.\"\nWhite Trappers Drive Indians to Starvation, Inspector Finds\nSLAUGHTER GAME;\nDEFY MORAL LAW\nLeprosy Story May Be Invention to Keep Rivals\n,    Out\nCHAMBERLAIN\nSAYS JUSTICE\nIS FLOUTED\nLabor Has Destroyed the\nSystem Under Which It\nLived\nLONDON, Ort. 14.\u2014Premier M\nDonald lost his temper even hefore\nhe lost the 1924 election, declared\nAustin Chamberlain, in a speech today at   Rugby.\nThe premier has professed to see\nin the union of the two old parties\nin the house of commons over a very\ngrave and Important question, nothing\nbut pettifogging proceedings nnd\ntrickery, Mr. Chamberlain said, but\nthe retractions and evasions into\nwhich the government had been\nforced over the withdrawal of the\nprosecution of the editor of the\nWorker's Weekly on a charge of\nsedition, and the levity with which\nthe premier now treated the matter,\nhad simply increased the gravity of\nthe   question.\n\"What matter of greater consequence to Great H-italn could there\nbe than the Impartial administration\nof justice.\" Mr. Chamberlain proceeded, and the knowledge that our\njudicial progress could not be subjected to political and party interference?\"\nSoviet   Repudation   Ratified\nAs to the Anglo-Uusslan treaty.\nMr. Chamberlain said it had settled\nnothing, but if it were ratified it\nwould recognize tbe right of the\nSoviet government to repudate lis\nohlii*ntions.\nInstead of concentrating on restoring the war losses, the government\nhad destroyed the system under\nwhich it lived, and embarked on a\nseries of rash, futile experiments\nwhich would bring to the ground\nwith a crash the credit, strength and\nstability of  the  Empire.\nLabor Will Fight\nBurnaby Campaign\non Brown Dismissal\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 14.\u2014\"We shall\nmake Mr, Rrowne's dismissal the crux\nof the municipal election in Furnaby\nin January,\" said R. H. Neelands.\nM.P.T'., president of the Vancouver\nTrades and Labor council, in commenting on tbe Rurnaby council's action,\nlust night, in appointing F. .1. Rundle\nto the post of accountant, replacing\nFrank   A.   Rrowne.   M.I'.I'.\n\"The Labor party will take no further action until January, when we\nshall enter several candidates In the\nBurnaby field and endeavor to put\nthose fellows where we think they\nbelong.\"\nCONDENSED 'WANT' ADS ORDER FORM\nUse this blank on which to write your condenaed ad,, one word in each space. Enclose money order\nor check and mail direct to Ths Daily News, Nelson, B.C.\nRate: One and a half cent a word each insertion, six consecutive insertions for prica of four\nwhen cash accompanies order. Minimum, 25c. Each initial, figure, dollar signs, etc., count as ona\nword.    No  charge  less than  50 cents.\nPItasa   publish   tha   advertisement   below    -   times, for which   I   enclose $  \u2014\nI\n. _\ni\nj __J I\t\nIf desired, replies may be addressed to box  numbers  at  Tha   Daily   News   Office.    If   replies   ara\nto ba mailed) anclosa 10c extra to cover tost of postage and allow five words extra for box  number.\ni  '\nVICTORIA, Oct. 14.\u2014Of man's surrender to the passions of cupidity and\navarice, of ill treatment of Indians\nnourishing a desire for vengeance, of\nboot legging, and breaking of game\nlaws, all these*are told in a report\nwhich Inspector George 0. Pragnell\nhas forwarded to the deputy superintendent-general of Indian affairs in\nOttawa, a copy of which has been\nfiled with Indian commissioner Ditch-\nburn here. Copies are also attached\nof a report to the game conservation\nhoard on the subject of defiance of\nthe game board's rules in that territory hy trappers who have ousted\nthe Indians from their trapping\ngrounds, are reducing them rapidly\ntp a  sfate of poverty.\n\"Beyond the law,\" might be applied\nto the basin of the Finlay and Parsnip rivers, from Tort McLeod to\nPort Graham, in tad. ona trapper is\nquoted as calling it a land where \"the\nlaw does. not. count.\"\nThe inspector, who went In with W.\nJ. McAlnn, ngcnl for the- Stuart %A*t*\nagency, and Sergeant Taylor, representing th'e police, says the stories\nbrought to Kdmonton by trappers\nabout leprosy and starvation In the\nSlkannl tribe, which Is nomadic, with\ncustomary concentration of 1'ort Graham, are absolutely untrue. He could\nfind no cases of skin disease, only\nthose ailments which affect all aborigines who have not been brought\nwithin the influence of western cleanliness.\nHe attributes the statement either\nto sheer ignorance, or to ulterior motives among the trappers, who wished\nto discourage others from\" going into\nthe   territory.\nBootleqging    Rampant\nMr.   Pragnell   describes   bootlegging\nas rampant, and alleges  frequent  and\nrelentless   destruction   of   game,   and\nbreach of tbe game laws.\nIt Is alleged that the trappers are\nJumping trapping areas formerly in\ncomplete control of the Indians, whose\nlivelihood solely depends on tbe exte.it\nof the  game.\nParticular complaint is made in\nconnection with wanton destruction\nof bever   In   the  close  season.\nIt Is stated that Fort McLeod, being\nnearer the avenues of civilization,\nhands of Indians are worse off there\nthan In the Fort Graham area, and\nare rapidly bftMH 4riven to despera\ntion. '. .\nInspector Pragnell recommends i\nresident police putrnl In the territory\nnffected, as the only way to cheek\nbootlegging, and game law evasi\nand protect the Indian trapping\nrights.\nSAYS LIBERALS\nSHELTER UNDER\nTHE TORY GUNS\nPremier MacDonald Also\nRakes Baldwin; Denies\nThat Industry Hurt\n14.