{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-11-03","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1926-10-12","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0403157\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" eeesyseeeeemm\nF\u00bbfB   T*B   \"*\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 12, 1926\nThe .Ark\n\u2022FECIALS\u2014w. are overstocked\nwith Comforter.. Until stock tr, reduced we will give 25'\/' discount.\nOur Bargain Table le atll! well \u00abup-\nBlled with good, at 25\u00bb* i\u00bbr yard.\nIlen'i Work Shirts, good quality.\n$1.25. Overalla. heavy. 82.25\nPair. Men's Winter t'niletwenr.\n$2.00 P?r suit.\nMwiw 534\nJ. W. HOLMES\n\u202206 Virnon  tt\nNelson's Dispensing Chemists\nCITY DRUG CO.\nFilma, Kodak*, Drum, Stationary,\n\u2022fall Ordera Promptly Despatched\n\u25a0OX 1013     Nelson. B.C.     PHONE 84\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nSpecializing    In   Correcting    Defective\nSight   by    Proper   Gl.iaoa.\nQuick  Rapalr Service.\nGRIFFIN    BLK.    -    \u25a0    PHONE   125\nNelson Business College\nEVENING CLASSES\nIndividual  Tuition\nincrease Your Salary\nP.&W.\nPHONE 235\nAPPLES\u2014For Cooking or  Des-\n\"\"'\u25a0     Bo* 81.00\nGRAPES\u2014Red   Emperor.\nLb 20<*\nONIONS\u2014Good   keepers.\n100 lbs 82.O0\nQUALITY   GROCEP^.S\nRead The Daily\nNews Every\nDay\n\"All the News While It Is\nNews\"\nDelivered to your door\nin Nelson before breakfast\nevery day for 25c a week.\nBy mail outside Nelson,\n60c a month, ?6 a year.\nThe newspaper with the\ncomplete news service.\nTO BE AIDED\nApportion $500 Toward Huge\nMeet in  Early Year  for\nSchool Children\nIS PART OF BALANCE\nAFTER LABOR DAY FUN\nSome for Expenses at Nelson\nMeet; Committee to Decide\non Other Plans\nTRAIL, Oct. 11.\u2014Finding themselves\nwith thf tidy balance of $675 cash\nIn hand after all expenses of the\nrecent Labor day celebration had\nbeen paid* the celebration committee\ntonight unanimously decided to devote thla balance entirely to the entertainment and promotion of sport\namong Trail youngsters of school age\nand below.\nAlderman J. A. McKinnon. chairman of the Labor day celebration\ncommittee, submitted the financial\nstatement, which showed that the\ntotal amount collected from amelter\n\u25a0 \u25a0mi.loyft'K, other citizens and business\nmen, totaled $2314. Expenditures on\nthe celebration totaled $1635.40, leaving\na  cash   bank   balance  of  |B78.fiO.\nThe itemized statement showed expenditures as follows: Sports, $619.10;\nrefreshment*, $541.15; first aid, $59;\nmusic, $207.10; decorations, $65.95;\nJointing, $63.30, and Incidentals, $79.80.\nSuggest*   Cek'bra.ion\nMr. McKinnon urged that, as in\nformer years, the officers and members   of   the   committee   should   vote\nGuilty!\nWe are accused of\nselling Used Cars cheap.\nAnd here are a few more\nthat we will practically\ngive away:\nFORD   BUG   899\nFORD COUPE  8325\nDODGE   TOUR    -8450\nNASH   TOUR    8375\nDODGE COMMERCIAL %-TON\n 8550\nFORD   TOUR    8275\nA DEMONSTRATION WILL\nCONVINCE YOU OF THE\nQUALITY IN THESE CARS.\nCAPITOL MOTORS\nGEORGE W.  PEASE,  Mansejer\nOpp.   Post   Office Phone   65\nAUTHORIZED   DEALERS:\nNASH       PONTIAC\nAJAX        DODGE\nthe bank balance toward holding a\ncelebration for th* children on May 24,\n1627, and invite the officers of the\nTrail Track and Harrier club to cooperate with the committee In arranging an Intercity school track and\nfield meet here on that occasion. He\nwarmly rommt tided all those who\nassisted financially and in personal\nservice In making the celebration such\na   aplendid   success.\nOf this sum,- $500 was apportioned\nfor financing the May 24 celebration\nwhich for years haa been tha big day\nfor all Trail youngsters. Seventy-\nfive dollars was set aside to finance\nTrail school athletes taking part in\nNelson intercity schools field and\ntrack meet. The remaining $100, an\napproximate figure since there may\nbe one or two small bills yet unpaid,\nwaa set aside to be used tn such a\nway as a Bpeclal committee shall decide. The committee appointed was\nAlderman J. A. McKinnon, chairman;\nC. J. Minton, secretary; Als\u00bbx Balfour,\ntreasurer; H. Holden, representing\nthe smelter employees' finance committee, and Walter Murray, repre-\nsfnting the downtown finance committee.\nSuflgeet   Winter   Sports\nTo thiB committee were submitted\nseveral suggestions. One was that\nthe $100 should be used to stimulate\ncompetition in outdoor winter sports\namong children, such as skating,\nspeed races. Oeorge Murray, making this suggestion, stated the park\nboard planned to have two outdoor\nice rinks this winter if the weather\nman was kind.\nAt first the award of $500 to the\nMay 24 celebration was opposed as\ntoo high, When It was pointed out\nthat the $200 so used this year was\ninadequate to financing the celebrn-\ntion on the scale of former years,\nwith the rapidly growing Juvenile\npopulation, Mr. Holden, Mr. Dock-\nsteader. Mr. Murdock and others\nspoke In favor of the appropriation,\nAlex Balfour reminded the fitthtriM\nthat It was hoped to initiate a t\nangular Kootenay-Boundary schools\nfield and track organization this\nweek, and if possible, to hring the\nfirst meet lo Trail in conjunction with\nthe May 24 celebration of 1927. Following the Trail Amateur Athletic\nftaaoobtttoa annual meet here on Friday, a meeting of representatives of\nNelson, Rossland, Grand Forks and\nother distant points would he held.\nOne   Big   Meet\nThe idea of Trail men was to have\na big annual meet, swinging to successive points in the organization\nyear by year, and eliminating a succession of small meets. If organization resulted and the first meet were\nbrought to Trail May 24, part of the\n$500 would be devoted toward finnnr-\nInK it.\nTlure were congratulations on nil\nsides for the success of the Labor\nday celebration under adverse conditions, for the unprecedented financial Bupnort given to it, and for the\ncooperation and work of all concerned in the under'aklng.\nThose attending the meeting were\nAMerman J. A. McKinnon, chairman; Alex Balfour, C. J. Minton,\nJ. A. McKenzle. Oeorge Murray, F. S.\nWillis, Rev, N. I>. B. Larmonth, Alderman A. O. Harvey, John Ice Younp,\nJ. C. Murdoch, W. Davis, H. Holden,\nJ.   Docksteader,   D.   Downie,   E.   Day,\nD. Rustis and T. Lewis.\nnomniMS told\nk\nFoggo   Discusses   Boys'  Work\nBefore the Rotary\nClub\nCHARACTER THE\nCORNER  STONE\nWork of Mafeking Boys During\nSiege Gave Idea to\nBaden-Powell \"\nAsk Our Patients\nWe take pride in doing good dentistry work at a reasonable\n\u25a0price, and it Is gratifying to know that our many patients appreciate  it.\nDon't  neglect your teeth. '\nDR. KEELEY\n4061\/2   BAKER  ST.\nDentist\nPHONE  726.\nNEL80N,   B.C.\nLOSES OUT IN\nAPPEAL COURT\nJudge Forin's Award Upheld;\nSchneider Must Pay\nMrs. Jacobs\nMend That Roof Now\u2014and Use\nWOVALOID\nBest Quality Rubber Roofing\u20141, 2 and 3 ply\nWE GUARANTEE EVERY SQUARE OF IT\nSamples and Quotations for Any Quantity on Request\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWHOLESALE NELSON, B. C. RETAIL\nIn the court of appeal at the\ncoast yesterday, the judgement of\nJudge J. A. Forln, of Nelson, which\nawarded Mrs. Mary Jacobson $476\ndamages from William Schneider,\nto compensate her for injuries received when attacked by a bull owned by the latter, vas sustained. The\nparties are both  of  Deer   Park.\nThe five appeal judges were unanimous   in   their  decision\nWord of the appeal being dismissed\nwas received yesterday by E. G. Matthew, counsel for Mrs. Jacobson,\nfrom R. L. Maitland, who acted on\nher   behalf   at   the   coast.\nClaimed   She   Petted   It\nIn the county trial held here in\nthe spring, the defence contended the\nbull was gentle, and that Mrs. Jacob-\nson had couried trouble by putting\nher arm around its neck and Inviting\nit  to  \"go a walk.\"\nHer story was that It charged her\nfrom a short distance, knocked her\ndown, and kneeded her with Its knees,\nattacking her on her own ranch.\nHer condition after the attack was\nestablished    by    various    witnesses.\nLORD OXFORD TO QUIT\nLIBERAL LEADERSHIP\nLONDON, Oct. 11.\u2014Retirement of\nLord Oxford from leadership of the\nLiberal party in England is imminent sayB the Dally News, an As-\nnuithian   organ.   _\nHURRICANE KILLS\nDANES AND DUTCH\nROTTERDAM, Oct. 11.\u2014Eighteen\nUvea lost in hurricane which has\nraged over Denmark and Holland.\nPIONEER   IS   DFAD\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 11.\u2014John Mc-\nEwan, aged .2, well-known through\nout British Columbia as a timber\nbroker and postmaster In 1898 at\nDawson, where he went during the\nKlondyke gold rush, died suddenly\nat  his residence  here yesterday.\nCharles Butler, 24, confessed roh-\nbef of stats bank at Gallon, Mich..\nwas sentenced to ,10 to 16 years.\nCOMING'SO THIS IS\nOPERA HOUSE LONDON!'\n2 Days Com., Wed., Oct. 13\nI     AN ALL-CANADA THEATRICAL RECORfi\nAs  Prtsentsd  by  This  Company for\n10   SOLID   WEEKS  IN VANCOUVER\nto   Capacity   Business.     \u2022\nSpeaking at the Rotary club at lti\nmeeting in the Hume 'yest^day. J.\nFoggo, a Nelson acoutmaswi\". told\nbriefly of boy scout activities* In\nNelson, outlined the Work of th*\norganization and described briefly\nhow the movement endeavored to\ntrain   the   boy   in   the   right   path.\n\"The problem of the boy confronts\nus at every,4urn of the roacW' asserted Mr. Foggo'. \"We do not understand what a  boy  Is.\"\nThe    Boys'    Coiilnt.llt-.imis\nThe boy; he stated, was the possessor of a very level head, a big\nheart, Impossible tp drive, hard to\nlead, but fairly easily guided. -He\npossessed unbounded loyalty to those\nhe loved, and had a fiendish faculty\nfor \"getting the goat of those whom\nhe does not care a snap for.\"\nAlthough he might grumble when\nasked tp bring up the coal, shouM\nthe occasion arilie he wcjuld risk his\nlife   for   his  friend,\n\"The boy is a big interrogation\nmark, he wants to know why,\" hA\nremarked. \"The same doubts ana\nproblems that confronted you and\nme confront the boy of today, but\nyou and I were afraid to voice our\ndoubts\u2014the boy of today is not.\"\nTwo   Million   Scouts   Now\nThere were many organizations\nworking on behalf of the boy today, said Mr. Foggo, but there waa\none which stood head and shoulder!\nabove ail others\u2014that was the boy'\nscout movement. \"Its activities are\nworld-wide, it knows no color line,\nIt embraces all religions, It haa a\nmembership of 2,000,000 boys, it Is\nIn  50  different  countries.\"\nSir Robert Baden-Powell, when an\nofficer in the British army, realized\nthat the training a soldier received\ndid not help him to act individually when he was In a tight corner,\nand he instituted In his own regiment a course of instruction to overcome this deficiency, Mr. Foggo\nstated. \u2022\u25a0\nDuring the selge of Mafeklng he\norganized the boys of the town Into\nutility troop. The results exceeded nil expectations. On his return to England at the close of the\nwar he set about devising some\nscheme of training boys along the\nlines which had proved so successful\nat   Mafeking.\nIn 1908 the first scout troop was\norganized, and in 1910 the movement\nhad grown to such ; an extent that\nBaden-Powell resigned i from the\narmy to devote his life to the movement. N\nMr, Foggo recited the scout promise and law. \"The corner stone of\nthe movement is character-\" he said.\nThe word of a scout Is accepted\nJust as If he had taken a most solemn oath.\" He also told of the\npractical side of.scout training, describing the tenderfoot, second class,\nfirst class and proficiency badges.\n\"But until we are willing to come\ndown off our pedestal of self-efficiency and be boys ourselves, our\nplans will go astray,\" he asserted.\nNi teon HooutH\n'I often think the scouts are .too\nmodest,\" he said. \"In fact, 1 think\nmany citizens of Nelson liken our\nscouts to a cuckoo which has been\nhatched in another btrd'B nest, and\ndoes nothing but squawk and open\nits beak for the fattest worm that\nis going. If that Is your opinion\nof the scouts of Nelson, then let\nme tell you that you never made a\ngreater mistake  In your lives.\nMr, Foggo told briefly of a few\ncommunity works of the boy scouts\nwere doing. These Included many\nminor but time-taking services, such\nas visiting the sick and reading to\nthem, gathering clothing and supplies for the needy, sometimes also\ncontributing from scout funds for the\nobject. Then there was the Christmas cheer fund for \u25a0 the boys and\ngirls In the hospital and the isolation hospital, a public church service conducted by the scouts, a play\ngiven to raise funds toward the\nannual camp expenses, and other activities.\n\"Do not, for a minute, think that\nbecause we do these things w% are\nsissies, for we are not,\" he stated.\n\"The scouts of Nelson, hold three\nmedals for life saving, and for two\nyears in succession they have won\nthe Junior ambulance championship\nof British Columbia.\" *\nIt was a movement\/ stated Mr.\nFoggo, which the League of Nations, placed on record as being the\ngreatest factor toward World peace\nin the world today.\nCANADA'S EMBLEM IS\nIN DEMAND IN ENGLAND\nA. S. Horswill &C\u00a7.\nGrocers\nPhone 121 and get best goods\nprocurable and promp service.\n\u2022Drop   in   and   see   our\nSPECIAL   BARGAIN   TABLE.\nFinest Spuds, sack  $2.50\nOTTAWA, Oct. 11.\u2014The maple leaf,\nCanada's emblem, Is In demand In\nEngland. From the office of the\nCanadian high commissioner in London comes a request for Canadians to\nsend over maple leaves which may be\nused for decorative purposes at public\ndinners.\nAMERICAN LEGION.IN\nFAVOR OF POISON GAS\nSilverware\nA NEW SHIPMENT OF\nVERY BEAUTIFUL PIECE8\nTHAT MAKE IDEAL GIFTS\nFOR   FALL  WEDDING8.\nREASONABLE  PRICE8.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nitWMite\nAT PRICES THAT SPELL V-A-L-U-E!\nSHIRTS\n\"IXJ'HILB the low prices are In deed attrictlve, It's, the duality of \\\nthese shirts that we want to emphasize. Unusual car. was\ntaken in the choosing of the fabrics, the patterns and the making.\nBroadcloths and Madrases In all style,   are   Included   In   two   selec\ntions at\n$2.00\n$2.50\nT\nAnother    Shipment    of\nNEILSON'S\nSUPER-CREAM\nCHOCOLATES\n75.*  Per  Mb.  Box\nKANDYLAND\nDurban Resident Interested in\nLand Values and Investments\nA man in Durban, South Africa\nsaw Nelson's advertisement in the\"\nManchester Guardian and has written to E. F. Oigot, secretary of the\nNelson hoard of trade, asking for\ninformation regarding Nelson. Here\nis what he says:\n\"I have read your interesting ad In\nthe special British Columbia Issue\nof the Manchester Guardian Commercial weekly, and would like particulars of your city and neighborhood such as you distribute to tourists and prospective settlers, Including information as to rents, land values, mining, taxation, cost of living,\nrates of Interest and investments. A\ncopy of the daily newspaper circulating In your city would be useful.\"\nPrairie   Inquirtett\nMr. Gigot has also received a letter from Claresholm, Alta., asking\nfor information as to land for rent\nor sale, and market prices of fruit\nand   vegetables.\nA resident of Iteginu, has asked\nfor information on general conditions\nhereabouts, and the climate enjoyed\nhere.\nWUlofCaptWhittaker\nProbated at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 11.\u2014The will\nof the late C. W. Whittaker of Nakusp, drowned here in August, probated here, leaves an estate of $4559\nwith life Interest to the widow and\nthe remainder to his two sons and\ndaughter. \u25a0\nCONTEST OF VALENTINO\nWILL ORDERED IN SOUTH\nLOS ANGELES, Oct. 10.\u2014Contest\nof the will of Rudolph Valentino has\nbeen ordered by Alberto and Marie\nGuglielml. brother and sister of the\nfilm sheik, their attorney announced\ntonight, following the appointment\ntoday, of George 8. UUman, Valentino's former business manager, as\nsole   executor.\nSam Pierce, M, farmer, and Arthur\nKing, 35, killed each other, In a\npistol duel at Parkin, Ark., as climax\nof a feud of many years.\nFort Morron Cemetry, near Marion,\nOhio, where 13 heroes of the war of\n1812 are buried, will be rededlcated\nin  October.\nNelson News of the Day\nThe regular practice of the Operatic\nSociety will be held this evening at\n8 o'clock in the Recreation Club- Membership list for former member.-, will\nclose this evening, und applications for\nnr.w members received. Scores will he\ndistributed and dues received from 7:30\nto  8. (5233)\nD.O.K.K. Hallowe'en masquerade\ndance, Monday, November 1. Good\nmusic and good prizes. Keep this date\nopen. (5232)\nLadles' Hospital Aid Brtdg* Wednesday afternoon, K. P Hall, vacancy for\nfew more tables. Phone Mrs. E, Gammon. (5225)\nFuneral of the late Neil MacDonald\nwill take plact* from Standard Furniture Parlors at 2 o'clock today.   (5226)\nDon't forget Missionary fair. Trinity\nscQiioolroom, October 19. Afternoon tea,\ncontinuous   program. (6229)\nI.O.D.E. Patrol Girl Guides are holding a Hallowe'en tea on Saturday, October  30.     You'll be there,  of course!\n(5230)\nWASHINGTON, Oct. - H-\u2014The\nAmerican Legon through #its executive committee goes on record as\nfavoring use of poison .fas In warfare because It is humane compared\nwith other weapons.\n*\u2022** I\t\nROYAI\/TY  QUICKLY  RETURNS\nBUCHAREST, Oct. 11.\u2014Former\nKing George and Queen Elisabeth\nof Greece, who have been enjoying an\nexcursion on the Danube with King\nFerdinand, have suddenly returned\nto Bucharest by special train from\nBraila. The newspapers profess to\nhave learned that the unexpected\nmove Is connected with recent event*\nin Greece. \t\nS. T. Club opening meeting, Wednesday, October 13, at 8 o'clock. All\nyoung people of city cordially invited.\n(5t31)\nKootenay Valley Cooperative Milk\nProducts Association will supply you\nwith pure fresh milk. All cows guaranteed  T.B.  test.     Phone IK.       (5217)\nTHE  0*1X1. is OPZH.\n(5195)\nMen's  Soles,  si.50, AT WATIOVS.\n(G0S3)\nAsk   your  dealer  for  Nelson   Brand\nNew  Pack  Strawberry  Jam. (S0B4)\nPHONE\nDr. M. F. Setters\nPhysician   .nd   Surgeon\nSuit.   608   to   609   Rookery   Buildlno,\nCorn.r Riverside and Howard,\nOver  Whltohouee.\nSPOKANE. WAMi.      _\nTYPISTS!\nWe   Are   the   Authorized   Remington AgenU in This District\nI\nOur    stock    of    Ribbons   and\nCarbon  Papers  is  always  fresh\nand   well   sorted.\nBuy a hook of Ribbon Coupons. It reduces the cost of\nyour ribbons from $12 down\n:o $9.\nMr. Mallacord, Remington expert, -1h   now   in   town.\nPHONE &1 IF YOUR MACHINE\nNEEDS ATTENTION\nCanada Drug &\nBook Co.\nHAS IT!\nPure Drugs\nFine Stationery\nFor\nService\nPhone 10 or 193\n*GR0CERY*\nWork Shirts\nShirts that are really\nroomy built to giv freedom to every movement\nduring your day's work.\nThese are in all wools,\nhigh and low collars, in\nKhakis, Browns, Maroons,\nGreens, Checks.\nS2.25  to sa.50\nTRY   US   FIRST\n* .classified\nP4     \\<e+A',\nNow, when there Is no rush1,\n]s time to start and'lay In your\nwinter supply of Coal.\nWe specialize In QALT and\nIMPERIAL Coal, also In best\ndry WOOD, all lengths.\nMcdonald cartage\n& FUEL CO.\n603  Baker  Si. Phone  504\nMechanical & Electrical\nSupplies and Repairs\nBennetts, Limited\nThs   Home  of   Electrical   Coeds\nNothing is too good for the sick\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrescription Specialist\nIn business for your health. Let us\nfill your prescriptions. Mall orders*!\npromptly executed, Call and wait for\nyour car.    Phon* 1.\nSunday hours i   1 to 4 and 7 to I p.m.\nBUY ADVERTISED GOODS\nThey Mutt Make Good\nTonight and Tomorrow\nNight\nRudolphJ\nValentino\n-m-\n'The Son\nof the\nSheik'\nA  Sequel  to The Sheik.'\nLots of people told us\nthey  liked   it  far   hatter\nthan \"The Sheik.\"\nMrs. M. Michlson drew\nthe J2.50; Miss Cecchini\nand Mrs. D. Proudfoot\ndrew the two passes.\nNOTICE\nMutoic Presentation postponed\nfor another week. . Starts en\nWednsvdsy. October 20.\ni\n East Kootenay\nTALKS OF SMELTER\nSee Page 6\n\u00aeJh?\nVOL.26\nT8dw\nNELSON, B. C, TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 12, 1926\nNo. 137\n\u00bblCToma a .i\"\"**-**\nYonaf Ubs\nARE PENALIZED\nSee Pare 7\nFERNIE ROBBER DID JOB IN NELSON, 1925\nWEARS AIMEE HIRED HER TO ACT AS DOUBLE\nin sum\ns\ns. Wiseman-Sielaff on Stand\nSays Evangelist Paid Her\n$50  for  Work\nENT OVER WEEK AT\nTHE CARMEL COTTAGE\niss  X.'  Came  From  Phila-\nelphia;    Signed   Affidavit\nSwearing Sister the Lady\nJOS ANGELES, Oot. U.\u2014Mrs. Lo-\nI Wlseman-Sielaff, the state's star\nness, detailed on the stand here\nty Her charges that she was en-\ned by Mrs. Aimee Semple Mc-\n\"rson, evangelist, to produce a\nnan to pose aa the cottage eom-\nIkrn of Kenneth O. Ormiston, radio\nPKtor, at Carmel, last May.\nwas a confession by Mrs. Sielaff\ntiy that led to the conspiracy\n(ss on which Mrs. McPherson,\nmother, Mrs. Minnlf Kennedy,\nothers, including Mrs. Sielaff,\nbeing given  a .preliminary  hear-\nxs. Wiseman testified she entere.l\nMcPh.'rson case in Sen Francisco,\nTe she was employed as a stenog-\n\u00abr, at the request of a \"Mr. Mar-\n! who 'is understood to he the\ns named in a \"John Doe\" warrant\nth\u00a9 McPherson case. He has not\na Arrest ed\nit   Was   Evin?\u00ablist,   He   Said\ntartin    produced    newspaper   clip-\ni;s about the McPherson case and\nl.the evangelist   must   be  cleared,\nI \\filefaff   testified.     Martin ' told\nshe* said,  \"that of course  it was\n.   McPherson   at   Carmel,   else   I\nId.not want you to help.\"\nie witness said she  wont   !,\u00bb  |\u00bbh\n\u25a0ales   aird   mel    Mrs.   McPherson\nMrs. Kennedy, telling tha?m she\nrt > the vyattgellst wae not tbe\ni\u00bbn at rarmtl and agreeing to\nie a statement. Mrs. McPherson\nI her. .50 the day after her ar-\nI. she testified.\nxs. Kennedy asked her to produce\n'little Jady\" who occupied in.'\nrati cottage and lns'rueted her to\nte Carmel'sto Interview ;>ersons\n'? had Identified Mrs. McPherson.\nS*nt for \"Little Lady\"\n. Wiseman Sielaff slid she\nWtod that a number of persons\nCarmel were certain that they saw\nevangelist at the cottAge and told\n\\.  Kennedy  she  was  sending  east\nthe \"llttls lady\" to pose as the\nage  woman.\nfew days later site told the\nngsllst and her mother that the\ntjs lads'\" waa on her way, and\nfelted It would be better for the\ntie lady\" to be her slstrr.\nrs. McPherntn then suggested Mrs\n:aff .was the woman taken for\n\u2022elf at Carmel and had her pur\nse a dress, a, hat and a pair of\nglee similar to those worn by the\nmel woman, th? witness said.\nv McPherson also had her arrange\nhair   so   it   would   resemble   the\n(Continued on page 8.)\nFined Hundred Dollars\nfor Driving to Common\nDanger at the Capital\nVICTORIA. Oct. 11\u2014One of\nthe heaviest fines on record in\nBritish Columbia for a breach\nof the motor traffic regulations\nwas handed down this morning\nby Acting Magistrate James\nForman. in the city police court\nwhen Frank Mann pleaded guilty\nof a charge of driving to the\ncommon danger and was fined\n\u00bb10O or one month in prison\nMann crashed Into another automobile, containing several women, one of whom was seriously\ninjured.\nO'Brien, <   Former     Assistant\nState Attorney, Probably Fatally Wounded on Street\nTWO NOTORIOUS GANG\nMEMBERS ARE KILLED\nTwo Wounded;  Machine Guns\nPour Lead Into Ambushed\nVictims Near Cathedral\nmmaitder in Chief of Fascist\nlationafvMilitia;  Complete\n'Control National Defence\ntOikJE, Oct. It,\u2014New York Herald-\nbUne) Special Cable.)\u2014Premier Mus-\njll's Assumption of the position of\nntnander In 'chief of the Fascist\nfcmal militia with the rank of\nleralls'siruo, Succeeding Prince Clonals,   wno' resigned   with   a  gesture\ndevotion    lo   \"Fascist   discipline,\"\ne' approved at  the autumn  session\nthe grand council of the Fascist\ntty Sunday.\n?he grand council also decided to\nlllah   elections   within   the   party\nIf.    