\u2014(CHnadlii\nr      MacDonald\n'ception   by\nt   the   VVnvi\nEDINBURGH.   Ocl\nPress     Cable)\u2014Prerr\nwas given a great\ncrowd of about .\"000\nmarket   here  today.\nThe government had entered a contest of an obsolutely unique kind\nthe premier aald, addressing the\ngathering.\n\"The Liberal  party bad  gone under\nthe shelter of   the  Tory   guns   to   pre\nvent   the  Liberals   from   being  hope\nlessly  wiped   nut   in   this   election,\"   h\ndeclared.\n.Wants   a    Majority\n\"I do not mind them blaming u\nfor tho election,\" the premier assure*\n(he audience. \"When you yet what\nTory members of the house of commons described ::s contemptible party\ntactics to defeat the Lalmr party iii\nthe houfie. we must go back to the\nconstituencies and ask them to return us in sufficient numbers to defy\nboth  parties  combined.\"\nPremier MacDonald said he was\namazed to see in the election address\nof former Premier Baldwin, the absurd statement lhat bad trade had\nresulted in the Labor party's abolition of the M'Kennn duties. He\nchallenged Mr. ISaMwin tn make good\nthat statement, which he said was untrue.\nTlte Industries which had been affected by those duties hail Improved.\nWhat the country was suffering from\nnow was wastage of the war. and\nthe stupidity of the peace made\nafterward.\n, The premier's speech was frequently cheered.\nTRADE   COSffclSSIOYER   ' \"\"\"\nD1KS   FROM   I-YJTRIES\nMONTREAL, Oct. 14.\u2014As a result of injuries sustained when he\nfell from the steps of a street car\nhere early this month, Edward H.\nS. Flood, aged 70, the first Canadian trade commissioner to the British West Indies and British Guiana,\ndied  in  a  hoBpfta!  here  today.\nI\nFOUR\nON HERALD ISLE\nTwo Parties of Four Each\nLost From Karluk Six\nYears Ago\nTRIED TO MAKE\nA WAY OVERLAND\n1 \u25a0-?.p|n.\nCompass  and   Guns  With\nBones; May Have Been\nScientists\nN'OMK, Alaska, Oct. 14.\u2014Bones believed to be those of one of two\nparties of four each that were lost\narter the Karluk, the exploration ship\nof Viihjulmtir Stefansson. went down\nin the lee 10 miles north of Herald\nisland in 1918, have been found, according to information brought here\nwhen Capt. Louis Lane came Into\nport   with   the   steamer   Herman.\nIncidentally. Captain Lane announced that he had hoisted the\nStars and Stripes on Herald island,\nClaiming it for the untied states, ns\nBgalnst the recent seizure of Wrangell\nisland by a Russian Soviet gunboat.\nKaniuk   Lost   Sixty   Miles   Away\nThe Herman lay at Herald Island\ntwo days. On the beach were found\nbones believed those of one or two\nparties of four each that were lost\nafter the Karluk, an exploration ship\nof Stefansson. went down in the Ice\nt>0 miles north of Herald Island in\n1.HS. Paris of a sledge, a compass\nand two guns were seen with the\nbor;es.\nDr. Allison Forbes McKay nnd\nlames    Murray,     British    scientists:\nHenry    p.eauchut,    French    scientist,\nand Stanley .Morris, a Canadian\nsailor member, of the StefansHon\n1917-18 government arctic expedition,\nleft Stefnnsson's ship Karluk after it\nwas wrecked, and attempted to make\ntheir way to Wrangell island across\nthe he floe.-. They were never heard\njf   after   starting   their   attempt.\nSWEDISH ARMY\nISSUE DEFEATS\nMINISTRY\nTrygger  Cabinet  Resigns;\nKing Asks It to Keep\nHelm a While\nSTOCKHOLM, Sweden, Oct. 14.\u2014\nThe     Swedish     cabinet     tendered     Us\nresignation to K ng Qustav today, in\nConsequence 'if divergent views between it and pa rlia merit on the\nquestion   of   disarmament.\nErnest Tryggcr, the premier, and\nhis ministers were asked \u25a0 by the\nking to  retain  office  for the present\nAfter tHi' res gnatlon ot' the cabinet had been tendered, Premier\nTrygger declared that as under the\ndecision of tiie Geneva conference a\ngeneral conference on disarmament\nwould he summoned for next sum-\npier, H was his opinion that it\nwould lie Injurious to the country\nfor parliament to undertake a solution of Sweden's defence questions\nat   the   presenl   t me.\nA majority of the riksdag mem-\nbe,., however, did mil seem to share\nhis   view.\nClosing at 1 o'Gock Today f\nSome rousing specials that will bring yon\ndowntown early. Better to leave the breakfast\nfishes till you get back. I.;\nMAKE STRAIGHT FOR THE BAY\nWednesday Morning\nSpecials\nTHESE SPECIALS ARE ON SALE FOR  THIS\nMORNING ONLY,  OR  UNTIL  THE\nQUANTITIES ARE SOLD OUT\n100  YARDS  HEAVY  QUALITY  WHITE   FLAN-,\nNELETTE\u2014Warm, fleecy weave.   85 inches wide.\nWorth 45c. OQ\/\u00bb\nThis morning only, per yard  Ls\\j\\,\nGO YARDS COLORED STRIPED TURKISH TOWELING\u2014For Hand or Roller Towels. Heavy absorbent quality. 15 inches wide. i Q \u2014\nThis morning only, per yard  il\/C\n15 PAIRS ONLY, BEST QUALITY WHITE FLANNELETTE SHEETS\u2014Whipped separately, with\nblue striped border. Size 70x90 inches. fl\u00bbQ QQ\nSpecial this morning only, per pair ...\u00abPO\u00bb0*\/\n300   CAKES   PALMOLIVE   SOAP\u2014Regular  large\"\nsize.   Special this morning only, CA\/\u00bb\n7 cakes for  DVC\nMEN'S TWEED PANTS\nA GREAT ASSORTMENT OF MEN'S TWEED\nPANTS\u2014In light, medium and heavy weight\nTweeds. All shades; all sizes. Good strong quality and well made. d\u00bbQ Hf* <j*rj AA\nPrices, pair  \u00abPO\u00ab i D TO \u00abP I m\\f\\J\nKHAKI SERGE AND KHAKI MACKINAW\nBREECHES\u2014Good cut and well  made.\npair $5.00, $6.00 and $6.50\nMEN'S NEW TWEED CAPS\nALL THE NEW SHADES AND STYLES IN MEN'S\nCAPS\u2014For fall wear.    