Elections- for   political   offices\ne vh\/tualry abolished many months\nMussolini's assuming the dlrec-\nof military means that he has\nt, eomplste control of all the wea,i-\n'of.national defence, tor some time\nhe took over tile portfolio of war\nllavy. i \"\u25a0\neeem\nUdsrman A.\\S. Horswill\u2014Though\n' wet weather Is a deterrent, the\ni is getting on' with the excavation\ntsaary In connection with the lso.\non hospital, and It is expected\naUe will be ready for the build-\ncontractor by about Friday,\n!. D\\ Blaokwood\u2014Tou can search\ny province .over for a nine-hole\n^flourse the superior of Nelson's.\nf. W. Tyler\u2014I believe our Nelson\nr\u00bb and' flrls wlH give a good ae-\nnt of themselves at the coming\noor   trafk   meat   at   Trail.\n. WHO RESIST\nYouthful Gunmen Throw Terror  Into  Residents;  Several  Wounded Too\nSAN  FRANCISCO,   Oct.   11 _T\u201e   \u201e\nstarteTr6.10' \" re'gn 0( \u00bb'<\u2022'\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\nhn,\u2122      y tW0 y\u00b0utn'ul Sunmen,  38\n\u00bbnd^\u201ea*0^two men wm> k\u00bbl\u00aba\nand two others shot when thev resisted    robbery    tonight\nThe slaylngs followed a series of\nholdups and robberies Saturday night\nand Sunday in which two men already had been killed and several\nothers shot down or beaten. Tonight\nthe bandits struck first at San Bruno\navenue and Mariposa street Their\nvictim, Frank Petrovich, attempted\nto resist.the robbery. He was shot\nthrough the mouth and died before\nreaching  the   hospital.\nA tew minutes later, Kard Johnson, an attendant at a gasoline station, paid with his life for his ef,\nfort to prevent the cash tin from\nbeing rifled. Twd\"unidentified companions   of   Johnson   were   wounded.\nAfter both attacks the .\u00abIavers\nescaped   in   an   automooile.\nGave  (80  Then  Killed\nSeveral hours prior to tonight's\ncrimes, Marco Segene. the operator\nof 'a soft drink parlor, died of\nwounds received during the killing\npair's first outbreak of banditry. He\nwas robbed of \u00bb80 and then shot\nthrough the abdomen when he- could\nproduce no more. The fourth murder attributed to the gunmen was\nthat.of Mario Pagano, who also ran\na soft drink establishment. In addition, Clarence Schlevo and Constantino Guillen were shot and seriously\nwounded during the holdup of a\npool room early Sunday morning\noKliT\nPKICHT\nReduced  Licences  and  Longer\nHours Also Requested by Vancouver  Parlor Operators\nVICTORIA, Oct. 11.\u2014Reduced beer\nlicences, reduced beer prices, longer\nhour* and the sale of bottled beer\nare the chief demands of Vancouver\nbeer parlor operators, who will meet\nAttorney-General Maneon and Commissioner Hugh Davidson early thla\nweek.\nThe pro-weal of the beer men, made\npublic today, indicates they are asking for the most drastic kind of\nchanges In  the present liquor system.\nAt the moment the official view\nappears to be rather critical of the\n'beer licence system as it is working\noilt in Vancouver and other places.\nIt Is believed the beer question will\nbe a leading theme of discussion in\nthe legislature at its next session.\nThere is a growing fear In the highest\nofficial circles that British Columbia's\nexperiment With private beer sate Is\nnot a suecew.\n\u2014i -w>\t\nAirman's Wife to\nAccompany Him 6n\nFlight to Ma\nLONDON, Oct.. 11.\u2014Lady Hoare,\nwife of Sir Samuel Hoare, secretary\nof state for air, will accompany her\nhusband on an air flight over the\n.Ww Egypt-India route, planned by\nImperial   Airways   Limited.\nTwo Die in Wild\nCelebration for\nx       St Louis9 Victory\nST. LOUIS, Oct. 11.\u2014The Ml of\ndearths from St Louis' riotous\ncelebration Sunday and last night\nof the Cardinal*' world eerie*'\nvictory wae i ncreaeed today to\ntwo, when Emil Tueck, 15, died1\nfrom   a   fractured   skull.\nThe youth wu struck by an\nautomobive. while throwing papsr\natreamrre over telephone wire*\nin th* etreet. The first victim\nwaa William Troll, 17, who waa\nkilled when he wae knocked to\nthe atreat from tKa running board\nof an gutomobil*.\nCHICAGO, Oct 11.\u2014W. W.\nO'Brien, former assistant state attorney, and famous criminal lawyer,\nWas shot and probably fatally wound.\ned, (wo notorious gangsters were\nkilled and two other men were\nwounded late today when Chicago's\ngangland feud which has flared Intermittently for two years past,\nblazed   afresh.\nThe victims were ambushed on the\nnear north side almost in front of Holy\nName Cathedral where the eucharis-\nUp congress waa opened last June and\nonly a short distance from the flow.\ner shop of Dlonne O'Banion, where\nthis notorious gunman and gangster\nwas ambushed and slain three years\nago.\nOperating a machine gun from the\nsecond-story window of an apartment building, one party of the\ngang sprayed their victims with\nlead while a second party riding in\nan automobile opened fire with rifles\nand   machine   guns.\nMacldne Gun Found\nWhen the slaughter was ended two\nmon lay In the blood spattered\nstreet, one dead and the other dying,\nanother crawled to the curb and\ncollapsed* and two others limped\naway and were found in a doctor's\noffice. The facade of the cathedral,\nwhich is the see of Cardinal .Mun-\ndeleln, WM faked with bullet*; A\nmachine gun was found In a nearby\nalley.\nThe dead are Barl Weiss, notorious\ngangster, and gunman, who was associated with O'Bannion, and Paddy Murray, gangster and brother\nof William Murray, who was with\nBig Tim Murphy, sentenced to Leavenworth prison for participation in\na big mail robbery here a few years\nago.\nO'Brien was shot five times in the\nabdomen. He waa a former state\nattorney and one of Chicago's best-\nknown   criminal   lawyers.\nWaa Defence Lawyer\nAfter dissolving his partnership\nwith Stewart, O'Brien set up a firm\nof his own and at present was engaged in the defence of Joe Saltis\nand Frank Konicil, well-known gang\nleaders, now on trial for the murder  of John  Foley,  rival  gangster.\nBesides O'Brien, the others wounded are Sam Pine, alias Peller, and\nBenny Jacobs. Jacobs was sold to\nbe an investigator for O'Brien and\nPine ' was represented^ to have been\nassoalated with one d\\ the various\ngang   factions.\nBlazed   Into  Auto\nO'Brien had left the criminal\ncourt building, only four blocks from\nwhere the shooting occurred, Just a\nshort time previously. According to\nwitnesses, an automobile believed\nto have contained O'Brien and the\nothers killed or wounded, was proceeding north on State street when\nit Waa overhauled and forced to the\ncurb by a second car bristling with\nrifles  and  sawed  off shotguns.\nAa soon as the gangsters' car drew\nabreast the guns began to blare,\nwhile from an upstairs window of a\nbuilding directly opposlte*the sputter-\n(Continued   on   Page   Eighth\nSucceeds Meighen\nWho was yestery ap.wiinted temporary leader d# the Conservative\nparty, replacing' Rt. Hon. Arthur\nMeighen, resigned.. A national convention of th.? party called for next\nspring will name 4 permanent  leader.\nThe new leader of the opposition in\nthe commons was born at Guelph 60\nyears ago. His father, Donald Guthrie; K.C., represented South Wellington in the federal house for six years.\nHugh Guthrie waa elected in the\nsame riding in 1900. He is one of\nthe four senior members of the house.\nHe has represented South Wellington\ncontinuously since then, first as a\nLiberal under Sir Wilfrid Laurier,\nthen as a Unionist under Sir Robert\nBorden, and more recently as a Conservative under Rt. Hon. Arthur\nMeighen.\nHe was appointed solicitor-general\nin 1917 and became minister of militia\nin 1920. He held this portfolio until\n1921, when the Meighen ministry was\ndefeated at  the polls.\nMr. Guthrie r-->e)resented Canada at\nihe international flnnncinl conference\nat Brussels, in 1920. In the same\nyear he represented Canada on the\nImperial war graves commission. He\nis a PresbyterlaaC and Aa* resided in\nOuriph  qi   l..tiii.#a   ajtf Bar Ufe.\nIS\nPARTY\nAppointed   Temporary  Leader,\nFilling Position Vacated by\nRt. Hon. Arthur Meighen\nIS CHOICE  OF FOUR\nMEMBERS NOMINATED\nTry  to   Keep   Meighen;   Two\nResolutions in Eulogy of\nMeighen Are Passed\ni^ia^ffi-^1' ',if:\nFOI STORIES* OF\nI\nSo    States     Premier    Oliver;\nMight  Quit  if   Health\nFailed,   He   Says\nVICTORIA, Oct. 11. \u2014 Premier Oliver has no intention of retiring, This\nwas made clear by the premier himself today when he was asked about\nnewspaper report.\" about his impending\nresignation.\nIn a brief statement the premier\nsaid he did not contemplate retiring\nfor any reason, and that there was no\nfoundation for the report that he\nwould quit politics after the next session  of  the  legislature.\n\"At my time of life.\" he stated, \"I\ncannot but realize that If my health\nshould fail it might compel my retirement from the position I hold. During the early part of this year, I suffered considerably from neuritis. I\nam, however, pleased to say that this\nhas almost entirely disappeared, my\npresent health is very good, and I\nhave not in contemplation the probability of retirement from any other\ncause. So that I mny say, as far as I\nam concerned, mere Is no foundation\nfor the stories.\"\nMeighen in Moved Language Thanks\nHis Ardent and Devoted Supporters\nin Statement Concerning Resignation\nOTTAWA, Oct. 11,\u2014The. following statement concerning the resignation of Rt. Hon. Arthur Meighen was given out at Conservative headquarters  today:\n\"Mr. Melghen's statement was   simple and  brief.\n\"He referred to the circumstances under which he assumed leadership and reviewed the three contests which had intervened. The\nConservative party, he said, was historical, and must ever r?maln\nthe great national party of Canada, and as such its strength must\nbe drawn from every province and every section of our people.\nThere must be unity behind Its leader if, such universal strength\nand power for service waa to be attained. It was his duty. Mr.\nMnjghen emphaslied, to contribute everything In his power to bring\nabout tihat harmony and unity of action   necessary   to  success.\n.'\"After the cont.-'et In 1921, he submitted his resignation, at the\nsame time he placed hla aervlees at the disposal of the party. On\nthis occasion it was his conviction that the best interests of all\nconcerned could be promoted by his retirement.\n*Mt was, he said, his desire to bring about to the utmost, circumstances conducive to the advantage of his successor, and he\nurged the conference to take no step which would weaken the\nhands of him who was, from this on, to have the great responsibility of leadership. Everything that could be done within his power\n'to .advance the Interest! of the party would be done,\n\"Mr. Meighen referred in moved language to the ardent and devoted support he had always had in the commons, and expressed\nhla gratitude to the friends of the- party In every province, who had\ndona so much to ensure its success, He thanked with especial ear-\nneatness those who Immediately after the late elections generously\noffered him their seats if he would continue In the post of leader.\"\nOTTAWA, Oct. It. \u2014 Hon. Hugh\nGuthrie, K.C., M.P.-elect for South\nWellington. Ont., was today elected\nleader of the opposition In the house\nof commons for the forthcoming session. A caucus of Conservative senators and members-elect chose him as\ntheir house leader pending the national\nparty convention which will be called\nnext year to elect a permanent leader\nin succession to Rt. Hon. Arthur\nMeighen,\nMr. Melghen's resignation was considered by a caucus assembled here\ntoday of Conservative senators and\nConservative candidates In the last\nelection, both the elected and defeated.\nFirst Armand Lavergne, K.C., who ran\nIn Montmagny In the Conservative interests declared that Mr. Meighen waa\nthe most acceptable leader In his province, in this he was supported by\ndelegates from other provinces. Pinal*\nJy Mr. Meighen aBked that his resignation be accepted as final. The gath\neHng adopted resolutions of regret and\nleft It to a committee of elected members to decide on details for the national  contention.\nWilling to \"F1U G*p\u00bb\nSenators and members then held a\nmeeting and elected Mr. Guthrie tem\nporary leader. In a brief statement\nttOfrward. Jdr. cuthrlo .a*- that he\nhad been asked to \"fill the gap,\" and\nhid consented to do so. He realfaed,\nhe said, that there were several people\nWho might have made a more satisfactory leader. He had not anticipated\nthe call, but was willing to undertake\nthe task since his confreres wished\nhim  to,\nThe caucus adopted two resolutions\nin   eulogy   of   Mr.   Meighen\nTonr   ITomiiuittotts\nOTTAWA, Oct. 11.\u2014Conservative\nmemb?rs-,elect of the house of\ncommons tonight appointed Hon.\nHugh Outhrie their house leader in\nthe coming session. Mr. Outhrie becomes leader of the opposition until a permanent leader Is chosen. A\nnational Conservative convention is\nto be held next spring to chose a\npermanent  leader   for  the  party.\nA committee of elected Conservative representing every province will\ndecide at some future date when\nand where the convention will he\nheld   next   year.\nIn addition to Mr. Guthrie, the\nfollowing were proposed to the meeting as house leader: Hon. H. H\nStevens, Hon. R. B. Bennett, Hon!\nDr. R. j. Manlon, C. W. Bell, Weat\nHamilton, Hon. Sir George Perley,\nHon. Dr. S. F. Tolmie and C. H.\nCahan, (St. Lawrence-St. George).\nBallot in Four Times\nSeveral   withdrawals   reduced   the\nnumber of nominations for the temporary   leadership   to   four.     These\n(Continued   on   Page   Eight.)\nFailed to Pay $14 Board Bill\nLast February; No Money\nin His Pocket\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 11.\u2014J. W.\nSaunders, aged 40, who last week announced himself as the \"Inventor\"\nof a railway safety device for which\nhe already had received $300,000 for\nthe Canadian rights, was lodged in\na cell at police headquarters today\non a charge of obtaining lodging\nby   false   pretenses.\nHe was arrested on a warrant issued in February of this year by\nWilliam Lee, who charges him with\nobtaining lodging to the value of\n|14. When arrested Saunders had\nno money on his person.\nIt Is said Saunders admitted staying1 two daya at a rooming house\nof which Lee was proprietor, but\ndeclared he paid him.\nTemptation Too Great,\nSays Judge; Sentences\nBanker Three Months\nxrecnxSaB, Out, Oct. 8. \u2014*\nToo great temptation was placed\n\u00bbtfone Harold XaoMeU, 20, who\nstole 938.000 from the Gait branch\nof tha Bank of Montreal, where\nhe waa ledger-keeper. Thla was\nthe opinion of Judge M. J. Xeara,\nwho esattenosa MLa-oJTeii to three\nmonths la the ootmty jail when he\npleaded guilty. The small salary\npaid to hBaoKeU and the aeglect\nof a senior official in falling to\nleek tbe safe of the vault wave\nmeationed hy the Judge.\nCopper Producers\nCombine in Plan\nfor Stabilization\nNEW YORK. Oct, It \u2014 Copper producers have combined,\nwith government approval, for\ncooperative action in stabilising\nthe price of the domestic metal\nin   foreign  markpfs.\nA new company, Coppers Exporters, Inc., has been formed\nincluding virtually all the leading producers of the red metal\nIn the United States for the\npurpose of handling exports.\nC. F. Kelly, president of the\nAnaconda Copper company will\nhead   the  new  organisation.'\nRUSSELL SCflH\nMM GEI NEW\nT\nFlaw Discovered in Last Case\nWhen Was Declared Sane;\n'I'm Glad\/ He Says\nCHICAGO, Oct. 11.\u2014Saved once\nfrom execution by a governor's reprieve nnd again by an order from a\nsanity hearing which averted his\ndeath by more than a year, Russell\nScott, convicted slayer of Joseph\nMaurer, drug clerk, found his hope\nof life rekindled today, four days before the third date Bet for his hanging. The elerk of the supremt court\nat Springfield, III., Issued a writ of\nerror today which if upheld by the\ncourt tomorrow would re-open Scott's\ncase for appeal or for a new sanity\nhearing. The writ waB baaed on\nthe sanity hearing by which Scott\nwas found sane last summer. Previously he was found insane and\nBent to an asylum, but after a year\nwas found at the new hearing to\nhave regained his reason. The writ\nwas asked by Scott's attorney because the Judge, who heard tha\nlast sanity ptoeeedkig refused a\nchange of venue after listening to\ncourt attentats who called Scott sane.\nOpen   New   Fight\nThe court's affirmation of the\nwrit would open the way to a new\nfight to save the life of Scott. Reversal of It would apparently seal\nScott's last hope of escaping execution.\nThe convicted man, a few years\nago. hend of a $10,000,000 Canadian\ncorporation projecting a bridge from\nWindsor, Ont., to Detroit, was arrested In 1924 and convicted of the\nslaying of Maurer in a holdup. He\nwon a new trial, pleaded guilty and\nwas to have been hanged July 17,\n1025, but a hoax telegram, purporting to come from Russel's brother,\na participant in the robbery, induced\nthe governor to grant a week'B reprieve. A few hours before the second date for the hanging Scott won\na sanity hearing and was adjudged\ninsane.\nWhen Scott was brought from his\ncell In the county Jail today to hear\nthe news of the new writ, he believed he was being started to the\ndeath cell. \"I'm glad,\" he exclaimed when he learned of the\nwrit. A Book I have written will\nbe out,this week and I hope it will\nbring money enough for financing\nmy defence.\nThree Killed When\nAirplane Falls in\nCity of Philadelphia\nPHILAl^ELPHIA, Oct. 11.\u2014Three\nmen were killed late today when\ntheir aeroplane fell In the northeastern part of the city near a private\nflying field. The dead were T.\nW. Shallcfoss and Oeorge W. Wld-\nner, Philadelphia, and Clarence Mark-\nhama,   St.   Vim-land.   N.J.\nCHILDREN TRAMPLED\nIN GERMAN FIRE SCARE\nGROCERS' IE\nChief Long Goes to Fernie and\nIdentifies Bennie, Alias\nJohnson\nLETHBRIDGE WANTS\nHIM FOR OFFENCES\nHas Served Jail Term; Secured\n$1500 in  Latest Haul\nat Fernie Garage\nEILBENBURG, Germany, Oct.ll.\u2014\nMore than 80 children were trampled\ntoday during a panic In a motion\npicture house, caused by dense volumes of smoke penetrating the hall\nfrom   an   adjacent   burning  oil   stove.\nThere were more than 200 children\nin the hall. They rushed to the only\nstaircasd  loading  from  the  place.\nBlames Conduct of\n\/\/if Wife and Pleads\nGuilty, Check Charge\nNiE-W WESTMINSTER, B. C, Oct.\n11.\u2014Attributing his downfall to the\nconduct of his wife while he was\nserving overseas, Cecil Rutherford\npleaded guilty before Judge F. W.\nHoway, In county court today, to\nthree charges of passing worthless\nchecks, and waa remanded for setv\ntence.\nFERNIE, B. C., Oct. 11.\u2014Upon\nthe arrival here tonight of Chief\nThomas H. Long of the city\npolice, Nelaon, B. C\u201e th* man\nheld in cuaiody here under the\nnam\u00ab of Charkaa Johnson, charged\nwith burglarizing th* Fernie\nMotor Car company and stealing\nthe'efrom over $600 in cash, to*\ngather with ft number of check*\nand vouchers, in all to th* value\nof (1500, ha* been positively identified as Charlee Benekariatie,\nalias  Charlee  Bennie.\nHe h wanted by the Nelaon\npolice on a charge of *hopbr*ak-\ning and theft of WOO in Victory\nbonds, cash, dead* artel share certificate*.\nThe   Nelaon   crime   occured   in\nApril, 1925, and waa known a* th*\nsafe    robbery     of    the    Western\nGrocers,  wholeaalere,  there.\nChief Anderson of this city, through\nactive   work   in   furnishing   detailed\ndescription   of   this   man   to  the   authorities   of   all    nearby   cities,   haa\nspeedily   identified   him  aa   one  with\na long record of criminal practices.\nServed   Terms\nJohnson, under the name Benekaria-\ntis,    alias    Bennie,    haa    served    two\nterm*-  In   Saskatchewan, penitentiary\nm   1921   and   1923   for   breaking   and\nentering.    He  was  alao  convicted  at\nLethbridge.   and   la   said   now   to   be\nwanted    there    for    another    similar\ncrime.\nBefore Police Magistrate Henderson\nhere today, under the name of Johnson, the preliminary hearing opened\nin connection with the Fernie Motor\nCar company robbery, but was adjourned. So far no charge has been\nlaid in connection with the other\ngarage theft which occurred on the\nsame night us the Motor company.\nChipf Anderson la conducting the\nprosecution, while the accused has\nrefused to he represented by* counsel.\nIt is said his parents reside at Blen-\nfait, Sask.\nTOT DIES FROM\nDemented Father Almost Severs His Son's Head, Then\nNearly  Kills  Himself\nWOODSTOCK, N.B., Oct. 11.\u2014\nLeonard Todd, aged rive, was fattl-\nly gashed by a razor here tonight\nand his father, Chesley Todd, aged\n40. proprietor of a hotel, is in\nhospital here seriously injured with\nself-inflicted wounds about the throat.\nIt is charged that Todd, while\ndemented attacked his son with the.\nrazor. The attack was made on tho\nlawn in front of the hotel. E. L.\nTurdney, a roomer at the hotel,\ntried to save the boy, but before\nthe father could be separated from\nhis alleged victim, the boys head\nwas almost severed from his body\nand Todd's own throat was slaahed.\nThe boy died shortly after. Doctors\nsay there is a slight chance for\nTodd's recovery.\nBISHOP OF JAMAICA\nACCIDENTALLY DROWNS\nKINGSTON, Jamaica, Oct. 11.\u2014Rt,\nRev. William F. O'Hare, blahoo of\nJamaica, waa drowned while bathing\ntoday. Hla body waa recovered.\nBishop O'Hare headed the Jamaica\ndelegation to the Bucharlstic congress\nin Chicago.    Ha wa* 48 yean of age.\nHEINTZMAN   BURIID\nTORONTO, Oct. 11.\u2014The funeral\nof Gerhard Helntzman, head of the\nQ. Helntzman Piano, company, who\ndied on Friday, was held this afternoon, at Mount Pleasant cemetery.\nThe Weather #\nMln.   Max.\nNELSON       tl 6\u00bb\nVictoria     4\u00bb \u00ab0\nVancouver      50 54\nKamloops       44 69\nKamloops     44 58\nBarkervllle      10 40\nPrince Rupert     *8 10\nAtlin  10 40\nDawson     14 18\nCalgary      28 84\nWinnipeg      88 60\nPortland      68 52\nSan   Francisco     64 58\nSeattle      61 52.\nSpokane     44 68\nPenticton    89 58\nVernon     48 67\nGrand  Forks     41 6*\nCranbrook     IT 68.\nEdmonton     88\nSwift Current   16\nPrince Albert    84\nQu'Appelle      88 \u00ab\nForecast\u2014Nelson      and.     Tlolnity.\nPartly  cloudy and  coldsf at night,\n\u25a0\u25a0\n_\n Two\n\t\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY\n-  i\u2014\u2014\nviCJ.\nRNING, OCTOBER 12, 1926\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\n\u2022**\"\u25a0\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nTbe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nRoems with Running Water, Private Baths and en \u25a0ulta.\n\u25a0eadquarttra   tar  all  Travelllnf   Men,   Mining   Men,   Lumber   Men\nand Tourists,\n\u25a0FBCIAL SUNDAY DINNER. fl.M. Rotarlan Headquartera.\nWh. Moat Comfortable Rotunda In tha City.\nHUME\u2014Mr.   and   Mrs.   H.   H.   Marshall, I, S, Hookham, P. F. Llsster, H.\nC. At.ick. T. Holland, W. A. elements,\nVancouver; J Kavanaugh, \\v. Foster.\nTalgary.  .oar .fti\nNEW SAMPLE ROOM*\nALL DAYLIGHT.\nFREE BUS FROM STATION\nAMD BOAT.\nHotel Strathcona\nEUROPEAN PUN\n\"A Borne for Those Away From Home\"\nUNEXCELLED SERVICE\nLARGE PM\nPLES\nBADLY\nOn Face, Shoulders and\nArms. Cutieura Heals,\n\" My trouble began with pimple*\nbreaking out on my face, \u2022houlderi\nand arms. They were large, hard\nand red, and fettered, and acaled\nover, causing disfigurement. The\npimples itched badly and when 1\nscratched them eruptions formed.\nHy clothing irritated tbe breaking\noot on my shoulders. The trouble\nlasted for some time.\n\"1 began using Cutieura Soap\nand Ointment and they afforded\nrelief in a short time, I continued\nthe treatment and after using\nfour cakes of Soap and four boxes\nofOintmeml was healed.\" (Signed)\nMiss Grace M. Ward, Thetford\nCenter, Vt., Aug. 12, 1925.\nUse Cutieura to heal skin troubles\nIsuiBl* E*ck rr*a it M*Q    AddrvM Cuisdikti\nD*pot    iWitw Lt4, Mmtrml-   Priea, Soi.