In Tweeds and Velours.\nFrom \u00abP 1.0(1 TO  &2.5U\nBOYS' NEW TWEED CAPS\u2014In Tweeds and Velours. All shades. tfj-| (\\(\\ dj-| (J A\nPrices   Jpl.UU AND  tPleDU\nBOYS' TWEED HATS\u2014In Donegal and lovat shade\nTweeds. <\u00a3l   OCT &1ETA\nEach   &1.&Q  AND  Jpl.OV\njOi^dsons |Jat$ (Ftfnipatiy Iffl\nPremier   Oliver   Says   the\nPrairies Sure to Appeal\nCrow Pact Reversal\nWhite Indians\nLeave Canada\nfor Washington\nBROCKVILLE, Ont., Oct. 14\u2014The\nWhite Indians, native of Southern\nPanama, after spending the summer\nat the home of rt. O. Marsh, their\ndiscoverer, near here, during which\nperiod they were the subjects of\nextensive investigation by scientists,\nleft today for Washington, Where\nthey will be placed in :i private\nschool preparatory to returning to\nTana ma.\nUrged by the members of his congregation that the work of Grace\nchurch Calgary and the larger Interests of Prebytcrian work In western\nCanada would suffer by his departure\nfrom tho field* Rev. Dr. Robert\nJohnston has taken steps to prevent\na unlmous call extended him by the\ncongregation of Parkdale Presbyterian\nchurch, Toronto, from going before\nthe Toronto Presbytery, .\nVICTORIA, Oct. 14.\u2014\"Until I secure an official copy of the ra hvay\nboard'h Judgmenl respect ing the\nCrow's Nest pass agreement, I cannot say what actio]] the government of British Columbia will take.\"\nsaid Premier Oliver today, in commenting on the Ottawa press dispatch telling of the deefs on of the\nboard to cull for withdrawal of the\nCrow's    .Vest    rates    within    16    days,\n\"So far as British Columbia la\nconcerned, and that particularly tbe\nfruit producing areas, the effect of\nthis decision of the board is to very\nmater ally reduce the discrimination\nagainst them. Personally I view\nwilh considerable misgiving a decision which overrides a statutory\nagreement which has been in force\nfor last 28 years. I understand\nthat the decision of the board means\nthey agree with the contention of\nthe, railways that the Crow's Nest\nPass act was superseded by tbe general Railway act of 192S. I feel\nquite sure that the decision of the\nboard will be Immediately appealed\nby the governments of the three\nprairie   provinces.\"\nDiscrimination Remains\nUnder conditions as they will exist when the Crow's Nest Pass agreement becomes inoperative, freight\nrates will be on the same level ns\nthey were before July 7, and tho\nPacific coast, route, ami British Columbia generally will be subjected\nto the same discrimination as formerly existed.\n\"It was against that discrimination that we first commenced our\nfight,\" sa (1 Premier Oliver, \"and so\nfar as I am concerned it will be\ncarried on. It means, to get down\nto figures, that wheat growers of the\nCalgary and Kdmonton areas will be\ncharged   22   1-2   cents   a   bushel   for\nfov-\nas compared to a straight rate\n26 cents from ihe Calgary-Edn\nton area to Fort William, sev\ntimes the d stance. The transport!\ntion companies, argue, in attemp\ng to explain the spread betwpf\ncharges f'*r carrying export and A-\nmestie wheat, tha! grain in th\nmer class is shipped 'ex-VanCOUV\nfor export.\" and not to its destln\ntion. I contend that the same nr\nliment holds good in the Case\nwheal shipped to Fort William,\nis shipped ex-Fort William f<\u00bbr e\nport, vet it takes the lower ia\nor wheat shipped to the laki he;\nfor   domestic   purpose;;.\"\nsIking and sloan\nGREET PREMIER\nMeet Him at Nanaimo on\nArrival From Prince Rupert;  Victoria Next\nVancouver Driver\nAppears in Court\nfor Hit-arJ-Run\nVANCOUVER,\nthat       HelTV\nIM    that    sir\niritlsh Colun\nVancouver Council\nRaises Peddler Fee;\nRetail Fee Holds\n. -Reaffirming\nany   reduction\nimposed    upon\nVANCOUVER, net.\nits refusal to consld.\nin the |25 licence f.\nretail merchants, the\ncity council today agreed to make\ncurtain concessions following a second conference with the retail merchants. Alderman H, K, Almond\nagreed to niov. nt a meeting tomorrow that Hi- rec imposed en bankers\nand peddlers he increased fi.\u00bbtu $56\n10 !7T>. and that (he police he instructed to enforce the early closing\nbylaw    more   stringently.\nThe    city    secures    ?70,aoo    annually\nfrom   retailers.\nFoley Acquitted of\nBrother's Murder;\nOut Three Minutes\nKEYBURN, Sask,, Oct. 14.\u2014 Ram\nFoley was acquitted today on charge\nof murder of his brother Richard,\nnear Ritchie, Sask., of April 10, last,\nby a jury, after three minutes deliberation.\nAccording to evidence, Richard\nFoley, was a. bad character in the\ndistrict, and had got h mself info\nnumerous escapades.\n  _   _._     '  Evidence  showed   that  a  year ago\nwheat shipped to Vancouver for ex-j Mrs. Sam Foley left hpr husband,\nport, and 41 1-2 for wheat shipped land went to live with her brother-\nto Vancouver for domestic demand,   in-law.\nVAN)\nli.    Kin\nbit  her\nwhere  ;\nSloan\n)UVER, Oct. 14.\u2014Hon. J.\n,   minister   of   public   works,\nthis afternoon for Nanaimo,\n^ was met by Hon. William\nmd     proceeded     to     Comox,\nuhei;e they met Rt. Hon. W. L.\nMackenzie King, prem er, on his arrival    from    Prince   Rupert.\nPremier King reached Comox\nshortly  after   y   o'clock  tonight.\nAccording'to the present program,\nthe premier will not make any\npublic addresses until he reaches\nVictor a    Thursday.