>\nSwallows Cartridges\nIndeed of Capsules\nSaid to Contain Drugs\nMONTREAJi, Oct. 11. \u2014 Edward\nWilliams, 29, given no particular address. Is In the Montreal general hospital here- with two cartridges In his\nstomach, swallowed in mistake for\ncapsules containing drugs, police-\nstate. Cnrwrtablea who took him into custody, way he was seen to lestve\ntwo capsules on a window ledge,\nthen go away. TTie police, as a ruse,\nreplaced the capsules with cartridges\n\u25a0wrappp<1 In tin foil. Williams returned, but on serine the police,\nswallowed the bullets, When apprehended he denied he bad swallowed\nanything, but when Advised of the\nreplacement, agreed the hospital wu\n(he   b?st   place   for  him.\n\u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0),\t\nDuring August United States auto-\n| mobile production was 379,111 pas-\niienf\u00abr   machines   and   4fi,283   trucks.\nNew Grand Hotel\n\u2022U VERNON  ST.  EAST 8.  E.  MILLS,  PROPRIETOR\nHeadquarters  for  Everybody.    Hot  and   Cold   Water\nTelephones in All Rooms.\nFREi BUS FROM STATION AND BOAT\nNEW QRANJ>\u2014W. Ling. city.\nSAVOY\nNELSON'S FINEST HOTEL ABSOLUTELY\n'. Hut and Cold Running Wati r in Ml Row\nPi ivate Baths or Shower*-.\nSAVOY _ V, Cnwoll, Rlvoraldi-. Ill: Law S C. T.; N. Wnlrylyskom, Salmo\n1). B. O'Noall. Mrs. P. M. Beater. \\ T. R Olds, Deer Park; <;. Devlin,\nMecchlnl. Slocsn city; W. H .Robson, Moose Jaw; J. .skinner. Trail; A. E,\nCalgary;    C.    Bakkem,    Marcua;    E.    E.   Kelso,   Vancouver;   S.   Peleck,   Natal.\nNelson's Best Cafes\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE\nOnly Wh.te Cafo Open Day and Night.\nElectric    Frigid-Air   Cooling    System.\nSODA FOUNTAIN IN CONNECTION.\nA  trial will  convince you.\nOpen   Day   and   Night.\nPHONE  681 BAKER   ST.\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic   Restaurant\nRefinement   and    Delicacy    Pr\u00abv\u00abn.\nOPEN   OAV   AND   NIGHT\nuncheon,   11:30   to   2       .......     36\n\u25a0oe^lal   Dinners   6:30   to  8    \u2014  -88\nW\u00bb   Rpeclallza  in  Chop   Srjav   *w-*\nNoodles.\n\u2014PHONE  182\u2014\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nFinest-equipped Restaurant In the\nCity. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice Cream. Soda Water\nind Hot Drinks. Nice, clean, fur\nnlahed rooms; hot and cold water\nWe  Cater  to   Private   Partis*.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n120   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   B.   C\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30,  Sp.cial   Lunch    36c\n6:30  to   8:00   p.m.,   Supp.r   \u2022 SSe\nPhon.   154\nio corns\nremoved\n, after three Radox footbath*\nThe great value of Fiadox for re-\nir,3vinif corns bodily la not only that\nRadox enables the corn to be lifted\nout root and all, but also that the\ntreatment Is absolutely painless; no\n\u2022uiting, no caustics, no Imlffins; plasters, no risk whatever of blood poiion-\ning\u2014dust a footbath In hoi antiijeitlc\noxygenated water, and tip com may\nbe  lifted  out.    Head  this letter:\n\"I   had   five corns  (rut  callouses)\nen each foot, and after using Radox\nBath   Sal's   as   directed   for   three\nrights   m succession,   I   was  able  to\nwalk   in   perfect   comfort.     I   managed   to   fjet  th*  last  of  my   corn*\nright   out   after  the   third   bath   in\nRadox.    Have still  got come of th*\nfine   packet.     Can   honestly   say    I\nhad    spent     dollars    on     diffmjnit\n'patent*.'    but   nothing   but    Radox\nhad   tho   desired  effect.\"\nWhen you  put your feet Into n footbath    containing     Kadox,    tho    salts\nsoften   the   hard  outer  layers   of   tho\ncorn and the dead skin  (of the corn)\ncombines  with  the Radox  Bath   Salts\nto  form  a  protein  salt of the  actual\ncorn    itself.      This   dissolves   In    the\nwater und ao loosens the corn that it\ncan be lifted out bodily.\nOn your way home to-       \u00a32fW\u00bb\nnight,   buy   a   package       OwC*\nat  the druggist's. H\u00abif pond\nPink   Pkg,\nRadox Bath Salts\nSole Importers: Gyde & Son, Montreal\nSeamen Forced to Assist Nicaragua!. Rebels After Shipping  on  Trawler\nREBELS TAKEN ON IN\nMEXICO-BOSSED SHIP\nForced to Leave When Trawler\nStrands; Go Without Food\nor  Pay for  Days\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nHoi and cold water In every room.\nSteam heated.\nA. LAPOINTE, Prop.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\nZV2   Blocks  East  of  Post  Office\nSteam heated. Hot and cold water.\nRooms  by  day  or  week.\nAlao Furnished   Suites.\nP.  H.   BUSH, Prop.\nQUKENS   \u2014   C    E.   Stalley    Vancouver; J.  Eraser,  Ymir,\nTHE MADDEN HOTEL\nT.   MADDEN,  Prop.\nBtwm-Hoatod Rooms by tho Day,\nWeek  or   Month.\nEvery consideration shown to guests.\nCor. Baker and Ward Sts, Nelson\nLtuiaiif\nMADDEN\u2014D. A. McDonald. N.S.;\nMrs. Cummings, Porrys; B. Munch,\nValllcan.\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA.   C.   TOWNER,   Proprietor\nThe   home   of   plenty.\nFifty  rooma of  solid   comfort\nVe serve the best meals tn Nelaon\nIt's   tbe   cook.\nCranbrook Hotels\nWHEN   IN\nCranbrook\nSTOP  AT\nTHE BYNG\nCranbrook's Newest and Up-to-\nDatP Hotel.  Furnished Complete\nThroughout  With  the   Best.\nSAMPLE   ROOMS\nHot   and   Cold   Water\nCRANBROOK   ST.\n(Near   Bank   of   Commerce)\nSHERBR00KE HOTEL\nNear C. P.  R. Station.\nRooms  at   Reasonable  Rates\nH.   DUNK,   Proprietor\nTrail Hotels\nSteam  Heated\nThroughout\nHot and Cold\nWater\nDOUGLAS HOTfeL\nE. L. AND A. GROUTAGE, Prop*\nBox 60S\nPhone 263\nTrail, B.C\nHave You Taken Your\nNerve Food Today ?\n\u2014i ! ,\u2014C*\u2014\nAre you restless and sleepless?\nHave you indigestion and\nheadaches ?\nAre you tired and languid ?\nAre you worried and anxious and easily disturbed\nover every little thing that\ngoes wrong ?\nAre you losing the best\nthere is in life on account\nof lacking energy, ambition\nand vitality ?\nYou can get away from\nthis condition by using\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food.\nNervous disorders do not\nright themselves. You must\nfeed th* starved and depleted norve ceiis back to\nhealth and vigor.\nBegin the use of Dr. Chase's\nNerve Food today and it\nwill not be long before you\nare well on the way to better health. New energy*\nand new confidence will\nenable you to live a fuller\nand a happier life. 60 cents\na box, all dealers or The\nDr. A. W. Chase Medicine\nCo., Limited, Toronto, 2.\nNEW YORK, Oct. 11.\u2014A tale of\nhaving: been shanghaied, held prisoner aboard their own ship and\nforced under penalty of death to\ntransport arms and ammunition for\nNIcaraguan rebels waa told by 18\nseamen who arrived here aboard the\nPanama-Pacific railway liner Cristobal today.\nThe seamen said they sailwi from\nBrooklyn laat June SO on the trawler Foam for Sam Diego and first\nsuspected all was not right about\nthe trip when at Puerto, Mexico, on\nshore leave to find groups of dark\nskinned mfn loading packing cases\nIn  the  Foam's  hold.\nThey questioned the captain, according lo second assistant engineer,\nJohn Holland, and were persuaded\ntn remain with the ship until it\nreached Blue Fields, Nic, where he\npromised them they would be paid\noff and given passage to New York,\naccording  to  their   story.\nRather than be stranded In Puerto, Mexico, they accepted. Shortly\nbefore sailing, they said, about 20\n\"pasasengers\" came aboard, and\nthese shortly after the ship had\ncleared the port doffed their civilian\nclothing and appeared In the uniforms of Nicaraguan rebels.\nIn OrneraJ's Uniforms\nTwo were in the uniforms of generals, the seamen said, and swaggered about the deck brandishing\npistols in the faces of the Foam's\ncrew. On the morning of August 15\nthe F(\u00bbiim anchored three mles off\nProgresso, Mexico, near the coast\nof Nicaragua, they said, and machine guns were mounted and the\nUnited States flag taken down. Then\nbegan a eerlfs of activities In gun\nrunning. The ship was ordered run\nalongside the dock at Bragman's\nBluff, they said, while the town\nwas being attacked by rebels from\nland and sea. Bullets whizzed over\ntheir hends, they asserted and then\nthe town finally was captured by the\nrebels.\nShip  Is Wrecked\nTheir ship was ordered to Rio\nGrande and then to Blue Fields\nBluff, where heavy fighting was In\nprogress. After a few hours' sailing\nthe Foam drew off and when ordered\nto return ran aground on the false\nBlue  Fields  rocks,  said   the  seamen.\nNo longer of use to the rebels,\nthe seamen said the vessel was\nabandoned and the crew left, practically without food to shift for\nthemselves. For three weeks, they\nasserted, they lived on coffee, a little\nrice and cocoanuts which they picked\nup on  the beach nearby.\nFinally the United States cruiser\nRochester was sighted and eight\nof the crew rowed In a life boat\neight miles to where Bhe was riding\nat anchor. The men told their story\nto the ship's commander and asked\nto he sent home. None of the 13\nseamen had received any pay for\ntheir  services,  they said.\nMENS\nWEAR\n\u25a0WRLES.Mo\nBOYS\nWEAR\nJU5T OUTSIDE THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT\nHave You\nCalled Yet?\nWe Are in the MAGLIO  BLOCK\nWherever our Men's and Boys' Wear haa received an impartial ex-\najnln.lt.en it has made an instant appeal. \"Wherever we have met\ncompetition on Ihe basis of'Quality, Assortment and Price, the verdict  rendered  la  in  our  favor.\nRemember\u2014Just Outside the High-Rent District!\nMAKES MEDICINE EASY TO TAKE\nOne Mother SayB:\nWhen giving your child medicine\nof any kind, flhst give him a tea-\nspoonful of crushed ice, then the\nmedicine, followed by another teaspoon or more of crushed Ice.\nThe Ice renders the tongue cold\nand the medicine tastes lees bitter\nafter taking the Ice. This little\nceremorfy in Itself has a psychological effect on the child, distracting\nhis attention from the thought of\nthe \"awful'1 medicine,\nEVEN OUTFITTED\nHER IN SIMILAR\nDUOS, SHE SAYS\n(Continued From Page One.)\nevangelist's.    Mrs.  Wiseman  sa.d'sh\u00ab\nspent between  seven and nine nights\nIn   th.-!  McPherson   home,   sleeping  In\nthe evangelist's own  bed.\nMrs. McPherson had discussed an\naffidavit to be made hy ihe \"little\nlady\" known as \"MIbr X.\" Mrs. Sielaff said, and In a notebook Ihe took\nsuggestions for the affidavit.\n\"MIsh X.\" arrived from Philadelphia. Mrs. Sielaff said, and wan driven\nto Salinas, Cal., wherp Mrs. Kennedy\nhad arranged to have the affidavit\ndrawn up in tho office of Judge Bar-\ndin. Roland Rich Wbolley, attorney\nfor the evangelist, was present in\nJudge Bardin's office on August 15\nwh.?n \"Miss X. was brought in and\nthe affidavit drawn u-r> by Judge\nBardln, Woollev and Mrs. Sielaff,\ntho witness said.\n8wor\u00bb to Affidavit\nMrs. Sielaff said she swore to an\naffidavit., one copy of which was\nsent by airplane mail to \"Mr. Martin\"\nIn Chicago. The affidavit stated that\nher sister was the woman at Carmel\nu ruler tha name of Mrs. Mclntyre,\nand that she (Mrs. WIseman-Slelaff)\nwas attempting to \"right a great\nwrong.\"\nMrs. Sielaff then Identified the\n\"Miss X.\" afffdavlt. It stated that\nthe signer was \"Mclntyre's companion\nat Carmel and that she wore her half\nlong  at   the  time.\" .\nCourt adjourned with Mrs. Wiseman -Sielaffs story uncompleted. She\nhad not detailed the steps leading up\nto her statement made on August 19\nto District Attorney Keyea in which\nshe factored her younger sister was\ntho Carmel cottage occupant, nor her\nsubsequent arrest and confession that\nher sta'ement was untrue and had\nbeen framed at the direction of Mrs.\nMcPherson   and  her  mother.\nPeter-PifterieSms\nProudly Predominate\nPreceding Puzzles\nLONDON, Oct. 11.\u2014Now that\nthe crossword puule, which\nswept across England from\nAmerica leaving a trail of\nthumbed dictionaries In Its wake,\nhaa spent its force, England has\nturned to peter-pi per Isms for\nsolace.\nPeter-pi pertains are alliterative sentences containing at least\neight and not more than 12\nwordB, each word of which begins with  the same letter.\n\"Since short skirts still seem\nstylish, sllk stockings should not\n\u25a0ag,\" hi the contribution of one\nexpert. Another hope: \".May\nmany more manly miners migrate, marry methodical maids,\nmake   much   money.\"\nOther tongue twisters are: \"Mr.\nManager, money might make\nMaud marry my miserable Max\u2014\nMax's mother.\" \"Stephen shyly\nstroking Sylvia's shining shingle,\nseemingly surmises smiling Sylvia's single.\"\nMANUFACTURER    ROBBED\nTORONTO, Oct. 11\u2014A man named\nSteele, member of a local manufacturing firm was robbed of |2000 today when a banditt Jumped on the\nrunning board of his'car and grabbed\na satehel containing the money. The\nrobber escaped,\n>\"D0DDS '\nKIDNEY\nk PILLS j\nKlDNEV\nRUN DOWN MEN\nNERVOUS MEN\nStomach\nTrouble Gone,\nBakes 40 Pies\n\"I was a nervous wreck with stomach trouble- Had dizzy Spells and\ncould scarcely walk. I began taking\nAdlerika, and now I run a restaurant\nand bake 40 pies a day. When my\nfriends ask how I do it, I tell them\nabout Adlerika.\"\u2014Mrs. L. Amrol.\nAdlerika differs from most medicines because It acts upon BOTH\nupper and lower bowel. It gives the\nsystem a REAL cleansing, and clears\nout old poisons which usually cause\nsour, gassy stomach, nervousness,\nsleeplessness, headache. Just ONE\nspoonful storw GAS, and relieves that\nfull, bloated feeling so that you can\neat better' and sleep hotter. Even\nif bowels move dally, Adlerika brings\nout much additional poison which\nyou never guessed was in your system\nand which maV have long caused\ntrouble. No \u25a0 matter what you have\ntried for stomach and bowels, Adlerika will surprise you. At leading\ndruggists.\nHubbub in Paris as\nQueen Packs for Her\nTrip Across Atlantic\nPARIS, Oct. 11.\u2014Queen Marie of\nRumania and her entourage, today\nrushed through their last minute preparations for their departure for\nNorth   America  tomorrow.\nOn the eve of the queen's departure for the new world, her suite at\nthe ^i^tel Rltz, was what more\nordinary tourists are given to describing as a mad-house. Maids,\nmajor domos and mannequins bumped into one another as they scurried\nfrom room to room, from corridor to corridor, trying to. make\nsure that nothing Intended to go\nInto the party's 50 trunks should he\nforgotten.\nDeputy Minister of\nAgriculture to Take\nPart in Conference\nOTTAWA.- Oct. 11.\u2014Dr. J. H. O-rls-\nrtile, deDuty minister of agriculture,\nwill probably sail next Saturday for\nKnpland to join the party of Premlfr\nKing in London. Announcement to\nthis effect was made today by Hon.\nW. R. Motherwell, minister of agriculture.\nDr. Gtrisdnle would be exacted to\ntake, part in the discussions, It was\nstated.\nTHE  GUMPS-SAY IT  WITH SIGNS\nTo\nMPs\nVU. PUT UP $,.<\u00bb** TWW\n*I\\VV  WMM  WW   C. VWSTNRO\npt^Tev. - \\ oowtr wero *w\nVIST* | <}\\ B\\TTeweHce wtTxnt^H we\u00a9\nPsViO W>CV<. VMV\u00bbT -  \"TO\npjv.\\nt\\hc\u00bb v* * -<Rf-.oe\nTHE\nRHST\n' YOUR un\nftlW? '\nVISTA\nVU. HUME  fk. WFPCWKT SMa**\nOH  SNEfcX W>T - \"^NV UTOE\nreKSONM. TDV.CW fAANW* NPPCM.'S\nTO ON%Cfc\\W\\HNWfa fcWE^fc - N VOt\nof wows fcom e.svve.'e &\n>\\o\u00abs\u00a3S*\\c>e vs vocvw or. ix w-t*\nC*K W WUJCVCT. - fc*)T \u00ab* TVSV*\n^\u00bbJWT\\^.U<i.  NbE \u00a9.6RTBOOX\nyewfc.% \u00ab* svfcMS-\n.\u00ab\u00a3-\nIF YOU LOVE HEK\nSAY  IT  WITH\nBUNGM.0WS\nIN\nCUMP'S\nP(k.RM>ISE- VISTA\nCOME ON\nADA\/A \/\n^HERE'S YOUR\n\\<F \\ VWtO tt* PNt.^ TWe< \\NOO\\JO VvN-A\nT*WV \\ATT\\* WK5.TWPKCE \\H \"Wt ,v<LM>e*M p\u00bb\nk V40K\u00ab. OT NtT- TVfWt* TO VWOULSfcRX \\\u00ab\no>.t fcVvtret vtiTwsWHvk cwkrrcw,- tvnkt\n0\\XVW\"( \"TO VEWE P\u00bb ft. WKCOtA TO &\\>\u00ab>\u00a3\n\u25a0sws, c\u00ab? fwhvwto \u00abe>ov.j,\nTO Tttfc WNiSOW. OP'WOWt ViKXX .\nV,OV\u00abfc \"\nDon't Miss This\nYou're behind the times if you\ndon't know that Cod Liver Extract\nis one of the greatest flesh producer!\nin the world.\nBecause ft contains more vitalizing\nvltamlnes than any food you can get.\nYou'll be glad to know that McCoy's\nCod Liver Extract Tablets come in\nsugar-coated form now, so If yoi\nreally want to put 10 or 20 poundi\nof solid, healthy flesh on your bonw\nand feel well and strong and nan\na complexion that people will admin\n\u2014ask Canada Drug & Book Co.\nCity  Drug  Co.,   or  any  druggist,  fox\nbox of McCoy's Cod Liver Extract\nTablets.\nOnly 60 cents for 60 tablets, and 11\nyou don't gain five pounds In Id\ndays your druggist is authorised td\nhand you back the money you naldj\nfor them.\nIt isn't anything unusual for a person to gain 10 pounds in 30 days, and\nfor old people with feebleness overtaking them they work wonders.\nCANADIAITj,, PACIFIC\n\u25a0T.   U.WBXUTGE   POSTS\nMontreal, Quebec,\nTo Europe\nTO IJVEEPOOI.\nOct, iS, Nov. 19     Montcalm\nOct. 29, Nov. 26     Montclare\nNov.   6      Montroyal\nNov. 12 Metagama\nTO  BBIaFAST-OLAttttOV\nOct. 21, Nov. 18    Montnalrn\nTO  CHEBBOURa-SOOTBAHPTOaT-\nAKTWEBP\nOct. 20, Nov. 17    Mlnneddsa\nNov.  J,    Mellta\nTO   CHBBBOUKO-SOUTKAlaTTOB.\nOct. 27 Emp. of France\nAnd  regularly  thereafter\nCOBVXBXEXT   BISECT   SEBYICB\nTO    IKE LAWD\nbo TBouranaa\nPull details, with rates, from any\nKent. Berth reservations can now Iva\nnade.\nt. I. OaUaTBB, Diet, PUR. Aft,\nsTBLMOsJ. B. a\nWANTED\nUsed Furniture\nThere is always a demand for second-hand furniture. And those who\nwant to buy it read the offerings in the Want Ads.\nUse the Want Ads to\ntell what you have to sell.\nThe Dai ly News\nNEL30N, B. C.\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 12, 1926\nPage 'Tbaffl\n'GRAY TERROR'\nThe Astonishing Adventures of the Gray Phantom\nBy HERMAN LANDON\n(Copyright by Street * Smith Corp. Serialized by Ledger Syndicate.)\nclutched convulsively at the edge of\nthe table. He marveled at the complex nature ot this woman who\ntalked coolly of murder, but drew the\nline at torture. He could understand\nthe state of mind that would make\nsuch a distinction, -but he had not\nlooked  for It  in  Miss Winton.\n\"Gosh!\" muttered Sammie the\nSwell. \"So little cutis is going to\nbe bumped off. I thought Mr. Emanon\u2014\u2014\"\n\"What you thought makes no difference. Swell. The plans have been\nchanged. In the beginning 4t waa the\nDuke's intention to have Miss Hard\nwick turned over to the police as\nsoon as he was free. That Ward\nmurder was a rather malodorous af-\nmembers of the Duke's gang spirit  fftlr. and Miss Hardwlck Is hopsleasly\n\u25a0yaopsis of rreeetlag XnstnUawate\nTHE GRAY PHANTOM, hero of many\nmiraculous near-criminal adventures.\nIs lured from his quiet retreat near\nNew  York by\nTHE DUKE, his old enemy, whom he\nhad been Instramental in sending to\nprison. -Reaching hie agents through\nunderground wires, the Duke has\nschemed to present a perfect case\nof guilt against\nHELEN HARDWICK, sweetheart of\nthe Gray Phantom, and she is wanted by\nLIEUT. CULLIGORE. of the police, for\nthe   murder  of\nPAUL WARD, a wealthy rogue. The\nPhantom Is also being tracked down\nIn connection with the murder of\nMRS. SLADEft, the Ward housekeeper,\nwho waa found knifed in the back the\nnext day.\nBefore the police can arrest Helen\nmembers of the Duke's gang spirit\nher away to a deserted place outside\nthe     City, and send\nFAY WINTON, a vampire type of woman, to deliver the Duke's ultimatum\nto the Gray Phantom. The plan le\nto keep Helen a hidden prisoner,\nnot to be released until the Gray\nPhantom has used his extraordinary\nability to rescue the Duke from the\npenitentiary. Ten days are given\nthe Phantom to perform this act\nbefore  Helen   hi  put   to  death,\nDesperately, the Phantom tries to find\na way out. Through\nAMBROSE MARR, eccentric acquaintance) With whom he bad shared\npast adventures, he learns that the\nonly one of the Duke's gang who\nknows* -Helen's   whereabouts   is\nMR. EHANON (\"no name\" spelled backward), the Duke's right-hand man,\nwho may be recognised by his fondness for playing weird violin music.\nCraftily, Marr tells the Phantom that\nthis mysterious personage is Fay\nWinton. Before he can act on this\nknowledge, the police surround the\nhouse and Marr hides the Phantom\nIn an underground chamber. From\nthe hidden room he Is kidnaped by\nmembers of the Duke's gang and\ntaken to the deserted house where\nHelen  Is  held.   Here\nRED MAGEE, a brutal criminal, tortures Helen until her screams force\nthe Gray Phantom to accede to the\nDuke s  demands.\nDoped and brought back to the city unconscious, hie first act Is to seek\nout Fay Winton and force her to\ntell the location of Helena hiding\nplace.\nBut, after the severest sort of test, the\nPhantom is convinced that she is\nhot Mr. Emanon, after all.\nHoning to find some solution to the\nsituation, the Phantom explores the\nhidden   room   from   which    he    was\n-. kidnaped. Hearing some one In the\npassage, he follows the footsteps\nuntil he enters a gorgeously furnished room. There, on the center\ntable,   lies   a  violin.\n\"Like old times,\" drawled Swell in\na tone of pleasant anticipation. \"Between you and me, I'll be glad when\nthe Duke is back on the Job. Mr.\nEmanon, whoever he Is, Is all right,\nbut it gives a guy a wooay feeling\nto take orders from somebody he\nnever   sees.\"\n\"No doubt, Swell, but Mr. Emanon has his reasons for remaining\nanonymous. You will have to swallow your woosy feelings and take one\nmore order from him through me.\nIt is his wish that you put the Igloo in readiness for the Duke's arrival.\"\n\".More and more like old times!\nSo the Duke la going to hang out at\nthe same old place?\"\n\"For a while at least. He'll be\nsafe there while the search is going\non. Better go there this afternoon,\nSwell, and try to make the place look\nJust as it did before the Duke was\nsent up. It will make him feel at\nhome.\"\n\"I get you.    Anything else?'\nMiss Winton did not answer immediately. By some strange paradox\nof mental reactions, the things he\nhad heard affected the Phantom like\na revivifying shock. His suspicions\nhad been confirmed; he was\nlongei* floundering in the dark. Certainty terrible though It was, was\nless tormenting than suspense. The\nconversation in the next room had\nmade the situation vividly, brutally\nclear. He knew positively now that\nthe Duke meant to violate his prom\nlse, thereby releasing the Phantom\nfrom all obligations Imposed by his\nsense of honor. So positive were the\nconspirators that he would liberate\nthe Duke, that already they \u201ewere\ntalking of putting the Igloo in\nreadiness. He had heard of the Igloo, the secret retreat of the Duke,\nbut neither he nor tbe police had\never obtained the faintest inkling of\nwhere it was located.\nHis mind was clear at last. Now\nthat he knew the wotst, the feverish\nrage that had burned in his veins was\nabating- He could breathe more freely again; the choking sensation of\ndoubt? and fear was gone. Already\nthe outlines of a plan were shaping\nthemselves in his mind. The outlook\nwas black enough, but he had one\nadvantage. The man and woman\ntalking In the next room had not the\nfaintest suspicion that he was listening to every word. Only a stroke\nof luck had guided the Phantom\nthrough the passage, and they had no\nreason to fear an eavesdropper.\n\"Just one thing more,\" Miss Winton was saying, and now he perceived an Indefinable change in her\ntone. \"Tell me, Swell, do you know\nwhere Miss Hardwlck Is being kept?\"\nSwell spoke as if the question had\ngiven him a gentle Jolt. \"No, and I\ndon't care particularly to know.\nThere's such a thing as being too\nwise.\"\n\"Right, Swell. I don't want to\nknow, either. I Just wondered. Yesterday afternoon you received a report from Cram which you transmitted to me.\"\n\"Sure I did, but Cram knows how\nto relay his messages so they can't\nbe   traced.\"\n\"I know, Swell. You may hear\nfrom Cram in the morning again.\nTell him from me that Miss Hardwlck is not to be treated with unnecessary harshness until further\norders.\"\nA muffled exclamation sounded\nin the next room. \"But Mr. Emanon \"\n\"You heard me, Swell,\" interrupted Miss Winton evenly.  \"It will be\nwell for you when the Duke returns,\n. if   In   this   particular   Instance   you\nobey me instead of Mi\"- Emanon.\"\n\"All right,\" said Swell hastily.\n\"what you say goes. I'll tip Cram off\nto what you said.\"\n\"IDon't forget.\" Her tone softened\na little. \"I don't suppose you understand my feelings in the matter,\nSwell, and It isn't necessary that you\nshould. Death Is sometimes inevitable,\nwhile torture is crude and unnecessary. I abominate crudities; they\nare a blotch on existence. Owing to\ncircumstances that have come up.\nMiss Hardwlck must be put out of\nthe way, but she mustn't be subjected   to   neodless   suffering,\"\nAffile     the.     Phantom's     fingers\nHALLETT KIN\nTrail   Bowling   League   Progresses;   Weir   Takes   Bad\nBeating; Freeman Loses\ncompromised. The Duke could imagine no worse punishment for the\nPhantom than to have her involved\nin a scandal of that sort. He was\nright, but recent developments have\nnecessitated a change of program.\nKnow what has happened to Topeka\nJimmie?\"\n\"No.\" said Swell In a mildly\nstartled tone. \"I ain't seen Jimmie\nsince   Tuesday   night.\"\nThere Is a reason. Topeka Jimmie Is dead.\"\nSwell gave a husky exclamation.\n\"I shall tell you how It happened,\"\ncontinued Miss Winton.    \"It may be\nlesson to you, though I trust you\nwill never need It. ft appears Topeka Jimmie had been disgruntled\nfor some time. Imagining he was being unfairly discriminated against\nand not getting his share of the\nproceeds. Ha concealed his feelings\nand waited for an opportunity to\nget revenge. Jimmie happened to\nbe one of the few who knew where\nMien Hardwlck was kept, and that\nCt&ve him a chance to Vent his petty\nspite, and, as he expected, put away\ntidy little sum against a damp\nand dreary day. The other night he\nwent to the place where Miss Hardwlck is confined, expecting to take\nher away. H\u00ab Was caught in time\nand\u2014well, as I told you, Topskft\nJimmie Is dead.\"\n\"Served him right,\" muttered Sammie fervently. \"But I don't see how\nhe expected to line his pokes by\npulling a stunt like that.\"\n\"Oh, Jimmie was clever\u2014a bit too\nclever for his own good. He thought\nhe would try the time-honored pastime of playing both ends against; the\nmiddle. His Idea was to get even\nwith the Duke's organization by taking Miss Hardwlck away, and then\nsettle an old grudge against the\nPhantom by forcing him to pay a\nhigh ransom for her release. -There\nis a rumor to the effect that the\nPhantom Is very wealthy, but t think\nit is grossly exaggerated. The Phantom was always a prodigal, throwing\naway with one hand what he took\nwith the other. He's made a few\nlucky speculations since he turned\nover a new leaf, and his gardens are\ngiving him a modest Income, but he\nIs not a rich man.   Jimmie was mis-\n\"I never thought Jimmie would\npull a raw one like that,\" commented\nSwell.\n\"And I am telling you this In case\nyou should be tempted to do likewise.\" explained Miss Winton softly.\n\"Jimmle's interference was an unfortunate thing for Miss Hardwlck,\nOne of our men caught them conversing through a thin board parti,\ntion. and Jimmie told her Mr. Emanon's real name. You see how awkward that makes it for us, Swell.\nMr. Emanon Is extremely valuable\nto the Duke, but hla value will be\ngone the moment he loses his anonymity. Under the circumstances\nthere  is only one  thing to  do.\n\"Well, there are better worlds\nthan this,\" declared Swell In tones\nof  mock  solemnity.\nThe Phantom, smiling grlmj\/,\nturned away. He had learned\nenough, and he fancied the colloquy\nin the next room was drawing to a\nclose. He must disappear before\ndiscovery came, not because he\nfeared an encounter, but because to\nbe found now might be fatal. He\nglanced, at the violin on the table,\nand a sardonic twinkle appeared In\nhis eyes. The cards In his desperate\ngame with the Duke had been\nshuffled in the last 20 minutes. The\nodds had piled up against him, but\nhe would still win, although he\nwould   use   different   strategy.\nHe looked for the exit in the wall,\nremembering that a slight pressure\nhad opened it for him, and now his\neyes fell on a tall full-length portrait\noccupying a position at the exact\npoint where he had entered the\nroom. The man in the painting was\nalmost as tall aa himself, with a\nslight stoop to his shoulders, a neatly trimmed beard covering the lower\nportion of his face, while the deep-\nset eyes, with an expression of\nmingled arrogance and greed, glared\nat  him.\nHe pushed one side of the frame,\nand the picture pivoted noiselessly\non Its axis. He reflected, as he\nstarted down the dark stairs, that\nthere was an oddly symbolic touch In\nthe circumstance that the door of\nescape consisted of a picture of the\nDuke.\nTRAIL, Oct. 11.\u2014 Barnava's flv\u00ab\neasily trimmed Weir's bowlers with\n267 pins to the good in the second\nround opening game of the Memorial\nhall bowling club tournament tonight.\nHallett's team defeated Freeman's\nby 101 in the second game.\nOn account of the T.A.A.A. indoor\ntrack meet on Friday, tbe fixture,\nForrest vs. Milligan will be played\ntomorrow-night, following the Postlll\nvs. Vanatter match.\nTonight's scores  were:\nBarnava\u2014Leslie, 97, 10\u00ab\ntal, 310; Rutledge, 131,\nTotal, 350; Martlnelll, 121\nTotal, 487; Pasquale, 148,\nTotal, 498; Barnava, 149,\nTotal, 467. Game totals,\n724.     Gross   total,   2097,\nWolr\u2014Smith, 121, 148, 105. Total,\n869; Substitute, 97, 98, 107. Total.\n297; Simonson, 114. 110, 188. Total,\n367; G. Pasquale, 145, 139, 161. Total,\n486; Weir, 133, 125, 124. Total, 382.\nGame totals, 610. 610, 620. Gross total,  1840.\nHallett\u2014Kelderman, 155. 141\nTotal, 427; Bradbury, 127, 151\nTotal, 866; Murdock, 176, 142,\nTotal, 471; Hallett, 188, 173,\nTotal, 655. Game totals, 646,\n664. Gross total,  1819.\nFreeman\u2014Hudoklin, 108, 98,\nTotal, 187; Laurlente, 112, 172\nTotal, 416; Provost, 181, 173,\nTotal, 461; Freeman, 159, 190\nTotal, 604. Game totals, 510,\n676. 'Gross total. 1718.\nTRAIL   MEN   BRING\nIN   GROUSE   BAGS\nTRAIL Oct. 11.\u2014C. Dodimead, F.\nDeane and J- P. Schofield, returning from the boundary country,\nwhere they spent the week-end.\nbrought In nine grouse as their bag\nthough they were not particularly\nbent   on   hunting^-\nfsOClArBRFl^sTROM-\nTRAIL AND TADANAC\n, 107. To-\n93. 126.\n191, 17&.\n186, 169.\n151, 167.\n646,   727,\n131.\n, 86.\n163.\n194.\n609,\n111.\n132.\n157.\n166.\n633,\nTRAIL'S TRUCK\nMEET IS H;\nI\nWonderful Array of Prizes Up;\nCompleted Program\nMailed Out\nTRAIL, Oct 11. \u2014 Friday night will\"\nagain see Trail humming with athletic\nactivity. Sohool and mature athletes\nfrom all district points will vie in the\nfruit fair building for the honors and\nsilverware at the Trail Amateur Athletic association eighth Indoor field\nand track meet.\nThe complete program prepared by\nF. a. Willis and George Murray* i\u00bb\nnow being mailed to Intending competitors. It lists 19 field and 9 track\nevents. There are six open track\nevents, heats and finals, the 50 yard*\ndash, the 220, 440 and 880 yards runs,\nand three field events, the broad Jump,\nhigh Jump and the pole vault.\nIn school events there are listed\nthe 50 yards dash, 100 yards daub for\nboys and girls, the 220, 440 yards and\none mile run for boys; the 60 yards\ndash for boys 14 and under. Of relay races there will be Intercity school\nraces for teams of boys and of girls,\na relay for girls of Grade VI. or under, and an intercity relay for nchool\nboy's of any grade. The field events\nwill be the broad jump, high jump,\nshot put and pole vault for boys and\nthe broad Jump and high jump fof\ngirls.\n\u2022 prist*   on   View\nA wonderful array of prises has been\nsecured and is now on view in a downtown store. Choice silver cups or\nmedals will bo awarded the winners of\neach event, and other prises to the\nseconds.\nTrail Elks lodge is offering a gold\nmedal for the boy winning most points\nin the school events. L. F. Tyson is\nsimilarly offering a beautiful silver\ncup for the girl winning the most\npoints  in  this  class.\nA silver cup, aonated by Charles\nDodimead, will be .handed to the points\nwinner in the open class.\nSilver medals donated by the Trail\nCaledonian society will be awarded to\nthe winners of the intensity boys and\ngirls relay race.\nThese prises are in addition to the\nchallenge tropaies competed for annually* among 'the Kootenay and Boundary ' schools, which are: The Trail\nMercantile cup for school championship; the Murray shield for the Intercity girls relay race; the Willis cup\nfor intercity high schools boys relay\nrace; and the Dr. Thorn cup for Inter-\nclt y  public  school  boys  relay  race.\nTrunk    .Martin,    i4,    of    Doylestown,\nPa ., was killed by a falling tree.\n\"Good Goods at Gray's\"\nLadies'\nWrist\nWatches\nof   Durability   and   Davintfoen*\n\"We   have  them  in   all  the   new\ndesigns.\nPriced   From   $10   Up\nJ.   B.  GRAY\nWatchmaker\u2014Jeweler\u2014Optician\n707 BAKER 8T.       PHONE 333\nTungsten and Manganese\nOres From District to\nBe Deployed, Toronto\nTRAIL, Oct. 11\u2014Samples.of Kootenay tungsten and manganese ores\nare to be put on display in the Royal Ontario Museum of mineralogy,\nToronto, according to W. Frampton.\npresident of the Associated Mining A\nMilling company, here. Today he\ndispatched about 75 pounds of\nsamples, believed to be the first ever\nsent  out  from  Kootenay.    They\nbe exhaustively analysed and pi-\ndisplay  with the data thus secured\nThey were taken from the company'*\nproperties  at  Ginol's  L-afldlng.\nTRAIL BUILDING\nPERMITS INCREASE\nTKAIL, Oct. 11.\u2014With tralloW\npermits totaling $29,97(1, durlnl September, Trail's total building activity this year reaches  $341,242,\nEDHVrtDSBURG\nCROWN\nBRAND\nVurest and Best\nCORN SYRUP\nTHE CANADA STARCH CO, LIMITED - MONTREAL\nCX.A\nThis column Is contluctod \u00bb>'*\";\nThomas  Weston   of   Trail,    Phone\nher ot all   social   events  ii\nRossland territory.\nTrall-\nTRAIL,  Oct.   11.\nMrs    T.   Loseke\ntonight lent  b_\u00abr   BMt %\u00ab\u00ab >ff~r*5\n- '.tful shower given   In   honor  oi\ndaughter of Mr.\ndeau.  T,\nHtlnson\na delleMful shi\nWhao,rm\u00bbrriogc to Km, RT\u00ab.' \u00a3 KM*\nberley is to take Place 1 \u00ab - \u2122'\u00bb\nmonth The rooms werr prettll> dec\nSrated- with Chlneas lanttr*J\" g*\nental motif further carried out when\nMiss Violet Loseke. arrayed In <\"\u2022\nmiH.s v\"\"y rhia,,,.- tu-lde wheeled\n\"\"\"JX 0dee^ra?\u00bbdeSrl,*:;hda\u00b0w loaded\nwith the many beautiful and useful\nshowered gifts to Present '*\u2122 'Vre\nBiifist   of  honor.     Pleasant   hours   were\nSe\" in ;,.cal and rm.slcal: entente-\nment and games. A dainty buffet sup\nper was served ^he 'nvlted guests\nwere Mesdames l\u00bb. M   Barrett A. M\u00abn-\nCrowe.   15    I'ri.we,   It.   Lee.   K.\na. MeWhlnnle. A. Jeffries and\nP. It, Newton and the Misses Evelyn\nE. Barrett. MaybeU. Newton Ava\nOgilvle Olga Butorac. Hose Birrett.\nFlorence Ogilvle, Doris Johns\u2122 T..\nBarton. M. Wagner, Gladys Ogilvle,\nLottie Barrett.        ^    f\nEast Trail members of St. Andrew's Junior Women's auxiliary met\nthis afternoon at the home of Mrs. J.\nH. Owen, East Trail, for their sswlns\nbee. There were Present EveWn Allen. Rose Shlmmel Nellie *\u00bb\"''<<\u2022\n(llsdys Allen, Isobel l'ae-e \"'Oils\nCullen Vera Shtmmrl Edith Allen.\nEvelyn Rumley. Isobel Varseveldt.\nMrs. Owen presided. .\nMrs. R. H. Hltehnis of Rowland Is\nspending a few days' vacation here\nwith her son-in-law and daughter. Alderman nnd Mra. J. A. MacKinnon, at\ntheir Bay avenue  holrfe.\nMrs.   r.   Swnrtzenhauer\nI Msttlng  frtenda  In   ths\nat    IMsshnul\nelty  low,\n(To Be Continued.)\nNearly Half-Inch\nYesterday's Record\nNearly half an Inch of rain fell in\nNelson in the 24 hours ending at 6\no'clock last night, actual measurement\nof the precipitation being .39 Inches.\nMost of the rain fell yesterday forenoon, although there was a slight fall\nin  the afternoon.\nMinimum temperature .yesterday was\n41, while the maximum was 60.\nThe barometer was rising last night,\nand the forecast for today Is \"clearing weather.\"\nStood Her Nagging\nForty Years, Then\nHe Klled His Wife\nCA.MfD.EN'. Oct. 11.\u2014After confessing to killing his wife Benjamin\nWallace contended he had 'suffered\nfor 40  years from  her  nagging.\nIn the raising of a lltier of wmi-\nteen pigs to weigh 478a pounds In\n180 days, Jenkins Bros., of Logans-\nport, Ind., have tii-U-l'lial.fU ntv\nworlds reuyid.\nMr nnd Mrs tt Bt. Wndds of tills\ncity spent the week-end visiting friends\nin 'Rossland.\n\u2022 \u2022     *\nGeoff Eyton of TtnHsluml wan a\nbusiness visitor  in   Trail   today.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. O MeGee *if Robson was a\nshopping visitor  to  Trull  today.\nMIsp A. Jewell spent the week-end\nwith her narents. Mr. and Mrs. E.\nJewell of Rossisuul.\n\u2022 *    \u00ab\nMiss  Gwendolyn   Hopkins,   nurse-ln-\ntraining    at     Rt.     Elizabeth     hospital.\nYakima, Wash., arrived Saturday night\nto  spend   a   hol.d;iv   with   her   parents.\nMr. and Mrs.  P.   Hopkins of Tadanac.\nSit\nMrs A. T. Fvton. Mr. flml Mrs W.\nC. Te'raan and Mrs. M. B. Davidson\nand Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Elletson and\nson. William, all of Rossland, were\ntheater visitors  here  tonight.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nTreii Amateur Musical Soo'\u00abty. Vast\nsnd present member* nf the above so-\nefetv are Cordially invited to a social\nto be held in Odd Fellows' Hal! on\nThursday. October 14th. at 8:30 p.m\nIt will be appreciated if those Intending to be present will notify the secretary. C. D. Leslie, honorary wore*\ntary. (517\u00bb)\nHr\nEconomies\nthat result\nin lower Prices\n*Ivery day one meets with object lessons\nin the economies of volume buying.\nCigars by the box cost much less than if\nbought one by one.\nDiscounts of a cent or so for purchasing in\npairs and dozens, is the housewife's well-\nknown measure of economy.\nImagine, then, the savings possible to General Motors of Canada, buying in hundreds\nof tons, thousands of gallons, millions of\nfeet!\nSteel, nickel, copper and brass; wire, glass,\nlumber and paints; leather and various\nfabrics; all these General Motors of Canada buys in vast quantities from the home\nmarket \u2022 . \u00ab Canada.\nNaturally the finest products of Canadian\nmines and forests, the toughest hides\nfrom Canadian herds, the choicest weaves\nof Canadian looms, the best materials\nfrom Canadian factories and laboratories,\nare available to this great Canadian\ninstitution.\n\u00ab\nNaturally, this results in lower costs and\nlower prices for those economies are effected in every phase of building General\nMotors of Canada cars, from the enameling of fenders and the manufacture of radiators, to the construction and upholstery\nof the Canadian-built Fisher bodies that\nare used on Canadian-built General Motors cars.\nCouple with this obvious result of tremendous buying power, the manufacturing,\nselling and distributing economies of huge\nvolume\n- add the supporting revenue of enormous\nexports to the Empire across the seas.\n\u2014 and the clear conclusion explains why.\nin the face of good wages to the superior\ncraftsmen who build its cars, General Motors of Canada can continue to give motor\ncar values, unsurpassed if equalled, elsewhere in all the world.\nGENERAL     MOTORS    of    CANA\nv, tr <L\nr~ C\u00abn\u00bbdi\u00bbD *~*7\nLIMITED,    OSHAWA,    ONTARIO\nCADILLAC  CHEVROLET^.-*-\u00bb^7McLAUGHLIN-BUICK\nOLDSMOBILE     OAKLAND     PONTIAC\nGENERAL MOTORS\n\u00b0\/,CANADAi\"\"\"\"'\n Page Foul V\n\u2014\u2014-\u2014\u2014\u2014   \t\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 12, 1926\nTHE   DAILY   NEWS\n, Published every morning except Sunday by The News Publishing company,\nlimited. Nelaon. B.C.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nsnd checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing company, limited, and tn no caee to individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate carda and ABC.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may be seen at the office of\nany Advertising agency recognised by\nthe Canadian Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy mall (country), per month I   .60\n.Per year         S.OQ\nBy mall (city), per year  11.00\nOutside Canada, per month 76\nPer year      7.B0\nDelivered, per week 25\nPer year    15.00\nPayable In Advance\nMi\u00abab\u00bb?A*aUt7higeauo\"f Clre'slattoa\nTUESDAY,   OCTOBER   12,    1926\nThe Attorney-General in the\nCity Hall\nFerule's city council Is asking the\nprovincial government what the cost\nwould be of having the city policed\nby the provincial police, the object\nbeing twofold\u2014tn order that the\ncouncil might be well Informed, and.\nIn the event of the cost of provincial\npolicing being substantially lower\nthan civic policing, in order to save\nthe   citiaens   money.\nNelson's city council asked some\ntime ago for similar Information, and\nIt Is now under preparation presumably, with the aid of cost figures\nfor many years past furnished by the\ncity.\nOf course, \"policing,\" In the ordinary sense. Is only a part of the\nJob of a civic police department.\nJust how satisfactory- it will be to\nhave policu departments run from\nVictoria\u2014run, let us assume, with\nthe utmost efficiency\u2014only experience can teach, and quite a few\nmunicipalities are now getting suoh\nexperience.\nHow will a liaison be mulnlafned\nbetween the city administration generally and the provincial police?\nWill a mayor .or a city council be\nable to do more than express wishes?\nWill there be formality about obtaining the doing of any little thing\noutside the prescribed list? Will officers controlled ultimately by Victoria be a flexible force, really as\nfully serviceable to interior cities as\ntheir present directly controlled men?\nTo establish the attorney-general at\nthe city hall would be an enormous\ndepur.urc.\nUnder such a system, probably\nmore crooks would be caught in the\nprovince. Probably every official,\nformal duty would be well done.\nBut many valuable duties performed by the police are not official\nand formal. They are matters that\narise from day to day. within the\ncognizance of the mayor. How fur\nwould these be done, or how far could\nth-py be done, by a force not In any\nway   accountable   to   local  authority ?\nWould the obvious disadvantages\nof 'placing the attorney-general in\nthe city hall be counterbalanced by\nothers sufficiently to make the experiment   advisable?\nThe\nLighter Side\nReaders of The Dally Newa contribute many of the best items to\nthla column. Just sign your name\nor initials, or nom-de-plume, and\nsend In your brtghtest Ideas. \u2014\nEditor, Lighter Side.\nAUNT HET\n\"That Scruggs feller didn't\nfool me. I knowed he wasn't\nbein' true to his wife when 1\nseen him glttln' a shave on\nTupsday.\"\nFlorida    will    come    back    if    th*\ntourists will go back.\nYet every man who thinks\npride of ancestry silly wants,\nlite eon to be proud of  him.\nALGEBRA IS USEFUL TO THE\nAVERAGE MAN ONLY BECAUSE\nIT ENABLES HIM TO HELP THE\nKIDS  WITH  THEIR   ALBEGRA.\nWe have reached tbe point now\nwhere you% can Judge a man's social status by the crime he goes to\nJail   for.\nSlowly, through the ages, the\ndomesticated dog has progressed\nfrom out of doors, to a kennel,\nto the hall, to the bedroom.\nA common misfortune binds married people closer unless It la that\nof being married to one another.\nSing a Hong of sixpence,  a  pock-\nfull    of   rye.\"      Strange    Mother\nGoose  custom!   Still, it beats  singing\nSwett-Ad-o-line.\nIt's ' lu-;t| '. r to live in a kiiiaU\nt OWll, I'here's no 1 in cut I vv to\nput up a \u2022 10,000-a-year front\nwhere everybody know-, you get\n$35  a week.\nWhen made up to resemble 20,\na woman of 40 haa thut indefinable\nlook of a woman of 40 made up to\nresemble 20.\nAn Able President Asked to\nResign\nLike many another university president before him. President Suzallo\nof Washington university, whose advent to the Pacific coast was hailed\nonly a few years ago as an acqulsl-\nkm,   has   been   asked   to   resign.\nTho reason given for the action is\nthat In the opinion of the regents,\nthe duty of a president la to administer policies, not to formulate them.\nIn holding that a president should\nhave something to do with formulating policy. President Suzallo seems\ntu have stumbled on the same rock\nas one Woodrow Wilson.\nIt appears to be the view of many\npersons in the neighboring state that\nstate  university  should  be  respon-\n\u00bb.*Jre to the hand that feeds It\u2014the\nstale treasury. From the day he\ntook office, Governor Hartley, who\nhas    been    a   pretty   good   all-round\n' smasher, has been \"tying into\" President Suxall-o, without getting him\nto say \"Uncle\" on demand. In his\neffort   to   bring   PresiuVnt   Suzallo   to\n| heel, the governor has had the support of the Spokane Spokesman-\nReview.      Finally,    the    governor    re-\nI Meved of their dutlen the regents aup-\n: porting the famous t*uzallo, and appointed new ones, from which event\nhas dated tbe certainty that the\nrvord would fall.\nWill this procured retirement permanently iirjure the career of the\nmilitant university leader? Or will\nIt merely transfer him into the field\n' of politics, as did the enforced re-\n. tlrement of Woodrow Wilson from\nfhe  presidency of Princeton?\nOut    of    a    Job,    Woodrow    Wilson\n| waa  offered   the   Democratic  nomination for governor of New Jersey, and\n' fae   easily   redeemed   that   state.\nBefore he was reelected, as he duty\nwas, he was demanded for political\ntours  by  all  sections  of  the  United\nWHAT A GHASTLY ASS IS MAN.\nHE THINKS HIMSELF A SHEIK\nWHEN A LADY SMILES AT THE\nDROP   OF   EGG   ON   HIS  CHIN.\nYou aren't really In the sticks\nuntil you find a place where toothpicks are worn to work after lunch.\nIt  has been a bad year for champions,   and   at   times   the   champion\n\u2022,   whoever  he  is,   must  have   felt\nvery   uneasy.\nIf only the higher civilisation that\ntaught nations not to collect debts\nby force had taught others the\nother   half   of   the   rule.\nCORRECT      THIS      SENTENCE:\nBILLY   IS ONLY SIX.\"  SAID  SHE,\nAND      HE      CAN      COUNT      THE\nSQUEAKS IN OUR FORD.\"\n SatafBt*\t\nPHEMIUII   TOM,   \u00bbu*sina\nJtEMKCHEID, Rhenish Prussia. Oct.\n11.\u2014A premium of 760 marks for all\nmothers nursing their children fur ut\nleast It weeks has been appropriated\nby the Renischeid nflntstry for public\nwelfare. This premium will be paid\nto the persevering mother at the expiration of the sixteenth week, and repeated after the twentieth and twenty-fourth week.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nSy X.A VKA  A.  XatBKMA.*\n\u25a0n 1111111 rrrrrnT-mrmi\nA.VSWKRS TO   INQUIRIES\nTOMORROWS MENU\nm\nBr aklast\nApplesauce\nCereai\nmailed Dried Beef       Muffins\nCoffee\nLundi, on\nBaked  Macaroni  and  Hum\nLettuce Salad\nRolls Jelly Tea\nDinner\nRoast Leg of Lamb with\nBrown  Gravy\nBaked Potatoes Peas\nCelery   Salad\nBread Pudding        Liquid Sauce\nCoffee\nMrs. V. V,\u2014Have you crochet directions   for   infants'   sandals ?\nAnswer\u2014Infants' Sandala\u2014Use two\nballs of Saxony (three-fold) and a\nsize two bone or celluloid crochet\nhook. Toe\u2014Chain Beven. turn five\nS. C. in five chs\u201e two S. C. In sixth,\nfive 8. C. In other side of five cha\u201e\nchain one and turn. Now Increase\none at. at -each end, Joining each\naround with a slip St., till you have\n38 sts. in round, eleven ridges. Then\nomit five ets. for instep and work\nback  and forth  for 12  rows.\nNext row work 12 S. C, decrease\nby working two sts. at one, one S. C.\nIn next st., another decrease, and\nfinish with 14 S. C. Continue to decrease In this way till nine sts. are\nleft on each side, then sew up back.\nCrochet one S. C. In each st. around\nsandal and one round of D. C. Cuff\n\u2014Next round, starting at center back,\nV'ork one st. In each double crochet\nto side of instep two S. C. In corner\nst., five S. C. across instep, two S. C.