\nHe will go to Courtenay tomorrow\nafternoon, where he will officiate\nat ihe turning of the first sod of\nthe new po.nt office; and it is expected he will pay short visits to other\nplaces- in the district. The party\nw il   proceed   to   Victoria,\nlir. King will remain with the premier's patty until it leaves British\nColumbia, the premier's last appearance in the province on his present\nvisit be ng scheduled fur Tuesday,\nOctober  28,  at   Fernie.\nUrge Portland\nPlan for Coast\nof Health Card\nVANCOUVER,   Oet.   14.\u2014Adoption   of\nthe   Portland   system   to   ensure   that\nno store or restaurant employees handling foodstuffs are suffering from\ninfect ions diseases, was urged by a\ndelegation from the Progressive league\nhi tore the civic health committee.\nIn Portland all employee* are required to carry a card which certifies that ihey have heen given a\nclean   bill   of   health   by   a   doctor.\nRe\\\nDr. VV. H. Heart\/, of Amherst,\nNova Scotia, is said to be the oldest\nminister engaged in active church\nwork in Canada today. He ia. the\nuncle of the present lieutenant-governor of Prin.se Kd-vard island, Prank:\nR. Heariz. Three years ago hla wife,\nwho was the daughter of Hon. Thomas\nKtliam. the first member of parliament to represent Yarmouth, Nova\nScotia, died inn her 72nd year after\nthey had been married for more than\n54  yea is.\nA graduate in arts and medicine of\nMoOfl] university, and yet unable to\nvote, disfranchised owing to the fact\nthat he is a full-tdooded Indian of the\nCaughnawaga reservation, Dr. J, H.\nJacobs, ra. M.l>. was recently a\nvisitor to western Canada with hie\nwife. Dr. Jacobs ts medical officer\nfor tbe Indian hosital on that reservation and has also a considerable\npractise among the white people ot\nthe district  near Montreal,\n HMJUII   WUl Jill   7-\nPaji Tea\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1923\nThe .AfkiVAlfll SYSTEM\nIN BAD SHAPE,\nSOLONS STATE\nLadies' heavy-weight Underwear,\nto clear: Drawers 65^, Vests 75^\u00bb.\nBrown. Black or White Hose, 35,* :\npair. Bobbed Hair Ivory Combs, (\n25<*. Root Pulper, S20.00. Hieri-\ncloset four-hole RanKi', with water\nconnections, $51.50. Axminster\nKllK. 9x10'n. $01.50, Table Oilcloth, 45-Inch. 65\u00ab* yard. Men's\nOveralls, heavy weight, $2.35 pair.\nLinoleum   Hugs,   ull   sizes.\nJ.\nViola   534\nW. HOLMES\neo*  Tsrnoa Itreet\nMayor Choquette Suggests\nExperienced Aid to Better Present System\nWe Specialize in\nCorrecting\nSatisfactorily\nDEFECTIVE\nEYESIGHT\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN\nFORTY THOUSAND\nIN THE TREASURY\nHorswill Favors the North\nFork Line; Austin Line\nto Cottonwood Lake\nB.C.  PLUMBING\nHEATING  CO.\n&\nAgents  for   ..\nALBERTA   CLAY    PRODUCTS\nSEWER PIPE and  DRAIN TILE\nBIG DANCE\nAt Bonnington Hall\nOct. 17, Starting 8 p.m. Sharp.\nNelson O.W.V.A, Full Orchestra.\n Miilniylit   Bttpper.\nWe Sell and  Recommend\nMALKIN'S   BEST\nTaa,   Coffee,   Baking   Powder,  Salmon,\nEtc.\nFLEMING'S STORE,    .\nFAIRVIEW\nWEDNESDAY, OCT. 15\nGrand\nFootball Game\nSt. Saviour's vs. Outlaws\nNelson\nTrail\nCollection   on   Ground.\nBANQUET,   6:30\nReservations  from  Committee.\nBIG FOOTBALL DANCE\nMEMORIAL   HALL, 9  TO  2\n$1.00   Couple.\nCapitol Orchestra    Refreshments\nTour   hearty   support    soli< ite.l.\nThat the present water system\nwhich supplied the city was in a\nbail Hhape was the opinions expressed by Mayor L. It. ChoqueUe,\nAlderman A. S. Horswill anil Alderman I. A. Austin last nitfht when\nquestioned. Three members of the\ncity council, however, all had somewhat different ideas as to a remedy,\nlt was the general opinion that a\nnew pi pt'line was nee.essary, and\nthat It should be extended above the\npresent intake to at least Cottonwood creek. All three expressed\nan opinion that the present typhoid\neases in the city had not arisen from\npoop    water.\nGot Authority to Work\n\"As far its 1 am concerned my\nidea is lo have someone look over\nthe sit ua lion. Let someone who\nknows go into the matter and make\nsuggest inns as to plans and costs.\"\nsuch was the stalemeni of Mayor L.\nIf. Choipielte last night in ref-i rin'4\nto Ihe bettering of Ihe city water\nsupply.\nThe council members, he stated.\nhad talked the water question ever,\nand had proposed many solutions for\na better supply. In lis estimation\na pipeline right to Cottonwood lake\nlooked to he the boat. The piping\nof the creek the whole of the way\nwould he a good solution, as it was\nshown that there wan at pres.-nt\nmuch seepage between Cottonwood\nlake   and   the   present   Intake.\n\"We have no idea of the present\nseepage there. I am not an engineer, and it is my idea to have suggestions of different ways ami icans\nami the cost of these from some authority,\"   sa'd ,the   mayor,\n(.Jit est io tied regarding moneys in\nIhe sinking fund for the purpose\nof renewing the line, the mayor\nstated that at the end ot\" this year\ntiie principal and interest would\namount to M2.000. Ot that amount\n$20,000 had been hi id aside a year\nago and that $18,000 had heen laid\naside last year. These amounts, wth\nthe interest, would this year amount\ni.( $42,OUO sel aside for the renewal\nof Water works.\nNo   I ear   of   Contamination\n\u2022\u25a0|    have   no   fear   whatsoever   that\nI the   water   is   contaminated   with   typhoid   germs.\"   stated   Alderman  A.   S.\n(Horswill   yesterday,   when   questioned\nregarding     the     eity     Water     supply.\nCases   original tig   in   town,   he   stated\nwere    the    usual    occurrences   every\ndemlc In the city, as far as city!\nwater and the milk supply was concerned. Were these sources contaminated, he stated, there would no\ndoubt be hundreds of cases arising\nIn the ctty. instead of only four,\nas reported by the medical health\nofficer.\nln regard to the changing of the\nsystem of delivery of water to the\ncity Alderman Austin stated that\nCottonwood water wus as good as\ncould be obtained as long as the\nsupply lasted. He advocated the\ncleaning out of the lake of the logs\nand dead wood which had existed\nthere for years. These logH were\nthere when the present system was\ninstalled, and although the cost\nwould be quite a little, he was of\nthe opinion that a cleanup would put\nthe lake and water in first class\nshape.\nCouldn't   Stop   Seepage\nThe present Intake as It was situated allowed the water to seep\nthrough from the lake. It passed\nthrough several ranches. These\nranches had refuse. The ctty\ncouldn't stop a rancher from owning a horse, cows or chickens and\nletting them run on his own property. Refuse wasn't going to run up\nhill, and It was only natural that it\nwould find a way to the creek. The\nonly solution was to go to Cottonwood   lake  for   the   water.\nCottonwod lake, he stated was\npure. The only trouble at present\nwas a poor pipeline and poor intake,\nExtend the present line about one\nand a half miles to Cottonwood lake,\nput in a complete new system of new\nand larger pipe, and as long as the\nsupply lasted, there would he no\ntrouble,  he stated.\nIn case of a water shortage, Alderman Austin stated that provisions\nshould be made to pipe water from\nWhitewater creek over the divide to\nCottonwood,   which    was   a   natural\nservoir.\nANALYSIS MADE\nBY WIDDOWSON\nAT WRONG T\nAnimals Don't Wade in the\nSnow Water; Refuse\nNot Foul Then\n\"AQUA\" TAKES ISSUE\nWITH StDENIS, TOO\nir.      lie\nDr.'  B,\nof   t he\nArthur,\nBUY ADVERTISED GOODS\nBacked By The Maker\nBulbs\nHyacinths\nPink,   i>\nDaffodils,\nand Ii\ndoz\t\nPoetlcus\nKyi.   i\nSingle 'I\ndus.\nSingle Tu\nDouble   'I\n(yellow)\nred),  di\nDouble Ti\nWlnl\n\u2022r duz.\nEmperor, (lolde\n$1.00\nper\n'So*\n40<\u00bb\n(deep\n70e\nGrizzeile's   Greenhouses\nNELSON, B.C.\nne opinion\nly medical\nthere was\neilv water sup-\nlid   have  struck\nthe    alderman,\ni   Ihe\n\u25a0d   tha\niperly\nth   I'm it   win\nIntake\ninK    ill\n,   the   in\nif   a\ntilt nit\na-   state\nC'ttV.\n'il.    Ik\nke,\nip the\ntpecial intake\nn should lie\n, would load\n\u25a0onlaioiniition,\nilllilul  supply\nHORSWILL IS\nREELECTED AS\nPRESIDENT\nBoy Scout Association\nHolds Annual Meeting\nand Hears Reports\nIts    i\nhall\n; Horswill\nel   president\ntion for Hi\nimil meetini\n<t night.\nwas    unanimously\n\u00bbf the hoy scout\ncoming year at\nheld In the eity\nV.   Husk   for vice-\npresident. W, C.\ntary-treasurer am\nKenftle for hono\nofficer  were  also\nCrebbin    for    necre-\nI    Dr.    H,    H.    Mac-\nary medical health\nelected unanimously.\nAn executive was elected, and reports from troops No. 1, No, 2 and\nNo.   :t   for  the  past   year  Were  received.\nIn   moving  Mr,  Horswill'a  reappointment,   District   Commissioner   Kred   L.\n11 win   spoke   in   high   terms   of   praise\nnf   ills   work   In   the   last   year.\nExecntive   Elected\nThe executive elected, with power\nin add to its own members, consisted\nof tiie president and other officers,\nIncluding Scoutmasters .1. i-'osro. Rev.\n\\. li. B. Larmonth and Nelson Hall,\n;is well as Yen. Archdeacon Fred II.\nOraham, P. O. Carter. T. Dolphin.\nA. A Perrier, V. Blakeman, David\nKeen, Chief Thomas H, Lour, Alex\nLeith, W. ''. Leno, Mrs. It. 1>. Hall\nrepresenting auxiliary for troop No. 1,\n.Mrs. W. H. Barker for troop No. 2\nand Mrs. lt. A. England for troop\nNo.    3,\nAfter the reading of the reports\ni! was announced hy tiie president\nthat No. 8 patrol of No. I troop,\nheaded hy Patrol Leader Jimmle Orr,\nwas the winner of the Clarldge shield\nfor the year. The other member.')\nof tti. patrol are Bobbie Burns. Joe\nVigneux. .lack Young, C. Wanlle. '!.\nKerr   and   <'.   Wilson.\nThe shield will lie presented hy the\ndistrict commissioner and president,\nwiih   the  commendation  ami   congrntu-\nSays  Nelson  Can  Afford\nWater System Worthy\nof Queen City\nTo the  Editor of The  Dally News.\nSir\u2014I have read with interest the\nvarious articles in your paper concerning the condition of Nelson's\nwater I con made a> few unbiased\nremarks   on   this   subject.\nIn your report of Mr. Wiiblowson's\nstatements, in Monday's paper, you\nare somewhat misleading, for In\ntin- headltiK you report him as saying that the water is pure, while\nin reality II was found to be pure\nonly when annlysized last spring,\nwhen the creek WU swollen with\nclear snow water, at a time when\ndomestic animals are not in the\nhabit of wading in the creek, and\nwhen any dish-water or refuse,\nthrown near It, would not be ln\nsuch an advanced stale of decomposition   as   in   the   heat   of   summer.\nFurthermore, Mr. Widdowson\nhimself said that' present conditions\nhOUId   he at once  reined ed.\nDisguising    Ih   Had    Policy\nIn another report in your paper,\nMr. StDenis says that the whole mat-\nshould lie hushed up, so that\npeople intending to come to Nelson\nnot frightened away from it\nhy   reports  of  bad  water.\nThis is a very wrong view of\nthe matter, for ln disguis ng the\nfacts from outside people, it blinds\nthe citizens themselves to their own\ndanger, and makes no provision for\nremedy, which won hi come in\ntime through the force of public\nop nion.\nThe remedy, however, is obvious.