\nIn other corner and one 8. C. In\neach st. to back. Repeat thlfl round\nfive times and finish with one round\nof crochet silk as follows: \u2022 One S.\nC. In one S. C, then one 8. C. In\nnext stitch but worked through round\nbelow. Repeat from *. Run ribbon\nthrough D. C. round.\nBride\u2014If you were dreaming of\nbuilding a small home, what finish\nwould you choose for the bathroom\nwalls?\nAnswer\u2014Tile is fine for walls as\nwell as for floors. Or eanltaB for\nwalls and linoleum for floor. Or\npaint Is a good wall finish with\nhardwood floors spar-varnished. All\nthree finishes are washable and sanitary. Watch this column for my\nSaturday (October 16) article on\nPlanning the Bathroom, as It may\ninterest   you.\nNew-at-Housekeeplng \u2014 What\nmake of vacuum cleaner do you advise   me   to   buy?\nAnswer\u2014I cannot give trade names\nIn this column, as that is advertising. Anyway, it would be so difficult to s..y that any one 1b especially\nsuperior to the others! There are so\nmany fine vacuum cleaners on the\nmarket today. Have a number of\nthem demonstrated for you. Some\nhave the motor-driven brush, some\nhave suction with friction-driven\nbrush, and others have pure suction.\nTo get best results from the pure\nsuction machine, one should run it\nrather more quickly than the others.\nPersonally, I like a fairly lightweight cleaner which I can carry\nupstairs   easily.\nTomorrow\u2014Making a Spanish\nCake.\nAddress inquiries to MiBS Kirkman\nand inclose stamped-eddressed envelope for reply.\u2014Editor.\nleiiiraraiiim\nThat Body j\nof Yours\nfej    \u00bbJ  JAMES  W.  IAITOS,  M.D.     B\n' iiifMIMMlaUM^\nEffects of Lack of Sunshine\nPREMIER KING'S NEW CABINET\nNew cabinet of Premier W. L. Mackenzie King, after members were sw orn'in SaturJay. Reading from left to right, back row: Hon. Fernand Rlnfret, secretary of state; Hon. Robert Forko, minister of immigration; Hon.. J. D.\" Elliott, minister of public works; Hon. W. D, Euler. minister of customs; Hon. Chattel A. Dunning, minister of railways; Hon. W. R. Motherw ell, minister of agriculture; Hon. J. P. A. Cuidin, minister of marine and\nfisheries; Hon. James Malcolm, minister uf trade and commerce; Hon. Dr. King, minister of health and soldiers' civil r^estaiblishment; Hon. Lucie n\nCiiniioii, \u25a0ollflltur tWera.; Hon. P. Venlot, poatmaster-geneial; Hon. Peter 11 eenan, minister oi' labor. Front row: Hon. James Robb, minister of finance:\nHon. Senator Raoul Dandurand, leader of the senate; Rt. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, erlme mlnlsttr And minister uf external a .fairs; Hon. Ernest\nLapointe.  minister of Justice;   Hun.  Charles  Stewart, minister of interior.     * f\nrays manufactured ozone, which is\nreally air in its* purest form, .and\nthat this counteracted the darkness\nand lack of ventilation In the cellar.\nFurther, as most of the workings\nuf the body are now thought to be\ndue to electrical reactions, the ultra\nviolet rays actually Increased the\namount of electricity in the body.\nAnd still further, the little glands\nIn the body that control nutrition\nand growth were likewise stimulated,\nso that the animals overcame the\nhandicaps   of   the   dark   cellar.\nAnd   the   lesson?\nJutt the same old one, that sunshine Is what makes everything\ngrow, and therefore your children\nand you also, should get your share\ndally. The day hasn't come when\nwe should sit In darkness or in ill-\nventilated rooms and try to make\nup for this by the use of the ultra\nviolet rays. These rays are for\nthose  who  are sick or shut in.\nYou and I need not only the sunshine Itself but the change, the variety that goes with the outdoors. The\nmind needs this as much aa the\nbody.\nW. F. RcShr of Woodward Technics.] high school, Toledo, will be\nprofessor of mechanical drawing at\nDefiance    College,\nWHAT MAKES A\nTOURIST TOUR?\nBUFFALO, N.Y., Oct. 11,\u2014'What\nmakes a tourist tour? Why, his\nwife, of course! You must enlist feminine Interest In tourist literature\nand advertising.\" So said a Montreal\nconvention manager, Mayor Mathew-\nson, addressing an international convention to his business confreres in\nthis  city.\nBRIAND   HAS   COOK   CO  YEARS\nPARIS, Oct. 11.\u2014Premier Rriand has\nretained his cook over a period of 30\nyears, On each of his 12 sojourns\nin various ministries, M. Brtand took\nthe faithful cook along with Mm.\nShe enjoys a high reputation omeng\nthe diplomats and statesmen who\nattend bunquets given tl th* Quai\nd'Orsay and has become such an\nimportant person that Bhe was recently   interviewed.\n\"Monsieur Brland may be in the\nright place at the foreign affairs,\"\nshe volunteered, \"but 1 would halo\nto have him go to the finances.\"\n\"Why,\"   asked   the   Interviewer.\n\"He never checks up my own ic-\neountV  she replied.\nONE   WOMAN    CANDIDATE\nTOPEKA, Kan.. Oct. 11.\u2014A woman\nIs *.he only independent candidate for\na state office In Kansas this year.\nShe is Miss Carrie Carlisle of Wln-\nfteld, now county superintendent. Both\nthe Republican and Democratic nominees are men. The state super In -\ntendency is the only elective office\never previously held  by  a  woman.\nWOMAN    BLACKSMITH\nEGGDNBERG, Austria. Oct. 11.\u2014\nRosa Stejnklauber, blacksmith. Is one\nof the best-known artisans in this\nsection of Austria.\nA dlpluma testifies that the is\n\"duly articled, having served her apprenticeship and satisfied her examiners that she is entitled to call herself  a  master  blacksmith,\"\nRosa is a cartwrlght as well as a\nblacksmith. She Is a handsome woman, whose strength is equal to that\nof any man, and can shoe the most\nrefractory   horse.\nAlmost dally you are reading about\nthe remarkable results obtained by\nthe ultra violet rays obtained by\nartificial light, and their effect upon\nthe growth and workings of the\nbody.\nI spoke once before about the ef\nfeet of these rays on the growth of\nchickens, and how they, increased\nthe   egg-laying   power   of   the   bene\nA French research man haB been ,\nexperimenting with these rays on\nyoung rabbits. There were five\nrabbits In the litter and they were\nborn and kept further in a dark cellar. The two strongest were made\n\"controls.\" as It Is called, that is they\nwere not subjected to these ultra\nviolet rays. The other or weaker\nthree young rabbits were treated\nfor about five weeks with three\ntreatments or exposures per week.\nThe five, animals received the name\nfood  In equal amounts.\nThe rabbits that were given the\nultra violet ray treatment grew In\na normal manner despite the fact\nthat they were kept in the dark\ncellar. The other two rabbits, which\nwere the strongest at birth, did not\ngain in weight, in fact their weight\nbecame less, and they were unques-\ntlonally   weak   and   sick.\nThese scientists believe that these\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nJOHN BURNS & SON\nFlashlights\n^^^^^^      and Batteries\nWe wish to advise the public that we have received\nanother large shipment of the famous\nBURGESS BATTERIES\n\"The Kind That Lasts Longer\"\nWe have them for Radio, Engine and Flashlight.   All the\npopular styles.\n\u2014PRICES RIGHT\u2014\nNelson Hardware Co.\n\u25a0 . Wholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNKLION PHONE   21 \u25a0.  O.\nMake if your bread\nTRISCUIT\nShredded Wheat in cracker form\nH is lOOper cent whole wheat\nToast it and serve itwith butter\nA\nPure\nRich\nMilk\nMfa M. Anderson of Yale, in a\nlatter to Pacific) MUX, says:\n\"Only a pure and rich milk could\ngive the .satisfieiiin Pacific Willi\nhas alwiyi glyto.    W i have mm\nit al.ogether in our home for two\nyears niol flail its i|i.ulity .ihvu.v*\nthe mime.\"\nHUh in its highest condition fresh\nfrom prize < kw'h is received every\nmorning  al   the  plants.    This   is\nPACIFIC MILK\nHead Office, Vancouver\nFactories   at  Abbotiford   and   Ladntr\nForemoat   Scientific\nIndustrial Research\nInstitute.    Will not\n\u25a0tain. PlrMi t odor.    \u00bb.    -    ^*\u2014  ~\nHvmlcMtohumaia \u00a3\u00a3   lOW\nRetailer\nMario    m    Vancouver\nBillheads\nWe print more billheads than any other cpneern\nin the interior of British Columbia.\nThat is because we have the equipment and staff\nto give the best service and because our prices are\nreasonable.\nTHE DAILYNEWS JOB DEPT.\nPhone 144 (Two Lines)\nPRINTING\u2014RVUNG-B00KBINDING\nTHIS CANADA OF OURS-The Great Company\n\u2014By J. S. Morrison and Maud Morrison Stone\nthe statement of Democratic doctrine\nthat caught Ihe country, which would\nprobably have elected him even without  a  Republican  split.\nAa U was, he wound up with\neight years as chief executive of the\nUnited States.\nIf Governor Hartley should run\nInto ex-President Busallo in the political field, It would be a very Interest-1\nIng sequel to tha event Just announced, and,  In a way,  poetic  Jus-\n' Utates,   and   brought a  freshness  tojtlce.\n(jf^ROBABLY The OLDEST COMPANY\nto the world. founded i'\/i centuries\nago and today stronger than ever,\n*tme governor and company of\nadventurers op england trading- into\nHudson's bay.\ntme muojomsbay co, played a very\nimportant part in the development\nof canaoa-\nVug. MERRY MONARCH PIO NOT REALIZE\nTHAT HE WAS GIVING AWAY OVER 1,000,000,\nSQ.MILES OP TERRITORY, WHEN HE GRANTED\nA CHARTER 16 ALL LANDS ON WATERS AND\nSTREAMS, PLOWING INTO HUDSON'S BAY-\nTO PRINCE RUPERT AND 17 OTHER PERSONS.\nTHE H.B.CO.WERE ABSOLUTE LORDS OVER\nALL TrllS VAST COUNTRY- IN RETURN THEY\nHAD TO PAY THE KING *TW0 BLACK ELKS\nAND TWO BLACK BEAVERS?\n\u00a9 N JAMES BAY A FORT WAS BUILT; ALSO\nAT THE CHURCHILL AND HAYES RIVERS.\nTHE INDIANS THEN AS NOW WERE THE\nBACKBONE OP THE FURTRADE.THEY\nBROUGHT. THEIR PELTS TO THE COHPANy's\nPOST, ANO  ITS OWN SHIPS CARRIED\nTHEM TO ENGLAND. THE GREAT ENGLISH\nTRADE  WITH HUDSON BAY HAD\nSTARTED.\nUT THE TRENCH WOl\/LD NOT GIVE\n' THEIR CLAIM TO ALL THIS COUNTRY\nSO RICH INTURS' TALON SENTfOR-\nWARD A SCOUT TO CLAIM THE LAND\nFOR FRANCE\"FOR 4-0 YEARS THEY\nFOUGHT FOR POSSESS\/ON   f?ADI5S0N\nAND GROSEILLIERS TOOK PART; FIRST\nTOR THE ENGLISH\/THEN QUARRELING\nWITH THEM, BACK AGAIN WITH\nTHE FRENCH-\n_\u2014a^a^_\n THE NELSON DAITT NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 12, 1926\nP\u00abgt Ffrf\nIr-l\n&TAMINA\nfootwear that will with-\nid the hardship of Fall\nd Winter service\u2014Foot-\near that is as new as toy's news\u2014Such is Foot-\nrear this store offers.\n[Aak to Have Child's Savingt\nPlan   explained  to  you.\nAndrew & Ci.\n\\Leaders 'in Footfashion-\nIS\nSouth Slocan  Man Fells \u00a300-\nPounder Near Glade; Another Gets Coyote\nSOUTH SLOCAN, Oct 11.\u2014Jack Edward* has again been fortunate In\nshooting a bear. This time It yaa a\nhuge cinnamon of 500 pounds' weight.\nIt was killed at the foot of Sentinel\nmountain at the back of R. C. Pass-\nmore's Pax et Copia ranch.\nOn the same day Fred Edwards out\nhunting with his brother, ahdt a\ncoyote.\nOeorge fichlavon recently shot a\nblac kcub bear which was caught up\na pear tree on Mr. Passmore'a orchard.\nEMPIRE TRADE\nIS\nVITRU BRUCE\nAustralian Premier in London;\nMutual Cooperation Should\nSolve Matter\nPROCTER NOTES\nHARROP NOTES\nItRROP, Oct 11. \u2014 C. D. Orchard,\n[$e forestry branch, Nelson, gave a\nlecture   to   the   pupils   at   the\non   Wednesday  on   fire   protec-\nAva   Ogllvle.    Miss    Florence\n'le  and C,   D.   Ogllvie   motored   up\nTrail on  Saturday,  returning on\n\u25a0lay.\nIv. D. F. Cbwie and Mrs. \"Cowle of\npn came In on Tuesday by launch\nBoswell. On Wednesday Mr.\n_ held both morning and evening\nIces here. They were the guests\ni few days of Mr. and Mrs. W, S.\nH\u2014 L. M. Russell of Boswell, ac-\nfcanlcd Rev. D. F. nnd Mrs. Cowle\nfruesday, spending the night here\ngie home of Mr.  and Mrs.  II.   Fuir-\nPROCTEa Oct, ll. \u2014 J- Holland\nwas a week-end visitor here,\nMrs. C. Hlngley of Nelson Is spending a few days holidaying at the Outlet hotel.\nMrs. C. Floyeur and children, who\nhave been spending the summer hare,\nleft for Nelson on Saturday to take\nup   their  winter  residence.\nMiss C. J. MacLean spent Saturday\nin  Nelaon.\nMrs. C. Cronin waa a Nelson visitor\non Friday.\nMrs. J. Foy spent yesterday In Nelaon shopping.\nSOUTH SLOCAN NOTES\nSOUTH SLOCAN, Oct. 11. \u2014 Mrs. J.\nKerr of Nelson, who has been the\nguest of Mrs. J. Norrles for the past\nweek,  returned  to Nelson  Sunday.\nF. H. Russel has left for Vancouver\nfor an  Indefinite visit\nMiss Mavis Henman has returned\nfrom a visit to Nelson, where she.\nwas  the guest of Mrs.  Donaldson.\nMiss Hazel Nelson of tha public\nschool teaching staff. Trail la the\nguest ot Mrs. E. Watts for the weekend.\nAPPLEDALE NOTES\niubberneck\" tourH to department\nhave been arranged that v*o-\nmlght see Paris gowns and furs\n\"aey do t^e Panthepn and Notre\n\"all   in   half   a   day,   with   no\n, dogs^must be muzzled In Brock-\nowing   to   a   boy   having   been\n\u00bb   recently.\nAPPLEDALE, Oct. 11. \u2014 Mrs. W. B,\nAnderson was In from Nelson for a\nfew days last week.\nMessrs. J, and F. Brooks have commenced the foundation for 13. W. Ko\npecki's new house adjoining the  store.\nMrs. Brjdge and children returned\nfrom  Saskatchewan  on  Wednesday.\nMrs. C. Herman, Mrs. LansdoWn, Mr.\nand Mrs. D- F. Peters, Mr. and Mrs,\nE. W. Kopecki. Mrs. H. V. Moyer. Mrs.\nW.' J. Laurie, Mrs. H. Horn, j. Brown\nand O. Haugen motored to Wfnlaw Fri'\nday night to attend the whist drive\nand dance.\n.SOCIETY\nChildren Kill\nOver Thousand\nGophers, Appledale\nAPPLEDALE. Oct. 11.\u2014The monthly meeting of the Progressive association was held on Thursday evening. It\nwas decided to lay a new floor of\ncoast lumber in time for the Hallowe'en masquerade. The secretary reported the number of gopher tails\nturned in hy the children this season\nas   1078.\nLONDON, Oct. 1J.\u2014Premier Stanley M. Bruce of th\u00ab Australian commonwealth, arrived In London today\nattend the imperial conference\nwhich opens on October It, and\ndirectly after his arrival he met a\nbody of newspaper men.\nPremier Bruce attended the pre\nvious Imperial conference three years\nago.\nPossibly public opinion has now\nbeen educated to the extent that the\ndelegates to the conference this year\nwill be able to accomplish something\non a larger scale.\nThe commonwealth  premier  had a\nwritten statement ready for the press.\nHe stressed the following:\nCan   Be   Solved\n\"So far as tariffs are concerned,\"\nhe said, \"I say the promotion of\nEmpire trade Is vital, and I believe\nwe can solve the problem by mutual\ncooperation, without a fiscal con\ntroversy. People get roused so much\nover the fiscal question. What, In\nthe name of heaven, could I do to\nt urn Britain protectionist, even if 1\nwanted to? However, there Is no\nobjection to thrashing the matter out\nat   the  conference.'1\nThe question of th'1 dominions' relations with outside powers, Premier\nBruce admitted, was a somewhat difficult one. He .thought It would be\nbetter perha ps, If tho issue were\nnever raised, but there would be no\npossible objections to the conference\ndiscussing and defining the position\nto which, by evolution, the dominions had arrived. However, ho was\ntotally opposed to the idea that there\nought to be some drastic alteration\nby a written constitution for the\nEmpire.\nAsk   Premier   Kino\nPremier Bruce submitted to a series\nof questions as follows, In the form\nof question and answer:\n\"What about the dominions having   representation   at   Washington?\"\n\"Wo havo not appointed a minister\nthere yet. You had better ask Mr.\nMacKenzle   King   about   that.\"\nDo you favor resident ministers\nof the dominions in Ijondon?\"\n\"I do not think it would  work.\"\nWill   Australia   be   a   signatory   to\nthe   Locarno   treaty?\"\n'That will have to be discussed at\nthe  conference.\"\n\"Have you any views with regard\nto the position of governor-general?\"\nYes, quite a lot, but I'm not going\nto tell you now; it would take too\nlong.*-\nI^ell-Known   Home   Builder\nuickly Restored to Health\nlimtpf Nervous Indigestion, Loss of Sleep and Intolerable\nPiin, Father of 8 Children Finds Long-Sought\nRelief; Strength Restored; Praises Tanlac\nsph 'A. Brunet, a well-known\nRtreal ' building contractor, 2osr>\n\\r Str.-et, says: \"The brawn,\nfcle and splendid health of the\npgest iman will break under the\nof 'modern living,\nwas suffering untold agonies\nI began taking Tanlac. My\nhgth had vanished, I couldn't\nk efficiently, I couldn't enjoy life\nrther men did. I had lost weight\nIwas wracked by knife-like pains.\nRwas completely discouraged w'.ien\nlac was recommended , to me and\nIrfc It. I recommend it ko anyone\nJ is ailing.\n(his   tonic   worked   wonders   with\nQuickly    my    old    strength    re-\nlad.    I began   to  have  a   great up-\n\u25a0 and  ate  everything without  a\nof   pain.     Once-   more   I   knew   tion and sluggish liver.   It Is nature's\nit waa to have a good  night's own remMy made from roots,  barks\nTanlac   certainly   nut   me   on   and   herbs   according   to   the   famous\nfewt, made me stronger and  gave   Tanlac   formula.\nIbetter health than I have had in Banish sickness from your life and\nenjoy the benefits of golden health.\nInlac usually banishes pain, con- Begin tnking Tanlac. The first bot-\n!\u25a0 ailments and builds up strengih tie usually brings results that will\nfamished bodies. It relieves the surprise you. Ask your druggist for\n(am o* poison caused by constipa-   Tanlac\u2014today! '\nSoothe\n& ffea\/All\nCUTS i\nBURNS\n&SCALDS\njjor eczema, psoriasis,\n\u2022\u00bb    ringworm,   ulcers,\nand   other\nPIONEERS RECALL\nOld Fort Garry Pioneers of 50\nYears Ago Tell of Hardships; Reunion Banquet\nWINNIPtoO, Ot. 11.\u2014Fifty years\nago the few agriculturalists of the\nold Port Garry eormnunfty, now Winnipeg, were engaged In preparing the\nfirst shipment of wheat from western\nCanada to Ontario, following ;i atop\nfailure  in   that  province.\nThe shipment was made on October 12, 1878, and tonight it o banquet attended by pioneers of the\nprovince, both from the agricultural\nand business sections, Ihe men who\nhandled the first grain shipment told\nof the experiences of the old days,\nthe hardships and trials of the ptonaei\n\"farmer  of  the   plains.\"\nSerious   Crop   Failure\nThere was a serious failure of the\nspring crop In ,t,ho province of On-\n*arlo in 187ft. Seed wheat was urgently needed, and R. C. Steele, founder\nof the firm of Steele, Brigg Seed company of Toronto, was selected to\nmake the long, ardousu Journey tn\nthe Red River valley In order to on\ntain a supply. He sought 5000 bush-\nlS, but was only able to obtain 800.\nHe came via St. Paul to Fisher's\nLanding, the end of the railway at\nthat time, and made the balance of\nthe trip by steamer and \".lumber\nwagon.\" The wheat was shipped to\nFisher's Landing by steamer and\nthence by rail to Duluth, to Sarnia\nby steamer and again by rail to Toronto.\nGuests of honor at tonight's banquet Include R. R. Keith, Winnipeg,\nwho helped prepare the grain for\nshipment, and H. S. Pateraon. long a\nresident of Winnipeg but formerly\nof Toronto, who distributed the wheat\nto Ontario farmers.\nThis column is being conducted\nby Mrs. M. J, Yigneux. All new*\nof a social nature, including receptions private entertainments,\npersonal items, marriages, etc., will\nappear in this column. Telephone\nMrs. Vigneux at her home.\nMrs W. A. Bennett and her children\n1215 front street, have returned from\na few months' visit; to England and\nWales,   where   they   visited   relatives.\nGuy Constable, who ppent the weekend in Nelson, leaves this morning for\nbis home in Creston.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrc. 8. Fletcher leaves this morning\nfor   Cranbrook,   en   route   to   Calgary.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nL. O. Serrea of Harrop waa a shopper in Nelson  yesterday.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMiss Annie Mclnnet and Miss Violet\nMcGregor motored to Trail, Sunday,\nand   spent   the   day   with   the   latter's\n\u25a0ister.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. Jewitt of Grand Forks, who has\nbeen the guest of her daughter, Miss\nElsie Jewitt, Vernon street, left la*t\nnight for her home.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00bb\nH. Beck, roadmastfC at Kaslo, spent\nyesterday in town,\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. R. Bourke of Crescent Bay was\na visitor to  Nelson  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. J. H. Walker nf Procter spent\nyesterday  shopping  In the city.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. H. Emerson and family of Sllverton   have   taken   up residence  In   the\nAnnable block.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMiss K. Smouse of Kaslo spent the\nweek-end   in   town,\n\u25a0    * ' \u2022\nMarcus White of Nakusp was a city\nvisitor Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. James O'Shea proved a capable\ncnnSener Saturday when she supervised\nthe dinner dance that evening given at\nthe Nelson Golf and Country club\nhouse by the members of the club. She\nwas ably assisted by the various members of the women's auxiliary who\nwere instrumental in making the affair the succeas It was. Among those\nattending the dinner and dance were\nR. H. Stewart of Vancouver, Dr. and\nMrs. H. H. Mackenzie, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. J.  Meagher,  Miss A. G.  Perkins, F.\nC. Whitehouse. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur\nLakes, A. D. McLeod, R. T. Thorburn.\nH. E. Appleyard. W. R. Dunwoody,\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. Appleyard, Mr. and\nMrs.   L.   V.   Rogers,   Mr.   and   Mrs.   C.\nD. Blackwood, Mr. and Mrs. B. Townshend of Willow Point, T. R. Wilson\nMr. and Jlrs. John Cartmel, Mr. and\nMrs. James O'Shea, Mr. and Mrs. II\nN. Douglas, Judge J. A. Forln. Miss\nJean Forin, Mr. apd Mrs. E. C.\nWragge, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. D. Benson, Mr. and Mrs. Alex. Lelth, Mr. and\nMrs. Hugh Robertson, Miss Marion\n.Blackwood. Miss Aileen Mansfield,\nMiss Alolse Wragge, Mr. and Mrs. A.\nL. McCulloch, Miss Agnes Cockle, Mr.\nand Mrs. Allan Anderson, Mr. and Mrs.\nW, H, Burgess, Mrs. James Anderson,\nJ. Fahey, Dr. and Mrs. D, Barclay, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. Latham of Kaslo, A. B.\nRitchie, J. Buchanan, Mr. and Mrs. E.\nM. Stiles, Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Hazel-\nwood, Mr, and Mrs. George Murray,\nW. P. Dunbar. Mr. and Mrs. R. C.\nCrow, J. Atwell, Miss Beth Newman,\nFreddie Lee, Miss E. Bruce, R.N., Mis?\nMargaret Beckwlth. W. R, Baxendale.\nGeorge  Norman and others.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. Malcolm McKay of Procter\nspent yesterday   shopping  In   the   city.\nMrs, J. F. Croll and daughter, Miss\nMayme, left yesterday morning for a'\nvisit  to  Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. L. M. Prochnow of\nYmir spent Saturday in the city.\nRev. George Kinney and son. Bliss,\nof Procter were visitors to Nelson\nyesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nDr. and Mrs. L. J. Mayrer. Mrs. E.\nC. Hunt and Mrt^ Guy i3roj\u00bb\/ell motored   to  Spokane over   tnfc  wfek-end.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. Erwin O. White of Bandon was\na nisltor In Nelson  Saturday.\n#\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022\nMrs.   A.  Link of Kaslo spent Saturday in town.\n\u00ab    \u2022    \u2022\nH. Dibley, C.P.R. agent at Sirdar,\nwas a city visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. H, Rhodes of Bonnington spent\nyesterday  in  Nelson  shopping.\n\u2022 *    *\nJack Dando,   son  of Dr. and  Mrs. A,\nB. C. Dando of the Royal Bank of\nCanada, ha? been transferred to the\nMount  Pleasant branch, Vancouver.\nSI J Baker Street.  