\nNelson Is supposed to he one of the\nbest financially situated cities in\nNorth America, so It can well afford\nto instal a sanitary water system\n\u25a0worthy of the Queen city of the\nKootenays\u2014and the sooner it does\nit,   the   better.\nThank ng you for the space you\nhave  so kindly  allowed  me.\nAQl'A.\nNelson,   B.C.,   Oct.   14,   1924.\nFOREIGNERS WOULD\nBECOME CANADIANS\nof   Hie\natioii.\nIn   llu\nut ll\nstales,\nlhat\nverj\nhe;\nVote\nwt\nto\nthe\n11\newnl\ni     ntake    would    be\nost nf the water now\ne city, stated Alder-\nw:ih   from   the   north\nIn\nold\nrta\nstated   tl\nat preset\nminatlon\npossibilit.'\non tin\nnit although there was\nt in his opinion any\nin the creek, there\ns for such. Alderman\nit present he had little\nsubject uf a new water\nsystem.\nAdvocated  System   for Years\n\"I    have   advocated   a\nwater\nmain and system foi' years,\" stated\nAlderman I. A. Austin last night,\nwhen questioned regarding the solution for tiie present water situation.\n\u2022\u25a0My   advice   on    the    matter   is   the\nputt ng down of ;i new main of heavier and large pipe, and the extension\n\u00ab,f    it    lu    the    hanks    of    Cottonwood\ncreek.\"\nAlderman Austin was of the\nopinion thai there was not at present    any    danger   of   a    typhoid    epi-\nPlumbing Contractors\nON THE NEW TRAFALGAR SCHOOL\nNelson Plumbing & Heating Co.\nP.O.   Box   174 -    Nelson,   B.C.   \u2022 Cor.    Baker   end    Kootenay   Sts.\nFix That Roof Now\nIf you have a roof to repair, we recommend and can\nsupply in any quantity\nWOVALOID\nGuaranteed Ready Roofing\nIn half, one, two and three ply.\nEvery Hull  Guaranteed,\nSamples and  Prices on Request.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE NELSON, B.C. RETAIL\nmoved to tiie retiring >\neluded P. Blakeman as\nretatj, hy Archdeacon\nIt was decided tn\ngeneral meeting of th'\nthe   second   Tuesday   in\nI't\nid.-tit\nng\nThe\nefo\nih.it   tun\nof th\n\u25a0fflcer:\nlast  ;\nsp.\nignation of Mr. Crebbin a;\neuliinasler   was   accepted.\nHe, as secretary-treasurer, was mi\nthorized to send |25 to Victoria at\npart of the association's quota ti\ntin*   provincial   association.\n.Mr. Crebbin was also uuthorlzed t<\nplace lusurnnee on the buildings \"i\nDie   hoy   scout   property   near  Knkane*\nA meeting of the newly eleeted ex.-r\nalive   will   he   held   Ue.Vt    Week.\nJudge   Brown   Hears   and\nGrants Four Applications\nfor Naturalization\nJudg J. R. Brown of Grand Porks\nheard the applications for naturalisation of four obviously nervous foreigners In county court yesterday\nmorning.\nThe first, Hans Sells of Sandon,\nsaid he had lived in Canada, about\n11 years, continuously, and intended\nto make his home here. Following a\nrequest from the judge, he' showed\nhis' ability to read English us well\nas speak It by reading part of his\napplication form aloud. He was\nvouched for by S. J. Towgood, and\nhis   application   was   granted.\nO. tfiervonino said he was a miner;\nthat he had lived In Canada 14 years,\nand that he had never appeared ln\npolice court hefore, during that time.\nHe could read a newspaper In English, h\u00ab said, but It was only on repeated encouragements from Judge\nHrown that he got through part of\nhis application form. His applies\ntion    was    granted.\nJoseph Stafanac and Pete Fufihak\nboth said they had had to report\ndaily during the war but had not\nieen placed in detention camps. Asked\nf he had ever been in any trouble\nin Canada during his II years, Pets\nFushak said, \"Never, no place.\" He\nis a resident of Bonnington at pres-\nJom'ph Stafanac said he had\nlived nt South Siocan, and that he\nthought   the  stationmaster  there  would\n>uch     for    hitn.       Both    applications\nere granted.\nJoseph   popredoff,   whose   name   was\ni the court registrar's list for appearance, was not ln court when his\nname   was   called.\nFLEMING NOTES\nOMISSION OF\n'AUTHENTICITY'\nArgues That Council Is Not\nAsking for \"Suppression\"\nof News\nSANDON WOMAN\nIS NATURALIZED\nLena Paul Says Sandon Citizens Vouch for Her;\nConvictions Alleged\nWhen Lena Paul of Sandon. spinster    and    Russian    Jewess,    came    up\nfor examination in connection with\nher naturalisation papers in county\ncourt here yesterday morning, she\nlold Judge .1. R. Brbwn of Grand\nPork* she made her living bv raising\nchickens.\n\"Only by raising chickens?\" said\niiis honor,\n\"Weil, hy raisins' chickens and\nselling a few eggs,\" .Miss Paul said.\n- \"Have you ever appeared in court\n1 of11re during your 1-I years in Canada?\"   was llie next  question  asked.\n\"To   pay   my   taxes.'   tiie   jady   said.\n\"Haven't you ever been served with\na   blue   paper?\"   said   the  judge.\n\"I don't understand you,\" was Ihe\nunswe\nTo the   Editor  of The  Daily   News.\nSir\u2014Your editorial of this morning\nuled:    'The   Daily    News    Will    Not\nmnive   ut   Suppression   of   News   of\nTyphoid    Menace,'    and    which    contained   as   opening   paragraph;   'The\nc'ty    council    is    taking    the    wrong\nline   in  asking  that   news  of the  typhoid     epidemic    in     Nelson    should\nlie   suppressed,'   la   entirely    misleading   as   to   the   intent   of   the   resolution   1  sponsored at last night's council    meeting.\nThe sad resolution  rends:\nThe Uosidiition\n\"That the editor of The Daily\nNews be interviewed by iiis Worship Mayor Choipiette and kindly\nadvised not to consent to publication\nul\" statements detrimental to the\nstanding of Nelson, without first\nconsulting w'sh of the city authorities as to ih.