Phone too\nNew Down Comforters\n$12.50 and $39.00 Each\nJust the thing for these cold nights. These are imported goods, direct\nfrom the Manufacturers and are the best values on the market for the\nmoney. They are made of fine, soft down with excellent quality Sateen coverings. Colorings to suit every room and in full sizes. Special Value at $12.50, $15.00, $20.00 and $39.00.\nScotch Wool Blankets\n$10.50 and $19.50 the Pair\nBlankets of the better sort, made of soft wool yarns, thoroughly\nscoured. These come whipped,singly and in full bed sizes. Blue or Pink\nborders.   An extra value at $10.50, $12.75 and $19.50.\n- New Embroidered Pillow Cases\n$2.95 and $3.50 the Pair\nIrish embroidered Pillow Cases, made of fine weave cotton with hemstitched or scalloped ends and in a big range of patterns. 42 and 44\ninches wide.  At per pair $2.95, $3.00 and $3.50.\n.....\nport.   Wash.,,, Sunday,   where   the   two\nlatter  remained.\n*    *    \u2022\nFrank Gordon of Grand Forks is\nspending a few days in town, visiting\nhis sister and brother-1n-lawi Mr. and\nMrs. J. B. Curran. High street.\n8*\nfdlitretaisg akin dis-\nte\u00ab\u00bbe Zam-Buk remains\nunrivalled. This great\nherbal balm ends pain\nland irritation,  draws\n^ut poison anil corruption, and rrowt\nealthy new skin in a wonderful way.\nKEEP A BOX ALWAYS HANDY! \u00a3*\u00a3\u00bb\nImpromptu Dance Is\nPleasing for Willow\nPoint Younger Set\nWILLOW POINT. Oct. 11.\u2014A number of the local younger set. feeling\nthat too long a time had been allowed\nto elapse with no social activities, organised an Impromptu dance which\nwas held last Saturday. It was a\ngreat success. The kitchen arrangements were under the direction of the\nMisses Dorothy Kemp and Winnie\nThompson. Robert Thompson acted as\nmaster of ceremonies. Local musicians\nprovided the music, these being Mrs.\nE. Applewhaite and Jack Thompson,\npiano; W. Maguire, comet; snd H.\nMiddleton,  bagpipes.\nWOMEN'S AUXILIARY\nPLANS TEA AND SALE\nBONNINGTON NOTES\nF,\nhere,\nB.  Scott, of the C.P.R. Telegraphs\nspent Sunday fishing at Procter.\nBONNINGTON FALLS Oct. 11, \u2014\nMra. A. Willey entertained at a charming tea at hor ' home on Thursday,\nwhen musical selections were given\nduring the afternoon. Mrs. W. A.\nRockcliffe, Mrs. G. B. Russel, Mrs. S.\nFletcher and Mrs. W. W. Bell assisted\nthe hostess in serving tea and\ncream. The invited guests were Mrs.\nB. Bennett. Mrs, R. A. Peebles, Nelson; Mrs. Kenneth Campbell, Mrs. F.\nFrfsby, Mrs. J. D. Teatman Mrs. G.\nV, Hunt. Mrs. J, Murray. Mrs. W. W.\nBell, Mrs. J. Strongitharm and Miss\nYeatman of Vernon, Mrs. O. W. Humphry, Mrs. E Watts, Mrs. M. Dnwnle,\nMrs. T. A. Wheiklon, Mrs. E. McGregor, Mrs R. Oreyson, Mrs. A. B. Boy-\ne'r, Mra. CoMngwood Gray Mrs. W. A.\nRockcliffe, Mrs. T R. Poole and Mrs.\nG. B. Russel of Nelaon Mrs. G. N.\nBrowp. Mrs. Clifford Jones Mrs. C.\nRhodes, Mrs, Stuart Fletcher. Miss\nRoaemary Fletcher,, of Calgary, Mrs, BL\n\"Ut the dark Kitthsns kelp yotfi\nWILLOW POINT, Oct. II.\u2014The regular monthly meeting of the local\nbranch of the women's auxiliary waa\nheld at the women's institute building\nlast week, Mrs. B. Townshend. president, in the chair. It was decided to\nhold a tea and sale of work next\nmonth, and committees were struck to\nhandle  the  various  departments.\nMrs. E. Applewhaite has returned\nhome from a three-weeks' trip where\nshe visited in London, Tdronto, Stratford and Winnipeg and attended the\nmeetings of the Dominion board of the\nwomen's auxiliary.\n , -<r '\t\nThefts of rare books have occurred\nat such alarming rate In Paris that\npolice are keeping an International\neye on old book shop* and Auction\nrooms.\nSteam   navigation   was   begun   on\nLake Erie In 1817\nJ. Htieston of Bonnlngtptt spent thf\nweek-end with bis family 'in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Frank Willis and daughter,\nDorothy, of Trail, are visiting with\nthe former's father, William Rutherford.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. R. Benzies, Josephine street, has\ntaken an apartment in the Annable\nblock.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Margaret Daly haa fts her gueet\nher  sister,   Miss  Mary  D^ly  of  Winnl-\npee- ...   \u2022\nLogan McPhee of Sandon was a visitor In town the latter part of the week,\n\u2022 \u2022   I\nMrs Gordon Hallett of Longbeach\nwas the guest of honor at an Informal\nbridge given recently at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. R. W. Hinton, when those\nplaying were Mr. and Mrs. Leslie\nCraufurd. Mr. and Mra. E. C. Wragge.\nMr. and Mrs. D. O. Thomas and Mrs,\nHallett.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMrs.   W.   J.   Turner  of  Ymir  was  a\nvisitor In town yesterday.\nw, a \u2022\u25a0\u2022\nA. R. McGregor of Crawford Bay\nspent yesterday In  Nelson on business\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. James O'Shea, Silica\nstreet, has as their guests over the\nweek-end Dr. and Mrs. D. Barclay of\nKaslo, who participated in the intercity\ngolf  tournament.\n\u2022 a     a\nMr. Ernest, superintendent of the\nQueen mine at Salmo, spent yesterday\nIn the city.\n\u2022 a    a\nMiss McRobble left last night for\nVancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHarry Houston left yesterday- morning for Northport, Wash.\na     a     a\nMlas   Margaret   Robson   of   the   high\nschool   staff   left   Saturday   night   for\nVancouver,   having   been   called   there\nthrough   the  death   of  her  father.\na     \u2022    a\nMrs. E. H. Smith 'and son, Stuart,\nleft yesterday morning for her borne\nIn Toronto, after spending the past\nmonth In the city, the guest of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Gilchrist,\nFairview.\na     a     a\nMrs. D. P. Kane of Kaslo spent Saturday In the elty.\na     a     a\nThe home of Mrs. F.. R. Prltchard.\nNelson avenue, Fairview, was the\nmeeting place of Mra. Fred H. Graham's circle of St. Saviour's Church\nHelpers yesterday, when those at the\nmeeting were Mrs. Gerald Rees, Mrs,\nE. R. Redpath, Mrs. A. J. Dunnett,\nMra. George Horstead, Mra. T. E. Mad-\ndock, Mrs. P. G. Morey, Mra. H. R.\nTownsend, Mrs. William Rockcliffe.\nMrs. 8. W. Steel, Mrs. Harry Gore,\nMra. Charles Ink, Mrs. W. T. Fotheringham. Mrs. W. J. Aatley and Mrs.\nStanley Bostock.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. Lister of South Slocan left\nthe Kootenay Lake General hospital\nyesterday with her baby boy.\n*i     s     \u2022\nG. A. Bladworth and Roger Cornish\nhave left for a \u25a0 two-weeks' holiday tn\nthe Lardeau.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs Cecil Grliielle and\ndaughter   Genevieve,  motored to  New-\nCLARK'S\nPORK\nBEANS\nMost\nWomen\nHave stopped old hygi>\nenic methods to assure\nreal immarulacy. NEW\nway gives true protection \u2014 discards like tissue\nFEW modern women but\nemploy a new and different\nwiy in hygiene. A way thtt\nsupplants the old-time \"sanitary pad\" with true protection.\nWear filmy frocks and light\nthings . . . any tuna, Dance,\nmotor (or hours without doubt\nor (ear.\nIt is called \"KOTEX\" . . .\nfive times as absorbent u the\nordinary cotton pad I\nThoroughly dtoioriiit , . .\nthus ending ALL (ear ol offending.\ny\/ Discards as easily as a\nr piece of tissue. No laundry.\nNo embarrassment\nYou aalc (or It without hesitancy at any drug or department store simply by saying\n\"KOTEX.\" Coats only a few\ncents. Proves old ways an\nunnecessary risk\nKOT6X\nWolmmtry itiswa-J Ufa slave\nRowberry Mrs. R. C. P.issmori', Mrs.\nE Murphy of Nelson and Mrs. G. E.\nHdlH-cque.\nMrs. F. B. Hardin has arrived from\nVancouver to join her husband who 1h\nengineer for the West Kootenay Power\n& Light company on tho construction\nof  No.   3  plant.\nEric Campbell, who left on \\V<dnrs-\nday to take a position in the C.P.R.\nelectrical    department,    Toronto,    was\nthe recipient of a gold watch from the\nmembers of the West Kootenay Power\na) Light company's staff before hla\ndeparture. The premutation was made\nby Gordon L. Thompson on behalf of\nthe staff, as a token of their great\nasttnia and regard for him during the\nMtnen yean he had been connected\nwith the company at Bonnington and\nwishing him die best of luck in his\nnew   poaitlon.\nCOAL   THAT   SATISFIES\nGait Lump and McGillivray Steam Coal Are High\nin Heat Units\nDry Cord .Wood   and  Stove  Wood\nORDER   YOURS   NOW!\nNELSON   TRANSFER   CO.,   LTD.\nMcLaughlin    and   Chevrolet   Service\u2014Goodyear   Tires\nCOR.   VERNON   AND   8TANLEY   STS; - \u2022 PHONE 35\n..;.\nBuy them\nby the Carton\nTHE most satisfactory way to buy Edison .\nMazda Lamps is by the carton of six.\nThen, when a lamp burns out, there is no\nfrantic scramble to replace it with a lamp\nstolen from some other socket. The time to\nbuy lamps is before you need them. When\nyou do need them it is often too late to buy\nthem.\nOn your way home tonight \u2014 on your next\nshopping expedition \u2014 make a point of\nstopping in\u00bbat the Edison Mazda\nLamp agent and laying in a supply of\ngenuine Edison Mazdas. Measured\nby light and service, they are the\nmost economical lamps to buy. See\nthat the name MAZDA is on every\nlamp.\nAsk your Kdison Masda Lamp dealer fee\ninformation regarding proper tllnmon-\nation jar your rooms. Us will kelp pop\nto enhance tho btanty of your homo.\nI SON\nMAZDA LAMPS\nA Canadian General Electric Product\nTkNEW\nyLAMP\nWith the INSIDE\nMOOT\u2014more light\n\u2014a\u00bb oiora\u2014longer\n\u2022\u2022\/. \u2014 \u2022\u00bb Sdison\nStasia aehiesem.,.1.\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 12, 1926\nTHESE WERE IN UNE FOR MFJGIIEN'S POST\nI\nYesterday Rt. Hon.  Arthur  Meighen  resigned   as  leader of  the  Conservative party.    He is succeeded by Hon. Hugh Guthrie.    Among thnse mentioned\n\u2022s-poaslbte suecessoi-n were  Hon.  U.  Ft.  Bennett of Calgary, minister  of finance  in  the   recent   Conservative  eal.iiK't,   upner   left;   Hnn,   B,   rf.   Rhodes,\n,.-.. premier of Nova Sootla, and former speaker of the house of commons, lower left;  Hon. G. H. Ferguson, premier of Ontario, center;  Hon. H. H. Stevens,\nof Vancouver, minister of customs in tho retiring cabinet, upper right, and  C. H. Cahan, K.C., M.P.-elect for St. George's. Montreal, lower right.\nDon't Push Finest Apple Upon\nthe Unappreciative\nPrairie\nWANTS RECIPROCAL\nTRADE ARRANGEMENTS\nUnited States Market Wealthy\nand Discriminating,  .\nHe Says\nappks nearlng 50 per cent of the\nwhole, with none of the variety\nproduced In the States to compare\nand compete except for a few hundred cars west of the Great Lakes,\nIt surely promises more for the\nBritish Columbia fruit grower to\ngrow that apple which he can grow\nwell, and place In such markets\nunder reciprocal arrangements, than\nto take the bumps of economic conditions in home markets which are\nnow ever recurring und perhaps Intensifying.\nGUY CONSTABLE.\nCTMCott,   B.C.,   October  11.   IK..6.\nNEIL MUD\n\u2666rf^tha Editor of The Dally News:\nSir\u2014It  is  a  doleful   report  which\nj     jrdti   publish   In   your   Issue   of   last |\n\u2022week from the Associated sales man-1\nager On the existing npple marketing!\nSituation.    The fruit business is ever ,\n<fhanglng   but   It '1b   some   relief   to j\ni     note   that   amongst   all   his   troubles'\ni     Mr.   McNalr  has   no   grievance   that |\n;     the    protection    the    fruit    industry \\\n,     enjoys   Is   not   high   enough,   or  that\n:     the   famous antt-dum])   is  not  func-\n[     tinning properly,\nHv*?h   Home   Mil rli ot    OUM\n\u00ab A   solution   for   the   virtual   disap\npearance   of  a  home   market   Is   not\neasy  to find.    The  field   for the   fur-\nj     ther   protection   of   the   industry   is\nSLZTZMit  yet   exhausted;   luxury   tuxes   on\n__   Imported   fruits,  embargoes even  are\n-\",-*|r-\u00bbfr    untried,    or    we    might    even\ntake       thene      bumps       and      wait\ntill   - Canada     populated     and     con-\n^ftiptlon    increases.    The    fact    ap-\njt*ar\u00ab  to   be  that   hundreds   of   cars\nxtf  Mcintosh apples are In the hands\nShf   the   regular   shippers   when   they\ntould be In the mouths Of the con-\nmera, or on their way there.\n\u2014. It la timely to ask, therefore, just\n\u2022*ow long we\u2014not necessarily Mr.\n3Mc.\\*air\u2014are to continue to place\nfinest dessert apple produced In the British Empire,\nLto the most unreliable, least dis1-\nernlng snd as often as not the most\nimpoverished market on the North\nAmerican continent.\n\u25a0r*      Creston Fruit in New York\nin 1920 the policy of Charles L.\n|4W(I, then sales manager of the Co-\n.Kperatlve Growers,'placed Macs in the\n-fKurterit United States markets suc-\nJe\u00bbssfuMy. The following year was\njSlsastrous comparatively. Since then\n3|io Bales manager has dared do\nrhiore than nibble at the outlet. Had\ngjhe United States large discriminating markets been consistently fol-\n5cw*>d and fostered. I venture to say\nwe grower would not now be be-\n\u2022fraUing the prairie conditions.\nA' With   the   production   of  .Mcintosh\nDIESHOSPITM.\nHe Lived   in  Kootenay   as a\nMiner  for  Thirty\nYears\nIS\n.[\nMatthew Arranges Program of\nLaughs; Speakers\nAmusing\nMEET 111 BE\n' RDTiMI GIFT\nMatter Referred to Executive;\nWill   Have   Speaker\nApple Week\nTALKED OF IS\nGreater Development at Sullivan May Lead to Another\nConsolidated Plant\nEAST KOOTENAY SIGNS\nPOINT TO EXPANSION\nPeak Not Reached Yet; Power\nLine in Connection With\nNew Development\nCRANBRrnK, B. C, Ot.'ll.\u2014The\nnews of the impending expansions to\nthe Consolidated company's plant at\nTrail does not come as a surprise\nto those who are following the progress   of   the  company's  operations   in\nthis district closely. During the past\nfew months there have been, tremendous jumps In production from\nKootenay and 61 oca n mines, which\nhas meant a corresponding Increase\nin custom ore at the Trail smelUr.\nThis, along with other causes,\nbrought about a perceptible slackening up at. the Sullivan mine, and it\nbecame obvious that extensions would\nbe made at Trail to tako care of the\noutput- of the Sullivan. Similarly,\ncompletion of the new addition to\nthe concentrator here, which will add\nanother 1000 tons a day to Its capacity, has been held up because of the\ninabili.y of the machine shops at\nTrail to fabricate some of the required machinery.\n*Mors   Expansion\nThe additional power line to Kimberley from Cranbrook Is obviously\nconnected with the proposed policy\nof further expansion and the establishment of the ball mill at Moyie Is\nregarded as welcome news In this\ndistrict, ,assisting still more In the\nrehabilitation  of  that  old   town.\nOpinion Is expressed that still further ajrowth In the company's sphere\nof nitrations is pending, and Marys-\nville, threif miles frohi Klmberlty, is\nlooked upon as a favorable slt^ for\na   Tvw program of development.\nWhether tbere will be a miniature\nTrail Bprlng up there to take the\nlocal concentrates is not known, but\nsigns, are not wanting that, gigantic\nas the company's operations 'are at\npresent and the scale at which Ihey\nare maintained, the peak has even\nyet not been reached.\nHeric Funeral at\nCranbrook Largely\nAttended by Frie\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Oct. ll.-~Thl\nfuneral of Peter Paul Heric of Y&hf\nand Kru-kson, which took place o]\nSunda y afternoon from the Cat!\nollc church, was very largely attend\nby friends of the family. 'He\nwell known In the Bast KootenaJ\nHe was a native of Berlin, Ojit., Im\nto the widow, he Is survived by\ngrownup family of five\u2014three sons!\nFred, Loe and Jack, and two daiighl\nters, Mrs. B. Markle, Bull River, an|\nMrs. D. PatenaJl. Yahk. In addlttoil\nthert are three brothers and five slaf\nters surviving. \u2022\nVANCOUVER MAN IS\nVANCOUVER,   .Oct.     11,\u2014Allege.\nto   have   Tour   wives,   John   Bruce]\nmerchant,   wae today  acquitted' of I\ncharge qf bigamy.     Magistrate Shaij\ndeclared- he could nof tell whrlch'\na valid,marriage and. which was mjtl\nFourth   wife   residing   here   broughj\nthe ^^^^^^^^^^^\nThe   \"Trudy\"   and   \"Rudy\"   manU\nthat   shook   New   York   reached   Itf\nculmination   with   the   appearance\ntwo    popular    songs,    \"Trudy\"    a:\n\"There's a\" New Star In the Heaven|\nTonight,   Rudolph   Valentine.\"\nNeil McDonald, for 30 years a miner in tin Kootenay dlstrlot, died in\nKoptena> Lake general hospital Sunday night, after five days illness,\nat the age Of ;,.\", y<\\irs. He came in\nfrom  the  Gourlenough  mine at   Ymir\nweek    before-   last.\nA native of North ITist, Scotland,\nMr. MeDonild leaves his . relatives\nchiefly in that locality. He was un-\nraMTted,\nHe was known In mining circles\nall over this district, including the\nSlorin. having lived and worked at\nSaii>iun   for   many   years.\nThe   funeral   Is   today.\nService League Changes\nDate of Its Session\nOTTAWA, Ocl. 11.\u2014Tiie rapid expansion of the Canadian Legion of\nthe British Kmplre service league\nIs flven as Ihe reason for deferring\nth*\u00bb first national convention of the\ni'nite.l Veivnin's nrga nidation In a\nstatement issued here today. Last\nNovember, at Winnipeg, it was tentatively understood that the first convert! i\"ii would take p'jyje a year\nhence.\nIt was announced that January 24,\n1927, has been fixed as the opening\ndate, and Winnipeg u the location.\nThe statement is authorized by Gtn.-\neral Percy Like, of Victoria, national   president   of  tbe  legion.\nTn its meeting at last night's luncheon, the Nelson Gyro club enjoyed\nlong and oft-repeated laugh* in Its\nmeeting in the Recreation club last\nnight.\nE. G. Matthew was in charge of the\nprogram. The first part of the entertainment consisted of each member\npresent getting up and telling the club\njust why tho man on his right was\nhis friend. Many and varied were\nthe   \"excuses\"   and   reasons  offered.\nClyde Emory spoke briefly on the\ngrowth of the Gyro organization, stating it had grown from a single club\nto many, covering (\"muda and the\nUnited   KtahN.\nSpeakers   Can't  Prooeed\nBut the most popular speaker of the\nSVeslng was Fred Ewing. In his opening remarks on the \"Origin of the\n\u25a0Gyro Club\" he started his audience In\ngales of laughter. His eloquence was\nchecked, however, by the roars of\nhilarity, and in the. end he was forced\nto sit down  unheard. I\nJoe  Holland   was  called on   to   IpMSHJ\nnn \"EfldtltWl or Friendly Service,\" but'\nhis    first    Instance    so    amused . the\nGyros that   lie   was   unable to   proceed.\nHirtory   of   Club\nHarry Ferguson told of the \"History\nof thr Local Club.\" lie stated it was\nstarted at a meeting In the old Eli's\ncafe, when a crowd of young fellows,\ncalled together by Ned Hanley, elected\none man, W. M. Myers, who then selected a friend. The friend In his turn\nselected another friend until 1!5 had\nbeen seleeteil. Then s. the club came\nin tn being, and there were now about\n40   members.\nMr, Hanley who is also district governor, spoke on district clutw. He\nstated this district, called District No.\n8, was secoqd to none in Gyro International. Every member of every\nclub in the district was a 100 per\ncent man, and although the district\nwas at present ihe smallest in Gyro\nInternational, in time It would be the\nlargest.\nJlaoMllU.A.V   IIJj\nROCKLAND. Me., Oot. 11.\u2014Commander Donald B. MacMillan, arctic\nexplorer, was taken to the Knox\ncounty hospital here yesterday suffering from an infection of the neck.\nHis condition was reported tonight\nby his nephew, Dr. Nell A. Fogg, as\nsatisfactory.\n ee^egmm.\t\nLarge eagle, measuring seven feet\nfrom tip to tip, was shot at Buffton,\nInd.\nReporting to the Rotary club yes\nterday,- A. A. Perrier and Howard\nBush, appointed last week to ascertain how the club could aid the\ncoming Nelson track meet, stated\nthose in charge merely wished the\nsupport of Rotarlans by their attendance.\nIt was pointed out that last year\nthe club gave a cup for the boys'\ntn n (1 a Rgrega te. The matter was\nleft In the hands of the directors to\ndeal with.\nAotvpt Offers of Speaker\nAnnounccm'V't \"f a \"National Apple Week,\" commencing October SO,\nwas made in a letter from the Canadian horticultural council. An offer\nto have a speaker address the Nelson club on the apple question In\nCanada during that week was accepted,\nHugh McLaren of the Vancouver\nRotary club brought the greetings of\nthe coast club.\nIjONDOV  bids  adieu\nIS    MARRIED\nSTAINES. Middlesex, Eng.. Oct. 11.\n\u2014Lord Sholto George Douglas, third\nson of th.T late Marquis of Queens-\nberry, today was married to Mrs.\nItendelMOtan Pickles, mother of the\nnoted Australian aviator, Lieut. Sydney Pickles. This Is the third marriage for Lord Douglas. Former marriages   terminated   in   divorces,\nCharged with the murder of her\nadopted son. John, oged 14. Mrs. Mae\nHamilton Is under arrest at Okmulgee,  Okla.\nUsefulness   of   petroleum   was   first\ndiscovered   in   United   States  In  1840.\nLONDON, Ont., Oct. 11.\u2014London\ntoday bid farewell to one of Its\nmost distinguished citizens and one\nof Canada's leading statesmen and\nleaders In sports life, the late Hon.\nCharles Hyman. Public services thiB\nafternoon were attended by hundreds\nof friends from the various parts\nof Ontario.\nuiiixir\nDATE SET BUCK\n\u2022\t\nDelinquent Lands Will Be Sold\nby Sturgeon Upon\nNovember 10\nTax Collector W. J. Sturgeon, for\nthe. Nelson assessment district, has\nbeen advised from ^Victoria that the\ntax sale of lands In the district on\nwhich provincial taxes' are delinquent\nhas been set back.from the original\ndate, October 13 lo'November 10.\nThe date for the tax sale of delinquent mineral claims remains unchanged  at  November  1.\nAlthough not advised on that point,\nMr. Sturgeon thinks the changed date\nfor the land tax sale probably is being\nmade to apply all over the province.\nWindow glass, that rolls up and\ncan be cut with shears, has been\nput on  the United States market.\nO'ARCY  8COTT\nI Assistant railway commissioner,\nI secretary-treasurer and legal adviser\n' of   the   national   dairy   council,   and\nformpr mayor of Ottawa, who Is dead\nin fcis 55th year.\ni N? 4079     .      ,\nThe Proprirtary or Patent M\u00abdicinfWi\nAVc^cldbtePrer^\u00bb'o(i6rA$\nsimilat^tixFbodM^a,\ntin^theStoMCfcaiar4jow|!^\nChildren Cry For\nINKANTS\/CHIIDRW\nThereby Plotnolin^DiJestion\nCheerfulness *****\u00a3\"\nneither Opium.Morphinen\"\nMineral. Not Narcotic\npKfololShami'imk\nPmasmisn\n\u25a0S\"u,a .*.\nSocMIr Salts\nMstSltd\nhemSrol\nClonriidSofsr\nUo*rfrien\u00aber_\nConstipation and OLarrnow\nresuUin4therefro5i!!]5f,nty\nCASTORIA\nThe Young Mother.\nThe ills of infanta and children should be 10 well known\nto the youngest of mothers that a reminder or a repetition\nof the symptoms of illness seems unnecessary, yet there are\nsome mothers who overlook a feverish condition, a little\ncolic, or a disposition to be irritable. If not corrected they\nmay lead to serious sickness. And to correct them, to bring\nBaby back to its happy self, is so easy by the use of Castoria\n\u2014a medicine prepared just for infants and children. It will\nregulate the bowels (not force them), aid digestion and so\nbring quiet and rest.\nFletcher's Castoria has been doing this for over 30 years;\nregulating the stomach and bowels of infants and children.\nIt has replaced the nauseating Castor Oil, so-called Soothing\nSyrups, poisonous Paregoric and other vicious concoctions\nin the homes of true and honest mothers\u2014mothers who love\ntheir children.\nThose mothers will give their babies foods and medicines '\nespecially prepared for infants and children. -\nFletcher's Castoria safely relieves\nConstipation    Wind Colic\nFlatulence       Diarrhea\nTo Sweeten Stomach\nRegulate Bowels\nAids in the assimilation of Pood, promoting Cheerfulness,\nSeat and Natural Sleep without Opiates.\nTo avoid imitations, always look for the signature of   _^^ ,, , ^\u00bbVTO,^.\nProven directions on each package.   Physicians everywhere recommend it.