- authenticity of such\nmatter.\"\nEvidently you took the reporters\nnotes for your Information, which\nwere not complete, in as much as we\nasked that you refer to the city\nauthorities jib to the authenticity\nuf such reports. We did not suggest\nthai von required our consent\npub! sh   any   material.\nThis correction is made, believing\nthat the council has a right to tbe\nconfidence and cooperation of the\npress and citizens before a detri\nmental report is broadcast without\nthe chance of contradiction. The\neon nel is surely interested in the\ngood health of the corn in unity, but\nif after consultation no action\ntaken to remedy an alleged existing\nevil, then go the limit, but give the\ncouncil   a   chance   first.\nROSS  FLEMING,\nAlderman\nNelson,   B.C.,   Oct.   14,   1934.\nme says you\n\u25a0s in your 14\neplng a bawdy\n'This    form    before\nhave   heen   up   ;u<   thn\nyears in Canada  fnr ke\nhouse,\"    said    Judge    It\nAdmits One Conviction\n,Vfler severul long speeches, which\nhe told her were not to the point,\nMiss Paul sa: I she had last been\nlonvicted eight yecrs ago. She gave\nthe names of Revival prominent Sandon iltlzens whom she said would\nvoii.-h  f<\u00bbr her as a  desirable  I'una-\n1 n-r   application   wa\nanted.\nThe streets of Tokio. which always\nwere the subject \"\u25a0* severe criticism\nfrom those aeeustomed to the advanced facilities of the Occident and whose\ncondition became even worse as a re-\nsuit of the earthquake last September, are at hist to be paved. By the\nend of li*2S it is hoped to have the\nentire program completed.\nCIRCLE IS HOSTESS\nAT TRINITY CHURCH\nEntertain Members of Congregation at Concert and\nAt Home\nThe ladies of Circle No. 1, president\nMrs. Tyrrell, of Trinity Methodist\nchurch, entertained a large numher\nof the members of the congregation\nat an at-home last evening. The\nprogram consisted of a number of\ncontests interspersed with Instrumental duels by Mr. and Mrs. John Ben-\nn. vocal solos by Mrs, E. Hlggin-\nbotham, and readings hy Mrs. Gordon\nAllen. The program was closed by\nihe   serving   of   refreshments.\nAnother activity of the church yes-\nterday  was the formation  of a Canadian      standard     efficiency      training\ngroup,   with   Harold   Hinilt  in   charge.\n\u2014\nBANFF   DANCE   POPULAR\nA crowd of about ISO people were\nin attendance at the first dance of\nthe season given by the popular Banff\ndance orchestra. Refreshments were\nserved   at   midnight.\nSOUTH SLOCAN\nHONORS BOUNTY\nHarvest) Thanksgiving Service Is Held at St. Matthew's Church\ndated\ntervicei\nand\nservi'\nSOUTH HLOCAN, H.C, Oct. 14.\u2014\nev. I'. E. Turner of Rossland offi-\nt the harvest thanksgiving\nIn St. Matthew's church lasl\nV celebration of huly corn-\nwas held In the morning,\nthe evening a full choral\nThe church was beautifully\ndecorated with masses of flowers und\nautumn foliage. An abundance of\nchoice fruit and vegetables were effectively displayed. Mrs. (i. K. Ashhy\nwas the organist, and the decorations\nwere done by Mrs. Ashby, Mrs. H,\nl.'ster, Mrs. 1). Cruickshunk and Mrs.\nl'\\   II.   Russel.\nGordon   Jewel   of Cranbrook  motored\nthrough   and   spent   a   few   days   tour-\nIng    the    district.      He    wns    the   guest\nMr.   and   Mrs.   A.   Somerville   during\nMay.\nMrs. j, Friesen has returned from\na two weeks\" visit to Spokane and\nother   points.\nNelson News of the Day\nWher*  are yon going Friday  night?\nBonnington  Dance.     Buret (6709)\nWanted   \u2014   Greengages,       Damsons.\nMcDonald Jam Company. (6624)\nCUMMINS  TAZI.     PHONE   44.\n(6452)\nWanted At Once \u25a0\norchard run apples.\nCompany,   Nelson.\nBUr   time,   hot   time,\nOctober 17.\nto   p.\nMcDonald    Jam\n(6610)\nBonnington\n(6709)\nComfortable\nUnderwear\nYOU won't have to freeze to death outdoors and you\nwon't have to keep the house boiling hot ft your\nunderwear is warm. It doesn't have to be heavy. This\nunderwear isn't; in fact, it is quite thin and light.\nMade of wool, silk-and-wool, wool-and-cotton or all-\ncotton, in Stanfields, True-Knit, Penmans, Viking and\nWatson's makes.\n$2.30 A SUIT TO $12.00\nYOUR    MONEY'S   WORTH\nOR   YOUR   MONEY   BACK\nSH0REACRES MAN\nFILLS HIS SILO\nSIlUKKAi'ltKH,    B.C.,   Oct.   14.\u2014R.   C.\nI'assnioie has just recently had his\nsilo filled with corn. 1'. V. Tarry\nwas in charge, and used his tractor\nfor tie- work. Three teams Were also\nkept   steadily   employed.\nMrs.   ltnht   of   Trail   is   the   guest   of\nMrs.   It.  I'.   Passmore  for a few  weeks.\nGIVE SHOWER FOR\nAPPLEDALE MAID\nAPl'LK\npleasant\n\u25a0a i.i-:,\nMi\nld\nOct. 14,\u2014A\nis spent at the\nMrs. J. Browse.\nSaturday, when a few vtf their friends\ngave a shower for their daughter.\nwho is lea\\ ing for Vancouver in a\nfew days to be married. Those present were Mr, and Mrs, J. Scovll. Mr.\nand Mrs, ,\\V. B. Anderson, F. Anderson, c, Anderson, Mrs. A. Lelen. Mrs.\nA. Bridge, Mrs. T. Brandon and Mrs.\nW. T. Wynne. tubers, unable to be\npresent,   sent   gifts   for  the  shower.\nA,    Chapman    left    for    Winnipeg\nTuesday.\nMrs Bowen. who has heen visiting\nher mother. Mrs. Klvnn, left for her\nhoms   In   California   Friday.\nf*. Wilson has gone to Dakota,\nWhere,   he   will   reside   with   relatives.\nJ. H. Steele, who has spent the\nsummer here with his son, left for\nhis home ut McKwun. Alia. He expects   to   return   for   the   winter.