\nyour\nCLASSIFIED\nAD'\nO IMPLY lift the hook, ask for No. 144 and\n\"^ state your request. It's a service that\nmakes it comparatively easy for you to insert your advertisement. And Wants Ads offer\nthe solution to many a problem. There's always someone eager to buy, sell or trade;\nsomeone who has a service to offer. The\ncost is quite moderate.\n rHB NELSON DAILY NEWS,    TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 12, 1926\nF*|e Be\u00bb\u00a7s > \/\nroung Lib Team Is Fined $200\nre's How Witts,\nSharkey Stack Up\nfor Today's Battle\ntVelglits   and   measurements\nthe   principals   In   today's\nlit are:\nWills Sharkey\n Ale    34 ,\n_       Weight       HO\n!eet 2 in. .. Height .. 6 feet\nin Neck       1\u00ab  in.\nIn. Chest (normal) 40 1-4 in.\nIn. Chest (elpnd.) 44 1-4 in.\nin Reach       72  in.\n1-4 In. ,. Forearm ..  13 in.\n1-2 In.   ... Thigh  ...  24 in.\nin.  ... Waist ...  33 1-4 in.\nin.   . ..  Ankle  ...   9  1-2 in.\nLL STIRS WILL\nT\nral   Coming   to   Canada;\ne Ruth Visits Bed of Sick\n>y; $20,000,000 Changes\nW   YORK.    Oct.    11.\u2014Baseball\nElssloner K. M. Landis took his\nhand today to sign the world's\nchecks   while   the   victorious\nnals. and the defeated  Yankees\nhomeward   bound   or   vacation\nIt   was   Indicated   that   some\ne money would go for sporting\nand   ammunition.\nladiun   moose   and   caribou   are\nbjectlves of an expedition,  con-\nd   by  Bob  Shawkey,   who   will\nhie   party   to   St.   Fellclen,   200\nnorth of Quebec. \"Sad 8am\"\ni, Mark Koenig. Benny Ben-\nti, Eddie Collins, manager of\nWhite Sox, Joe Bush, of the\naurgh Pirates, Babe Ruth, Herb\nock, Hollls Thurston and Fred\nnan may join the Invasion to\nda.\nGo   to   Nebraska\nthe  hand  shaking they   met  In\njouis   does  not  capitulate  them,\nHaines   and   Arthur   Reinhart\naccompany Grover Cleveland\ninder to Grand Island, Nets, for a hunting trip,\nday Babe Ruth went to Essex\nN.Y., to see Johnny Sylves-\nthe 10-year-old boy whose ap-\nfrom his sick bed for home runs\nid the Bambino smack four on\nlose. The Yank slugger brought\nny an autographed ball and\nhim to \"hustle up and get well\nou   can   see   the    Yankees   play\nyear.\"\n,11 street toted up some financial\nrs today and found out that\ni was more money changed\nover the world's series this\nthan ever before. It was about\n00,000 they figured, of which\n\u2022,000 was wagered on  the out-\nof   the   final   game.\nFIRST RACE BY\nCaptain Pine Beats Henry Ford\nby Minute and Four Seconds on 40-Mile Course .\nGLOUCESTER, Mass., Oof. It.\u2014\nIn one of the greatest races sailed\nIn many years, Captain Ben Pine\ntoday brought the schooner Columbia home over a 40-mile course\nJuBt one minute and four seconds\nahead of Captain Clayton Horrlssey's\nHenry Ford. Tonight in the series\nof three contests for the flahlng\nfleet championship, two silver cups\nand a purse of $S000. the Columbia\nheld a decided edge and Gloucester\nknew It had two fleet vessels and\ntwo   cunning   sailing   masters.\nIt was a battle of skippers and\ntoday was Ben Pine's day. But the\nresult was In doubt to the minute the\nleader crossed the finish line. Gloucester remained in doubt tonight as\nto their sailing qualities so closely\ncontested   was   the   race.\nWon   Near   Last\nThe race was won In the last\nsix miles, after the vessels had contested four legs of the course with.\nvarying advantage but on fairly even\nterms. Pine, well to lee-ward and\nahead, tacked to port and crossed\nthe bow of the Ford. He found he\ncould not fetch the mark, tacked\nback In front of Morrlssey, blanketing him completely and then In his\nown good time, filled and was off\non the short tack once more, straight\nfor the stake boat and on a straight\ncourse for the short five-mile reach\nhome. The Ford could not cut down\nthe lead.\nGolfers, Be Sure It's\na Hole-in-One Before\nYou Play Second Ball\nIf you make a hole in one\nand fall to discover the fact before playing another ball you\nfall to qualify for the famous\n\"Hole in One\" club, the powers\nof golfdom have decided. At\nleast you can't count the hole as\nhaving been done In a single\nstroke, but have to take whatever figure was made in playing\nthe second ball.\nnges Over\nFinnish, German and Swedish\nChamps Will Stage Exhibitions Over Continent\nAs Mate Scores\nNEW YORK, Oct. 11.\u2014Negotiations have been completed to bring\nto the United States this winter Paa-\nvo Nurmi, the fahious Finnish runner and his two foremost rivals, Dr.\nOtto Peltzer of Germany and Edwin\nWide, the Swedish schoolmaster, for\na series  of   Indoor meets.\nIt will be a return invasion for\nNurml, who swept nearly all before\nhim on a conquering tour of America\nIn the winter of 1024-26, but this\ntime he will have as opponents\ntwo men who not only have given\nhim his closest races, but also have\nbeaten him recently.\nThe runners will appear under\namateur colors and under the auspices of a group of prominent.-atfr*\nletic clubs.\nPLAIN    MNE-\nDCNOTEft DNft\nPLUNGE   BY\nRACK   AND\n\u00bb\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022       DC*TED  LINE\niOOOOO 1       QUARTER\nJT [PACKS V\/AIK\nY TO 6oAL\n\u25a0tTaon\nBY AL OEMAREE\nner Pitcher New York Giants)\nthe fall of 1918 during the first\ner of a game between Camp\nand Camp Funston,\" says Wal-\nj\\>rt, famous football authority,\niton made a long field goal and\njpeared this would be all the\nKg for the  day.\nwas getting dark and there was\n' one minute left to play. Pike\nlarrled the ball to Funston's ten-\nline. It was first down, goal\n. Time was growing very short,\nwent through right tackle for\nyards. Two more attempts net-\nwo yards. It was fourth down,\nO go. It meant touchdown for\nry. Time out was called. It\ndecided to run Laun again, so\ntgnal was called at exactly the\nplace and Laun came tearing\ngh like a wild man and on\nth he went and the crowd went\nmn had apparently scored the\nIng touchdown and the Funston\nWas on him like a swarm of\nHe had made a touchdown but\nd not have the ball. The quart-\nk had fooled even his own team.\nrammed the ball Into Laun's\nich, but held onto It a fraction\nsecond and pulled it buck, drop-\ninto a slouching position and\nId slowly down the side line\ni  touchdown.\nwn was' given credit for the\n.down by the press,\" said Fort\nmcluslon, \"but it happens that\n,s. the   quarter   that   pulled   the\n**   BICYCLES   IH   TsXJLMtJM\nlycles become more popular In\nce each year. There is now one\nle for every seven Inhabitants,\nels\" being about as common In\nDei as automobiles are In the\nid: States.\nParis alone there are almost 500.-\nThe latest figures show 8,7*3,354\nles In  France, an  Increase of al-\n400,000 In 12 months.\nOLD COUNTRY\nFOOTBALL RESULTS\nFT. LOUIS, Mo., Oct. 11.\u2014Travel-\nworn but triumphant, Manager Rog.\nera Hornsby led 15 members of his\nworld's chanTplon Cardinals back to\nhome grounds late today to a welcoming crowd of about a thousand\nboisterous   fans.\nMost of the players, however, managed to slip away from the admiring\nwelcomers and were escorted to their\nhomes or hotels by motorcycle policeman where they hoped to get a little\nrest before a formal celebration\nstaged tonight at Sportsman Park, in\ntheir honor. \"Alexander the Great\"\nand Bottomiey were about the only\nmembers of, the club that were rec-\nMjgrttaed as they-were smuggled out\nof the Union station midway and\nto waiting automobiles by members\nof the reception committee.\n\u00ab _ \u2014t-\nSATURDAY  GAMES\nLancashire*  Cup\nFirst   Round\nWlgan 6, Swlnton  10.\nSt.   Helens  Rees.   21,  Leigh   3.\nBarrow   24,   Broughton   2.\nOldham 2, Salford 3.\nYorkshire   Cup\nFirst  Round\nBatley   5,   Dewsbury   3.\nHull   14,   Featherstone   0.\nHull  Kingston  2,   Halifax  2.\nYork  24,  Casthford  2.\nHunslet   7,   I-eeds   13.\nHuddersfield   21,  Keighley  8.\nWakefield  24,  Bradford  Northern  3.\nRugby  Union\nBluckheath 11. Newport 3.\nOld  Blues  9,  Bluckheath  3.\nHarUqulns   45,   Portsmouth   Serv.  3.\nSt. Barts 13, Richmond 17.\nLondon Scottish 6, Rosslyn  Park  8.\nLiverpool   0,   Birkenhead   Park   9.\nBradford   3,   London   Welsh *5.\nBristol   11,   Devonport   Services   6.\nCardiff   13,   Llane'ly   8.\nCoventry  27,  Birmingham   Uni.   I).\nGloucester 19, Guys 3.\nBut.)   14,   Old  Edwardlans   6.\nNorthampton 3,  Old  Mer.  Tailors 7.\nPlymouth Alb. 40,  U.G.S.Old Boys 6.\nSwansea   3,   Pontypool   6.\nLeicester 24, Bectlve Rangers  3.\nBristol  Uni.  0,  Glamorgan   Wan.   3.\nMaeateg   3,   Aberavon   8.\nCrosskeys   17,   Mountain   Ash   12,\nNeath   37,   Pontypridd   5.\nWatsoninus   6,   Edinburgh   Chem.   3.\nGlasgow Acads. 4, Glasgow H. S. 3.\nHeriotonians   14,   Melrose   0.\nEdinurgh  Ins.  10,  Stewartonlans 14.\nRoyal H. School 5. Edinburgh U. IX.\nRugby  League\nWarrington   17,   All-Blacks   5.  .\nPontypridd   17.   Widnes   15.\nGeorge Von Elm Was\nOwn Golf Teacher\nFrom the'Age of Nine\nGeorge Von Elm, a#ed 25, the new\nAmerican amateur golf champion,\nstarted as a twddy at 9 at the Salt\nLake City Country club. As a schoolboy he laid out a miniature golf\ncourse In his back yard and spent\nmany hours there when free from his\nstudies. He Imitated noted golfers\naobut whom he read or had seen play.\nIn 1916, when he was 15, he entered\nthe Utah state championship tournament and upset all precedents by\nhandily winning the title. Since then\nhe captured the Utah golf laurel four\ntimes.\nBALTIMORE ORIOLES'\nREIGN IS STOPPED\nThe Toronto Maple Leafs, little\nworld series champs, who won the 1926\nchampionship In tSa._ International\nleague stopped the reign of the Baltimore Orioles, whlc had spread over\nseven successive years,\nHelen   Wills,   the   California   tennis\nstar, practices only with male players.\ny WILLS TO\nFIGHTATLRST\nMeets   Jack   Sharkey   in    15\nRounds at Ebbets Field Today; Idle a Year\nNEW YORK, Oct. 11\u2014Harry Wills,\nwhose gloved fists rapped in vain\non the heavyweight title door during\nthe seven-year reign of Jack Dempsey, fares forth on the challenging\ntrail  once  more tomorrow.\nThe big negro faces young and\nconfident Jack Sharkey of Boston, in\na 15-round contest at Ebbets Field.\nNow 35 years of age, the husky\ndark-skinned stevedore has not been\nIn the ring for almost a year. His\nlast match in October, 1925, resulted\nIn a technical knockout over Floyd\nJohnson, Des Moines. Five months\nprior to that bout he knocked out\nCharley Welnert of Newark at the\nPolo Grounds.\nSharkey, a boxer of the defensive\ntype, has come to the front rapidly\nIn the last year, winning decisions\nover Eddie Huffman of California,\nGeorge Godfrey, the giant negro,\nJim Maloney of Boston and King\nSolomon of Panama.\ns\nE\nCan Out First Six Games Next\nYear; Three Other Players\nOff Three Games\nAMATEUR UNION TAKES\nHAND IN FINAL CONDUCT\nCoast Champs Played Watters\nContrary to Officials; Attacked Umpire Too\nFool Crowds Assembled at St.\nLouis Station to Welcome Them\nVANCOUVER, Oct 11.\u2014The\nYc-ung Liberal baiebsll club wis\n\u25a0 fined $200. manager Hec Cann\nwas suspended for the first six\ngames of next season, and three\nplayers, CharKs Mlron, \"Lefty\"\nSimmons and Jack Bacon, were\nexpelled for three games each,\nowing to eonduct in the senior\nfinal gams at Ross>nd, on September 12.\nThe    executive    of   the    British\nColumbia    amsrteur   baseball. association   imposed   thJis  penattiss\non   the   Vancouver   team   on   ths\nreport   received   from   Rossland.\nThe  fine  of  $200  was  Inflicted  on\nthe   club   for   failure   to   follow   out\norders   of   tho   association   to   play\ntheir games In   order to  help defray\nthe heavy expense of the series.   The\nBosnia nd  club  has   put  in  a  bill  to\nthe body for more than $200 for expenses Incurred  as the result of the\ngame   not   being   played.\nCann Disobeyed\nMinagtr Cann, who had been appointed representative of the B. C,\nbody at Rossland, was suspended\nbecause he did not obey his instructions and Ihe players were pen-\nulia?d (or an alleged attack on the\numpire. The team ;al\u00abo played' Watters In the series after being told that\nhe was  nat  eligible.\nTom Davis, representative of the\nVancouver senior !ee.gue, of which\nthe Liberals are champions, moved\nthe motion. AtM an earlier meeting\nof the playoff 'committee, a motion\nwas put on the books to Impose a\nfine of $250 and expel the entire club,\nbut this was modified when more\npartieuh.rs wire available and only\nthe players directly Involved were\ndealt with.\nBOROTRA IS THE TY\nCOBB OF THE BASQUES\nJ tan Borotra Is the Ty Cobb of the\nBasque country. Then* are only 2,-\n000,000 Basques all told, but nearly\nall of them can give Ihe complete history of the International tennis idol\nwho springs from the land at the foot\nof the  Pyrenees.\nBasques were not much Interested\nin tennlB until Borotra became so Important in the sports world. They are\npelota fans. TJut Borotra and many\nother crack tennis players had their\nfirst lessons on the pelota courts of\nthe land where France and Spain\nmeet.\nIs   Borrowsd   Game\nPractically all Spain and much of\nFranco and Italy borrowed pelota\nfrom the Basques. The Basque villagers play the, game with the bare\nhand and have not adopted the gluves\nand baskets which professional players\nuse,    It  Is Himflar   tu   handball.\nPelota Is a great game for\ngambling. After the casino gaming\nrooms were closed al San Sebastian by\norder of Prlmo de Rivera, the professional pelota games became the medium through which the publfc was\ngble to satisfy Its love of g .tines of\nchance.\nThe ordinary game of pelota is\nplayed on a concrete court, at one end\nof which there Is a wall 30 feet high\nand 55 feet wide. The ball Is slightly\nsmaller than a baseball and Is made\nmuch the same way. Ordinarily there\nare three players to a side, but in\n1 village games the number Is often\ngreater, one side being allowed more\nplayers to offset the skill of its opponents. Whichever tide fails to keep\nIt going loses the point. The count\nthe same as  tennis,\nSuzanne nad Her\nTennis Partners\nArrive in Toronto\nTORONTO, Oct. II. \u2014 Suzanne Lenglen, queen of the tennis courts for\nmany years, arrived in Toronto today,\nwhere she will make her first appearance tomorrow night on a local court.\nAccompanying Miss Lenglen were Mary\nK. Browne, Howa rd Kinsey, Vincent\nRichards and other tennis stars who\nhave recently  turned  professional.\nIowa Produces the\nYoungest Ball Team\nManager in Pro Work\nIowa this year provided the young\nest team manager In professional\nbaseba.l.\nOeorge \"Dutch\" While, a wide-\nrange, lnflelder and a .300 hitter, took\nover the ma nagemen t of the Cedar\nRapids club In the Mississippi Valley\nleague for the last two months of the\nse'.ison, after two previous leaders\nhad failed to bring the club out of\na slump. He waa just 21 when he\ntook the team fn hand. He was sold\nat the close of the season to Danville   club   of   the   Three-1   league.\nDAILY NEWS PUTS\nIHTERCmr PLAY\nNelson,   Trail   the    Nucleus;\nCranbrook. Kimberley\nHoped For\nThe Daily News has decided to\nput up a cup for Intercity bowling\ncompetition.\nEntries from Trail, and Nelson,\nand, It le hoped, Cranbrook and Kimberley, will be made.\nTake   Up   Tonight\nThere will be a preliminary discussion of the matter from the viewpoint of Nelson bowlers at the meeting* at the Semaphore tonight, and\nit is expected that arrangements will\nbe made to take the matter up with\nbowlers in other cities In the district.\nSeven trophies have been put up\nfor Nelson competitions, A. Oellgnas\nannounced  last  night.\nGLOMMEN FAVORITE\nIN BRITISH BETTING\nLONDON, Oct. 7.\u2014The stage Is\npractically set for the annual renewal\nof the Cesaerwltch, greatest of autumn handcaps, at Newmarket on\nWednesday to see the race over the\nspecial course of 2 1-4 miles. Withdrawals have reduced the field to\n27 today. In former years the field\nwas rarely below 30.\nIn tonight's London betting Sol\nJoel's Qlommen and Sir Alfred\n.Butt's colt, Perfect Son, were the\nfavorites, the former at slightly\nlower odds. Carstake, one\/ of the\nstrongest. Jaflkeys of the turf, will\nride Olommen while Slrett has the\nmount   on   Perfect   Son.\nThe betting: Qlommen 6 to 1\nagainst; Perfect Son, 13 to 2; Fox\nLaw, 9 to 1 against; Try Try Again1,\n10 to 1 against; Templestowe, 100\nto 9 against; Mendozla, 100 to 6\nagainst; Miss Sport, 20 to 1 against;\nMafoota, 22 to 1 against; Take My\nTip  and  Forseti,   21   to   1   against.\n\u2022TRY A NIP TONIGHT*\nBEST PROCURABLE\nraoDuct   of  KOtuuiB   \\^\nTlw Orisinal Label \u2014 look for it al ilia Vandor\". and iauist oa\nGRANT'S \"BEST PROCURABLE\"\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed br\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nSISLER LOSES HIS\nMANAGER POSITION\nST. LOUIS, Oct. 11.\u2014George Staler, for two years manager of the\nSt. Louis Browns, will not be retained\nIn that capacity next year, President\nBall   announced    today.\nKentucky Fall Meet\nStarts Today; Some\nof Best Witt Run\nKentucky race tracks may be the\nfield of battle to settle this year's\ndlsfttt* as to tiie leading 2 and 3-year-\nold thoroughbreds, j Churchill Downs,\nwith the Kentucky Jockey Club staftes.\nwill be the scene of the 2-year-old\nbattle, while the Latonia course with\nits Championship stakes, may determine the year's leading 3-year-old. The\nChampionship stakes will be worth\nmore than $30,000 to the winner.\nThirteen of the best 8-year-oIdB In\ntraining are among the S3 nominated\nfor the Latonia race to be run, 1%\nmiles, at the fall meet opening October\nOnly two outstanding 3-year-olds,\nS. D. Riddle's Crueader and J. E. Wld-\nner's Haste, have not been nominated\nfor the race.\nTin Juana Race of\nNext March Will Be\nRichest in the World\nTho Croffroth handicap at TIa Juana next \\l.ii' ii, promises to\" be the\nrichest race in the world for horses\nthree years old and up. There will\nbe $1*000 for Ihe winning Jockey and\nLrulner, |5000 for the eecond horse,\ntStibu for tho third and 11600 for the\nfourth.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSeattle   U,   o.ikland   10.\nOnly one game.\nPerfection in\nourWhisty\nis Due to\n94Years\nExperience\nGooderham,Mrts\n, CANADIAN\n'RYE WHISKY\n9YEARS OLD.'\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or the Government of British\nColumbia.\ns\nSports a\nAa Sorts\nt=\nMaritimes Seek\nPublication of\nDuncan Report\nOTTAWA, Oct. 11.\u2014Demanding\nimmediate publication of the report\nof the Duncan commission, Conservative members-elect and senators from\nthe maritimes today prepared a resolution at a meeting held in Ottawa.\nThe resolution sets forth that the\ncommission requested that Its findings be made public, that tt is\ndetrimental to interests of the maritimes to delay publication of the\nreport and that the parliamentarians\nplace themselves on record as requesting the Immediate publication\nof the Duncan report in regard to\nthe maritime rights.\nAN  OLD COACH\nJim Ten Eyck, aged 76, has been\ncoaching the crew at Syracuse University for the last 28 years.\nLARGE   STADIUM\nThe Chicago Stadium, In which the\nArmy-Navy   football    game   will   be\nplayed this fall, seats 100,000 persons.\n ^^\t\nWOMAN COACH\nMrs. Adele Cook, prominent horsewoman of Detroit, Mich., is the only\nwoman  polo coach in  the  country.\nGOOD LUCK!\nA. J. Helnemann,  president  of the\nNew   Orleans   Pelicans,    always    has\n1 several   cats   around   the   ball   park,\nbelieving  that   they   bring   good   luck\ni to   his team.\n ^\t\n\u25a0 Some 10,000 barrels of apples will\nbe exported from Middlesex County\nto  England this autumn.\nOSLER8  WIN  TITLE\nTORONTO, Oct. 11.\u2014Osiers captured the senior Ontario baseball\namateur association championship\nhere today by defeating Coppercllff,\nlast season's champions, t to 6, in\nthe second and final game of the\nseries. Osiers won on Saturday by\na six to one count.\n,       SSJ\nMAJUUUiO WINS\nPHILADELPHIA, Oct. 11.\u2014Tony\nMarrullo, of New Orleans, won the\njudges' decision in a 10-round bout\nover Matt Adgie, Philadelphia fighting iceman, here tonight Both\nweighed  170 pounds.     ,\nOnly existing fresh water prehistoric fish Is said to have been caught\nIn the Ohio river.\nBOWLERS\nMeet Tonight\nAll interested in bowling are\ninvited to attend a meeting at\nthe Semaphore Bowling Alleys\ntonight, at 8 o'clock. ,\nArrangements will be discussed for the forthcoming tournament.\nDog races held at night are popular In New Orleans.\nFrank M. Troeh, of Portland, Ore.,\nIs the International trapshootlng title\nholder for 1926. During a contest\nheld at Denver, Col., he shot 195 clay\nbirds out of 200. His distances were\nas follows: 50 shots at 16 yards, 50\nshots at 20 yards, 50 shots at 23\nyards and 25 pairs of \"doubles.\" He\nalso shot 974 birds out of a possible\n1000 to tie with Mark Arie, of Champaign,   III.,   for   the   \"high   over   all.\" ,\nDuring a baseball game played recently between the San Lulsto nine, J\nof Eagle Pass, Tex., and the Piedras\nNegras international team from across\nthe border, 348 runs were made, but\nthe game had to be called In the\nsixth inning on account of darkness.\nThe game started at 9 A. M. and\nwhen called the Bcore stood 129 to\n119 In favor of the Mexicans. One\nof the features of the day was 24\nerrors made by one of the players\nn  the  third  Inning.\nGenerat ors\nMagnetos\nMotors\nArmatures\nREPAIRED and REWOUND by Expert Electricians\nSATISFACTION AND SERVICE\nYour nearest dealer will take the work for us or send it\ndirect to us.\nJEFFREE & JOHNSON, LTD.\nDistributors\nAutomotive and Electrical Supplies\n509-511 Burrard St., Vancouver, B. C.\nDGDENS\nCUT PLUG\nRipe for the pipe\"\nSave the VALUABLE poker hands\n\u2022\\\nwsm\n \u2014\n\t\nPigi fflfll\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 12, 1926\nIS\n1\nCUE\nPARTY LEADER\nKAISER IS ONLY\nPrussian   Official    Makes  Remark ;   Communists   Attack\nNew Estate Settlement Plan\n(Continued From Page One.)\nwere balloted on and Mr. Guthrie\nwas elected amid cheers. Brief\nspeeches were made by several prominent Conservatives from different\nperta of the Dominion pledging\ncooperation with Mr. Guthrie in\nthe work of the session and the\nmeeting  broke  up.\nThe main meeting, earler In the\nday waa,, held up for several hours\nwhile discussion centered around the\npossibility of keeping Mr. Meighen\nIn the leadership. It was proposed\nthat his resignation be not accepted, but be held over until the national convention. This found favor wit ha large bloc in the caucus\nand It was apparently on the urgent\nrequest of Mr. Meighen himself that\nhis resignation was considered final.\nThe crystallized sentiment of the\nmeeting;, a resolution committee was\nappointed. During the lunch hour\nthe committee drew up several motions which were finally carried.\nThe first deplored the withdrawal\nof Mr. Meighen and expressed admiration for his \"inedfatiguahle energy, his unmatchable ability and\nhis great force of character .in promoting the Interests of our party\nand  the country.\"\nThe second accepted \"with sincere and profound regret,\" Mr.\nMelghen'a resignation. The third\napproved the election of a temporary\nleader and the calling of a national\nconvention at the earliest possible\ndate following next session.\nTribute to Hrtghon\nThe resolution accepting Mr,\nMelghen's resignation adds the following tribute:\n\"For upwards of bIx years Mr.