\nA small mouse at Lille, France,\nsucceeded In throwing half the city\nInto darkness and -causing $20,000\ndamage. At the central general electric light plant the Inquisitive little\nanimal got itself mixed up in the\nmachinery.\n\\\nCINDERELLA   CLUB\u2014A  mittlng   Of\nCinderella   Club   members  will b*  held\nat   5:30   p,m,   Thursday   next   ln   Mr.\na.   W.  Dawson's  Office,  Ward  \u25a0tr\u00abt.\n(M\u00bbY)\nsten!      October   20\u2014\nis of England Whist\nMemorial  Hall.    Ad-\n(6690)\nop!    Look!    L\nand   liaut;hte\ne   and   Social,\nion,   3,ri   cents\nW. W. Ferguson, Barrister, Solicitor.\nNotary Public, Gilker Block. (85*4)\nKeep October 16 open for Tea and\nBake Sale. Women's Auxiliary, Ht. Saviour's Church, Memorial Hall, 3 to 6.\n(IJ57D)\nOh, Boy!\nOotober 17.\nBonnington Danes for me,\n(6709)\nHear the Mission Band Concert at\nSt. Caul's Church on Thursday, October 23. \"A Night With the\" Canadian    Indians,\"   In   song   and   story.\n(6710)\nNOTICE\n. The power will he off this morn-\nting for about twenty minutes commencing at 6 am. (67U)\nAll interested In hockey, meet\nThursday night. See tomorrow's paper\nfor    time   and    place. (6718)\nAH 1.0.1X8. members and their families are expected to attend the annual\nnance nn Friday evening without formal   invitation. (6715)\n1 Evrrybody to ths football gams at\n3 ('clock today; danos, 9 o'clock. Sm\n\/display ad. (6716)\nMonthly meeting \"f the Women's\nInstitute will be held tn the K.P.\nHall Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock.\nMrs. Hugh Itoss will speak on \"Points\nin Judging Domestic Science.\" Mr.\nW. J. HUcppard will give a lantej-n\nlecture   on    \"Horticulture.\" (6717)\nA new 400-room hotel may be erected on the site of the present Russell\nbouse at Ottawa. .\n\"Proper Food and Exerciie,\" by ARTHUR A. McGOVERN\nFormer physical director, CotmU Medical College)\nWatch for squeaks in\nthe human machine\nVOU would\n*\u25a0 not expect\na maohine to\nkeep going day\nin and day out\nwithout proper\ncare and oiling\n\u2014wonldyou? If\nit got out of or.\nder yon would\nhave it overhauled\u2014would -\nn't you?\nYour body ia\nan exact parallel to a raacl*ne.\nYou cannot\nabuse it and get\ngood work out of it. When a\nmanufacturer delivers a new\nautomobile he gives specific instructions as to the proper care.\nThe motor has to be gradually\nworked in. Tho wise owner always exercises caTe to see that\nthese instructions are carried\nout intelligently. If we would\nonly give our own human machine 10 per cent of the care\nand attention we give mechanical machines our bodies would\ngive us 20 years additional and\nbetter service.\nThe first squeak that appears\nin oar automobile gets imme\ndiate attention or we take it to\na repair shop. We know that if\nwe neglect to give it the proper\nattention something more seri.\nous will happen.\nNature gives us the same\nsqueaks in the form of headaches and other pains. If when\nthese distress signals appear\nwe were as careful to investigate our functional machinery,\nserious ailments would very\nrarely  occur.\niooh.\nWatch Your Body\nfbrWa.rnincj Signals\nWh\u00bbn tb\u00ab\ngauge on out*\nautomobile liff*\nnines that th*\noil well is filled,\nwe do not at;\ntempt to force\nmore oil into\nthe motor. We\nknow that eur-\nplui oil will\ncause mechanical deficiency.\nYet we continually pack food\ninto our ayatem\nirrespective of\nwhether our\nown gauge, is continually crying\n\"Full!\" People frequently Indulge in dinners consisting of\nas many as ten courses. They\ngo home and spend a aleepleai\nnight and have to resort to cathartics and feel sluggish end\nheavy.\nIndigestion, constipation, Insomnia, rheronatism, appendicitis, etc., and many other of our\ncommon diseases can usually be\ntraced directly to overeating and\nlack of exercise.\nThe following exercises will\nkeep one toned up and should be\ntaken daily: When you awaken\nin the morning, lie flat on your\nback, raise the right leg up and\ndown, repeat with the left leg,\nraise both legs up and down.\nHands extended over the head,\nsit up and touch your toes.\nThese exercises should be taken\nsix times at the beginning and\nincreased one count a day until\nyou are able to do theae exercises fifteen times each.\nThere is suggested below, \u00bb'\nwell-balanced diet for the aver-\nago person.\nDiet for Average Person\nBREAKFAST:   Fruit, bran or graham muffins, cocoa or\na coffee substitute.    Two glasses of water between\nbreakfast and lunch.\nLUNCHEON:   Some soup, vegetable salad, dark bread,\nglass of milk, alternating with boiled or poached eggs.\nTwo glasses of water between lunch and dinner.\nDINNER: Lean meat, fish or chicken, a green vegetable,\na baked potato, be sure to eat the skin, and for dessert\nfresh fruit in season, nuts or crackers and cheese.\nWeak tea, cocoa or chocolate.\nUr. McGovern mil answer your questions.   Hit addrett it\ni W. 66th St., New York City. e, a. a. McOovara\n11 f#l iM*\nA picture which contains all the ingredients of 100%\nentertainment.    Elaborate  sets, beautiful  costumes,\ntense dramatic moments and plenty of laughs.\nThe All-Star Cast Includes\nViola Dana, Lew Cody\nand Monte Blue\n=Short Features=\nComedy, \"YUKON JAKE\"\n, Pathe Review\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1924_10_15","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0402094","@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":"1924-10-15 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1924-10-15 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\/1.0402094"}