\nMeighen has discharged the onerous\nduties and great responsibilities of\nleader with high courage and consummate ability. His skill in debate, his unsurpassed knowledge of\nparliamentary practice and procedure, not less thtn his sterling qualities and human sympathy, have\ncommanded the esteem and admiration of his fellow Canadians and\nthe affectionate regard of those who\nhave known him as a colleague and\nfriend. The record of his achievements as a statesman is written not\nonly upon the statute books, but is\nto be found in the history of the\ninternational relations of the Empire. While for the present the\ncountry Is deprived of his wise and\nsagacious counsel and his wide vision,\nwe are confident that when the extent and character of his public\nservices are fully understood it will\nbe acknowledged that they have\nbeen helpful to Canadian development and progress, and that his untiring efforts have been to strengthen those\" ties of interest and sentiment which would bind more firmly the provinces of the confederation\nand maintain the position of Canada as a self-governing commonwealth  within the  British  Empire.\n\"We assure Mr. Meighen that to\nwhatever task he may hereafter devote his great talents, he will carry\nwith him the uffectionate goodwill\nand best wishes not only of our\nparty supporters but also of all\nwell thinking Canadians in every aec-\ntion of the Dominion. We extend\nto htm and to Mr. Meighen our earnest hope that they may enjoy many\nyears of continued usefulness and\nhappiness.\"\nBEPLULN, Oct. 11.\u2014\"The former\nKaiser is the only man in the world\nwho seriously cherishes the hope that\nsome day he -will triumphantly reenter Germany, and reestablish himself on the throne, from which he\nruled for 80 years.\" A high official\nof the Prussian government made\nthis remark today to the Associated\nPress in connection with the Hohen-\nsollern indemnity and property settlement agreement, signed by the\nstate and the former emperor's administrators, and now before the diet.\nThe reading of the compromise\nbill relating; to the settlement, raised\ngreat uproar in the Prussian diet\ntoday, the communists assuming u,\nthreatening attitude and denouncing\nthe terms ot the settlement, which\nprovides for payment to the Hohen-\nzollern family of $2,600,000, the allotment of 167,000 acres of the former\nestates and the castle at Hamburg\nfor the ex-kalser and his wife,\nPrincess    H ermine.\n\"The head of the house of llo-\nhensollem insisted on the insertion\nof the Hamburg paragraph In the\nagreement,\" added the official, \"to\ngratify his personal \\anlty.\" This\nwas consented to merely for the\npurpose of securing the ex-kaiser's\nconsent to the agreement.\nWilhera is nearly 68 years of age.\nThough age is not a barrier to his\nambitions, it la known that the monarchist leaders do not regard him\nas their chief.\nFAMOUS LAWYER\nCapone. A Capone join* in Cicero\nwas fired on recently by machino\ngunners. This was a reprisal for\nthat\"\nNote Reiterates\nIndependence of\nAbyssinian Land\nG ENEVA, Oct. 11 .\u2014Abyssinia's\nvote Indicating the action which the\nImperial government wishes the\nLeague of Nations to take regarding\nthe Anglo-Italian demarche for concessions in Abyssinia was published\ntoday after being held for a full\nweek   in   the   league's   archives,\nThe note reiterates the absolute\nindependence of Abyssinia and asks\nthat the note be registered and published in the same manner as the\nBritish and Italia* exchanges on the\nsubject.\nRumanian Queen to\nVisH Five Canadian\nCities on Her Trip\nWASHINGTON\", Oct. 11.\u2014The itinerary of Queen Marie of Rumania\nand her party, on their tour of North\nAmerica, was made public tonight.\nHer majesty's Canadian journey\nwill include visits to Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Winnipeg and Vancouver.\nThe detailed itinerary sh0W8 *nat\nthe queen will arrive in Vancouver ot\n12 noon. November ti, leaving Vancouver   at   12:30  a.   m.   November  fi.\nCharge of Murder\nAgainst Doctor\nIs Withdrawn\n(Continued From Tom* One..*\nIng machine gun was heard. The\ngun fire of the gangsters was directed on their victims for fully haJf a\nminute, whereupon the gangster car\naped away and those operating the\nmachine gun fled from the apartment\nbuilding. ;\nIn the street Murray lay dead and\nWeiss dying, while O'Brien was able\nto crawl to the curb, where he ool-\nlapsed while Pine and Jacobs limped\naway to find a doctor.\nAt the hospital O'Brien before lapsing Into unconsciousness declared\nthat he, had just alighted from a\nstreet car when he was shot by unknown persons. He said he was\nnot with the gangsters who were\nkilled but the police maintained all\nwere  together.\nThe machine gun found after the\nslaying was said to be similar to\nthat used six months ago in the\nslaying of William McSwlggen, assistant .stat en counsel, known a\u00bb\nthe   \"hanging   prosecutor,\"\nThe killing of McSwlggen and1 the\noperations of gang interests were I clobbered nuns'who'followed Queen\nsubjects for Investigation by five i E|llabeth into a polling booth to\ngrand juries which also investigated rtC0rd their ballots in the communal\nelection frauds in lart April's pri- [ eI,ction yesterday infiicatedi how\nmaries.    About 200 indictments were , Belgian  women are being interested\nLORD ELGIN IS ILL\nBUT NOT SERIOUSLY\nWINNIPEG, Oct. '11.\u2014Ths condition of I-ord Elgin, lord high commissioner of the Church of Scotland,\nwho Immediately after his arrival in\nWiinnlpeg yesterday morning was\nrushed to the general hospital, suffering from laryngitis, is not so carious as at first thought. Dr. Spurgeon\nCampbell, who la attending his lordship,   stated   tonight.\nNORTH VANCOUVER. B. C\u201e Oct.\n11.\u2014A charge of murder arising out\nof the death of Mrs. Flora Margaret\n\u25a0Grahame, 25, against Dr. Thomas\nVerner, 63, medical health officer for\nNorth Vancouver city, was withdrawn\n.n police court this morning.\nBelgian Women Are\nTaking Interest, Vote\nBRUSSELS, Oct.  11,\u2014The sight of\nI In    these   matters.\nIn the completed Rugby wirelesH\nstation, England has at last a mean.-:\nof communicating with British vessels\nsailing on any of the  seas.\nLost and Found\n1 LOST\u2014A     wrlat\nSchool     Friday\nwatch\nnight.\n:i t    Taghum\niteward   at\n(6223)\nLOST\u2014One bundle peony roots tied in\nhemp  sack,   between   Kaslo and Nelson.     Phone 338Y or write Box 916,\n(6215)\nSTRAYED   FROM   STIRLING   HOTEL\n\u20146-weeks-old    collie    pup.       Please\nPhone 633.  (6206)\nLOST\u2014Khaki   overcoat.     Please   phone\nRowland Bourke. 471L2. (6137)\nGOAL STRIKE IS\nExport Movement Slow From\nCanada;  Ships  Used  for\nWheat Are Carrying Coal\nBride's Hope Chest\nand All Contents Are\nStolen by 'Meanest Thief\nTORONTO, Oct. II.\u2014A thief who\nis said to be eligible for the title\nof \"meanest man in the world\" stole\nthe \"hope .-chest\" of a Toronto bride\nsome time last night.\nReturning for a party given In\nher honor, the lady found that her\nhope chest with all Its contents had\nbeen  stolen. \t\nThree Italians, smuggled into Detroit, will be deported by the immigration   authorities.\nreturned in the election cases and i\none or two minor gang killings murder   indictments   were   returned   but I\nthe  McSwlggen  killing  has remained\nunsolved.\nRetreated to Baaenieiit\nDoctors said O'Brien had a fight- I\ning   chance   to   recover.     He   rallied\nsufficiently  to  make a statement to\npolice.\n\"I got off a street car and as 11\ndid   so.   heard   a   rat-a-tat-tat   and\nfelt a sting in my arm,\" he said.    \"I r    Box\" 5223, Daily News\nran  down  Into a basement close by '\u25a0:;\"\"\u201e:\u2014zr~\\T, , >_\nj\"? sr wi0 rrr \u2122n i m ^^rx^ci^i-sizT1\nnot   know.     We   heard   some   more (6214)\nshooting but after a while everything\ngot quiet.   A woman came down and\ntold the other man to come up and\nthat a doctor  was waiting.    I don't\nknow   where   the   shots   came   from;\nthey   seemed   to   come   from   everywhere.\"\nO'Brien carried  $1500  in  cash and\nin Weiss' clothing was found money\nand    checks    amounting    to    morfc\nthan   11000.     The   landlady   of   the\nrooming  house   where   the   machine\ngun   was   operated,    said   that    two\nmen,   who   had   a   rear   room,   had\nasked to be moved to a front room\ntoday.    It was from  this room that\nthe machine  gun  was  used.\nA   complete   list   of   the   jurors   in\nthe   Saltis-Konicil   murder   trial   was\nfound    in    Weiss*    clothing, ~ lending\ncredence   to   the   police   theory   that\nthe   possible   result   of   evidence   introduced   in  the   trial   prompted  the\nshootings.    One of the first to arrive\nat   the   scene   of   the   shooting   was\nFather Francis Ryan, of Holy Name\nCathedral,    who    hurried    from    the\nchurch   to   administer   last   rites   to\nthe dying.\nMore Expected\nBoth Pine and Jacobs told tbe police they were merely innocent by-'\nstanders who got caught in the Jaws\nof the murderous trap laid for\nWeiss.\n\"This is not the end.\" Morgan Collins, chief of police, said. \"More outrages may be expected any time.\nIt will continue until one gang faction or the other is wiped out. Weiss\nwas    at    outs    with     'Scarface'     AI\nPiles painlessly treated without op.\neratlon. Cure guaranteed in writing.\nMoney returned unless cured. Write\nfor free booklet.   Itching cured.\n1-B1HI  m08>,   K.D.,  Sptclalirt\n404   Ilagler   Building,   eorntr   Howard\naad BlTtndde, gpokaaa\nLADIES'\nWinter Coats\nDYED\nFashionable    Shades    or\nDRY   CLEANED\nH. K. Foot\nHigh-Class   Dyer  A  Cleaner,\nFAIRVIEW NELSON, B. C.\nVMdArtkl*\nJUalEitih\nBmH\nT.Rol\nBoats m*\nAatomobQet\na\nClassified\nAdvertising\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wasted\nLost and Found\nLivestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber end Mines\nMale Help Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Two energetic men to assist In selling campaign In thla district. Interesting work with real\nfuture for the man who can make\ngood. Apply Hoover representative,\nHudson's Bay Company, Nelson, B.C.\n(621<)\nIP TOU WANT TO LEARN NEWSPAPER WORK, write to H. H. Cur-\nHe, Daily News. Tell him in the letter If you are really ambitious to become a first-class newspaper man, and\nwhat qualifications you believe you\nhave for the work. No personal ap-\npllcatlons considered. (4888)\nFemale Help Wanted\nGOOD LIVE SALESLADY for general\ndry goods store. Must be of good\nappearance and know ready-to-wear,\ncorsets, etc. Good stock keeper and\na worker. State age, experience, salary expected. Apply giving references. None but experienced need\napply. Apply by letter. Drawer 27,\nTrail,   B.C. (6234)\nWOMEN\u2014-We pay $7 hundred gilding\ngreeting cards; pleasant, interesting\nwork. Particulars free. Marguery\nCard Shoppe 137 East 43rd St., New\nYork. (6220)\nWOMEN\u2014Make money sewing children's dresses, bungalow aprons. Experience unnecessary. Materials cut,\ninstructions furnished, Radfleld\nMfg. Co.. 140 W. 42nd St., New York.\n(6219)\nWANTED\u2014Girl\/for housework.   Ap\nBox 6207.  Dally News. (52\nVANTED \u2014 Competent glrl_or woman for housework.\nNelson.  B.C.\nApply  Box 1106,\n (5169)\nHelp Wanted Male or Female\nWANTED \u2014 Experienced dish washer,\nmale  or female.    Apply The Grill.\n(5194)\nSituations Wanted Female\nEXPERIENCED   CAMP\n405Y.     Mrs.   Bourner.\nCOOK\u2014Phone\n(5221)\nFor Psoriasis\nTake   Our Herbal Reuiedlei\nBook on Skin Diseasef, new\nTreatise on Chronic Diseases by\nHerbal Remedies. Pamphlet on\nLoss of Manhood and Diseases\nof men- Booklet on Female Ills;\nand advice, free by mail; 30\nyears* experience. Without criticizing or disparaging your local\ndoctors, write us before losing\nhope. Treatment by mail our\nspecialty.\nENGLISH   HERBAL   DISPENSARY LTD.\n1356   Davie,  Vancouver,  B.C.\nThe Oldest Herbal Institution\ns\nREGTNA. Oct. 11. \u2014 The prolonged\nstoppage in the British mining Industry is having a serious effect upon the\nexport trade In Canadian grain and\nliutter. according to officials of the\nSaskatchewan wheat  pool.\n\"Unless there is some relief in the\nsituation before freese-up there may\nbe serious congestion in the movement\nof the wheat crop,\" declared an official ' of the pool today.\n\"Oci'an freight rates have Jumped\nabout 60 per cent, while similar increases have occurred In rates prevailing fur tonnage on the Great\nLakes,\"  he  adfled.\n\"A shortage of tonnage available for\nthe shipping of grain has caused the\nIncrease, the shortage being brought\nabont hy the transfer of vessels nor-\nniaMy used for the shipping of grain\nfrom Canada to Great Britain to work\ncarrying coal from United States ports\nto supply the British industries with\ncoal for the production of power to\nrun   their   machinery.\n\"Tonnage for the shipment of grain\nboth on the east and west coasts is\nconsequently scarce and freight rates\nhave Jumped.\"\nAlberta Mines Able to\nMuch Coal East\nShip\nTORONTO, Oct. 11. \u2014 Alberta mines\nare able to shl\\> Itl.iiOO tons of coal\ndaily to Ontario, according to a wire\nreceived by Mayor Foster today from\nJohn Blue of the Edmonton chamber\nof commerce.\nTen-Tear-Old Hit\nby Auto While on\nBicycle; He Dies\nVICTORIA, B.C.. Oct. II.\u2014Knocked\ndown by a motor cur while ritllng \u25a0\nbicycle on Friday, John Vlckers Tickle,\n10 years old, died yesterday In hospital.\nMother Faces Assault\nCharge After Slapping\nTeache\/s Face, Toronto\nTORONTO, Oct. IJ\u2014 Mrs. CharlM\nThomas, who slapped the face oi\nD. A. Mclvor, a teacher In a local\nschool, because he strapped her son,\nwill (ace a charge of assault In the\nwomen's police court on Thursday.\nMrs. Thomas claimed that her son\nsuffered from heart disease and that\nhe should  not have b,','ti  strapped\nm\t\nDENIED AN AMKMIMKVr\nCONDENSED 'WANT ADS ORDER FORM\nUse this blank on which to write your condensed ad., one word in each apace.\nEnclose money order or check and mail  direct to The Daily News, Nelson, B. C.\nRate: One and a half cent a word each insertion, six consecutive insertions for\nprice of four when cash accompanies order. Minimum, 26c Each initial, figure, dollar\nsigns, etc., count as one word.   No charge less than 60 cents.\nPlease publish the advertisement below\n. times, for which I enclose $_\n1\n1                   \u25a0\n1                     \u25a0\u2022\np-    \u00bb   i   -\\\n'\u25a0'I\nIf  dasirtd,  rat, fie*  may  be  silJiaaaiii to  box  a umban at Ths Daffy Hsmw Oftlo*.    tf rwoUaa an\nto ba mailed, enclose 10c ffxtra to aafar moat of poatag*  and  allow  fivt  words sattra  for box   number.\nEXPERIENCED CAMP COOK, female,\nsmall camp preferred. Apply Box\n6072.   Dally   News. <i072>\nEXPERIENCED CAMP COOK\u2014Phone\n405Y.    Mrs, Bourner, (5007)\nSituations Vacant\nMAKE MONEY AT HOME\u2014Men and\nwomen can earn $1 to %2 an hour tn\nspare time writing showcarda. No\ncanvassing or soliciting. We Instruct\nyou. and supply you with work.\nWrite today. The Menhennltt Company Limited 60 Dominion Building,\nToronto.  ^^        (5057)\nBusiness Opportunities\nFOR SALE\u2014Bakery and lunch counter\ncombined. The only bakery in\ntown; living rooms upstairs. Reasonable.    Moyie Bakery, Moyie, B.C.\n  (5165)\nSalesmen Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Salesman, house to house.\nBig seller. Apply Room 24, Hume\nHotel,   Tuesday   morning. (5227)\nHouses Wanted\nWANTED\u2014To buy. six-roomed house\nor bungalow, fully modern centrally located. Address Box B..28, Daily\nNews,  giving full  particulars.   (5228)\naMJBcellanqoqg for Sale\nLOOK\nWo   have   your    favorite   fuel\nback again\u2014\nCANMORE   BRIQUETTES\nPlace   your   orders   with\nWILLIAMS TRANSFER\n(5218)\nPHONE   106\nLLOYD BABY CARRIAGE\u2014Oood con\ndltion.    Apply 210 Vernon.        (5167)\nFOR   SALE\u2014Large   Lloyd   baby   ca:\nrlage, good as new.    Phone 477L3.\n (5140)\nFOR SALE \u2014 One Burroughs adding\nmachine.    Apply Appleyard.      (5124)\nBARRELS, KEQS AND EMPTY sacks\u2014\nMacDonald  Jam  Company,  Nelson.\n(6058)\nPIPE    AND    FITTINGS,\nBARBED     WIRE,     ETC.\n20,000  feet  ltt-inch  Pipe.  Special. 10c per foot Full stock other\nsizes, also Fittings, at low prices.\nNew   Galvanised   Barbed   Wire,\n$4-00, Black $3.00, per spool. Roofing Felt.  1-ply J1.60,  2-ply  $2.00,\n8-ply $2.65, per roll.   Extra heavy\nMineralized Surface,  90  lbs.,  per\nroll   $3.00.     Mixed   Wire   Nails,\n$2.00 per keg.   Wire Rope, Canvas,   Logging   Supplies   and   all\nkinds of equipment\nB.  C.  JUNK  CO.\n130 Powell St. Vancouver, B. C.\n(6059)\nCity Property for Sale\nRESIDENCE FOR SALE \u2014 10 rooms\nand bath, full stse stone basement,\n5 lots In lawn, fruit and garden. Ap-\nply  214  Robson  street. (8224)\nC. W. Appleyard\nInsurance\nStock! Bonds\nCity Property\nNELSON,  B.   C.\nPHONE 269 BOX  8261\n(5078)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nFURNISHED        HOUSEKEEPING\nROOMS\u2014614 Josephine street. (5180)\nFURNISHED        HOUSEKEEPING\nBOOMS\u2014Over  Poole Drug.       (5O70)\nFURNISHED        HOUSEKEEPING\nROOMS\u2014Apply Mack's Billiard Hall.\n(5067)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically,   l^c a word.\nKerr Apartments\n(6068)\nSUITE\u2014Ashman's  Apartments.   (6069)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically.   l%c a word\\\t\nSTEAM-HEATED  FURNISHED  TWO-\nROOM SUITE to rent \u2014 Stirling Ho-\n_tsl. (6013)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically.    lHo a word.\nLive stock sells quickly when it Is\nadvertised in these columns.\nLive stock sells quickly when it is advertised in these columns.\nInsurance\nYOU\nmay be the next victim.   Protect\nyourself    against   financial    loss.\nFIRE\u2014LIFE\u2014ACCIDENT\u2014AUTO.\nCHAS.  F.  McHARDY\nThe   Insurance   Agent,\nPHONE 185 NELSON, B. C.\n(5222)\nNever put off until tomorrow\nthe Insurance you should put on\ntoday.\nWe are agents for old-established companies selling\nLIFE,\nFIRE,\nACCIDENT & SICKNESS,\nAUTOMOBILE,\nand all other kinds of Insurance.\nWEST  END  AGENCIES\n119 Baker St Nelson, B. C.\nPhone 661. P.O. Box 95\n         '  (5092)\nRoom and Board\nROOM AND BOARD FOR GENTLE-\nMAN.    607 Carbonate street. (5041)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically.   l%c a word.\nMiscellaneous\nAT STUD\u2014Purebred Toggenburg buck,\nFee, $3. Does boarded ten cents\nper day. S. J Kennedy, Granite\nRoad. (5206)\nFor Rent\nFOR RENT\u20145-room cottage, furnished\nor unfurnished.    J. E. Annable.\n       (5211)\nA TWO OR THREE-ROOMED FURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING SUITE,\nto clean, quiet people only. 607\nSilica street. (5189)\nLARGE FURNISHED THREE-ROOM\nSUITE in basement of Kerr Apartments.   Rent $36 per month.    (5163)\nSMALL FURNISHED COTTAGE FOR\nKENT\u2014Near Shipyard. Phone George\nClerihew, 475R1. (5162)\nFOR RENT\u2014Warehouse on track, with\nfrost proof basement.    T. R. Clarke.\n(5149)\nFIVE-ROOMED FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED HOUSE \u2014 Apply 616\nCarbonate street (6141)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically.   lHc a word.\nFOR RENT\u2014In Annable Block. Single\nfurnished room. Also two and three\nroom suites. Hot and cold water,\nsteam  heat  and  light. (5066)\nLive Stock for Sale\nHOLSTEIN COW\u2014Due October Pure\nbred oolite pups. Cameron, Granite\nRoad. Nelson. (5191)\nFOR SALE. CHEAP \u2014 Horse, seven\nyears, about sixteen hundred pounds.\nPhone  Rowland  Bourke,  471L2.\n' (5136)\nBoats and Automobilei\n1925 Mclaughlin master six\nBest used car we have bad; IV\nNelaon Transfer Co. Ltd, _ (51\nSAXON 6 CAR 18 model, for sale,\ngood condition. Price $300. H. 1\nper, Yahk. B.C. (61\nFarms-Ranches for Sak\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE \u2014 ft\nranch ten acres, new - house, g\noutbuildings, electric light wa\ntelephone; 1 mile from city. Pb,\nAtkinson,  Granite  Road,  Nelson.\n (62\nMachinery for Sale\nFOR   8ALE   \u2014   Portable   engine\n. boiler;   three-saw   edger   with   \u00abj\nfifty-four-inch   Inserted   tooth   1\npulley,   belting,   chain,   office   i_\ntypewriter, camp stove, dishes, bis\nsmith outfit.    T. R. Clarke.      (61\nFruit and Vegetables\nGOOD CIDER  APPLES   66  cents\n*ack,  delivered.     Phone 89. (61\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Two buggy wheels in g\ncondition, 38-lnch diameter, 1-1\ntire.     Pleters    Nelson. (61\nBUSINNESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR\nAccounting\nCXaUu.m i*. aroma\u2014\nAuditor, MacDonald Jam BalMl\nliox  1191.  Nelson, li.C, (60\nTransfer\nAranox? nunm-coal w<\n-*  and   baggage.     Phone   174.     (60\nTITru.IA.tr     najrenn\u2014Bagga\nrT  Coal and Wood.   Phone. 106.       (5,i\nWood Working Factor;\nT AWSOoT\u2014 Below   market.   Carpen\n*-*   and Joiner.    Hardwood. (51\nChimney Cleaning\nW^\nrOWLBS,\nCleaner.\nOfficial\nInsurance and Real Esta\nP     W.   DAWSOIC\u2014\n7 3*1. \u25a0\u2022*\u00bb*\u2022. lamiancs, Benta\nAnnable Blk. P.O. Box. 783. PhoneJ\n  (511\nim.. a\u00bbd CITT nopnrr.\nr.08 Ward Street. (611\nMonuments\nnAKniLz,   *   mmmtm.   noil\ny    \"\u25a0**\u00ab*, 00.-PO   Box 166. IN\nson, B,C,    Telenlinn\u00ab 164.\nChiropractors\nT)>\" \u00ab. a. OBAT\u2014<3Mropraotor.   Mm\n*f blk.   Phones: Office, 116.   Res.6\u00bb\n?\u201e\u00b0r.\u00b0r,S:. \"-18 \u2022** * \"> \u00bb\u2022 Evening,\nappointment   Sat   9:30   to   12   m\n(HI\nFlorists\nrj.Bnuz,i,a'a onanoirsa n\n\u00ab ion. Cut flowers and floral deslg\n  (6!\nW\u00ab \u00bb\u2022 Joaaaoa\u2014 \"\nti.\u00ab. P\"\"\"'\u00bb\u00ab   cut flowera.\nPlants and Floral Emblem\".\nPot\n(61\nWholesale\nA     KACD01TAI.D  ft  CO.\u2014\nS\u2122^.01\";518 Grocers and ProTtg\nMerchants. Importers of Teas. Cofft\nSpices. Dried Fruits. Staple and Fk!\nGroceries. Nelson nr       '\nEngineers\nGteeu Broi., Bnr\u00ab\/e|| ^j\naraoa. \u00bb.o.\nont  a\u00abd  Miaiwo  mom\nB.C,   Alberta   aad   Somlaloa\n Land auxveyom (51I\nH.\nt).    SAWlOa,    land    Inrveyi\nMlalag   and   Civil   axuflun.\nKaslo, B.C. (511\nAssayers\nEW. WIDDOWIOB, BOX A110I, Nl\nson, B.C. Standard western charg,\n (511\nFuneral Directors\nD, J, ROBERTSON\ni*. d. b. i> a.\n\u25a0eattary Parlors aX Baal Meter Bean\nHon. asa sari atmt un,\nSERVICE\n (511\n\u2022tlJ\n\u2022SPi\nCo. \u2014 Undertake,\nAuto Hearse, un-t\ndate ehapel. Be\nservices. Prio.\nreasonable      (511\n, li.'jT CWTREADTHAT BOOK\n- OUR m OTHER LEfTPCWME.AU\n\u25a0F^l  DON'T, SHE'LL BRAT ME OP',\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 11.\u2014Michigan\nwas denied permission by the supreme court today to amend its\ncomplaint against Illinois and the\nChicago sanitary district, but New\nYork was permitted to Join it In\nopposition to the diversion of water\nfrom Lake Erie,\nMA\u00ab1E^NIUU BE BACK\nIW A FEVJ DAYS. AN' IF\nI  CAN'T TBUU HER THE\nSTORY IN -THAT BOOK .\n1  kiim stse THE OOCTOF\nTAKIN' MV -TEMPERATURE\nTHenea\nA HUNDRED\nVOLTS\nFOR EVERY\nLIGHT\non\nILL   CALL ON HIM\nAM'  HWCHIMTEH-\nME \"THE STORY\n7^1\nO 1926 bv Imtl FtATuftc S-wvice. Inc.\nCnMi  Bntatn  nf kit nwan-wt\n\/O-if\nao^_\u2014-\n.exexexexex\u2014^\u2014\u2014a..^\u2014\u2014\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 12f 192&\nP\u00abge Nlns~\n. S. STEEL HITS\nON LOW LEVEL\nouches 140VS>; Aggressive Selling on Wall Street Is\nthe Feature\nNBW YORK, Oct. 11. \u2014 Another ag-\nressive selling movement shook the\nock market today and prices crum-\ned away in all sections of the list.\nfforts to stem the wave of Uquida-\non by extending support to the usual\ntsrket leaders were partially success-\nil 'tor a time but the drive for low-\n\u2022 prices was ^vigorously renewed to-\nard the close and net declines of 1\ni\\i points predominated.\nIn the face of an Increase in untied tonnage reported by the U. S.\nteel Corporation,. selling orders\n;ainBt the steel shares accumulated\nheavy volume over the week-end.\n.8. Steel was hammered down to\nlOft. the lowest level in 10 weeks.\nid after a temporary rally It cloBed\n& net lower, at 141. Slosh Sheffield\nroke 4% and Bethlehem and Otis\nsues were heavy.\nUnloading of General Motors on a\n.rge scale sent that stock plunging\n>wn to 148%. more than 25 below\n\u25a0 recent peak. The close wat^ at\n18%, a net decline of 4H for the\nL7. Additional automobile price cuts\ntilled speculative interests. The er-\n.tlc character of trading was reflect-\nl in the temporary recoveries Of 4 tn\npoints from the day's*\u00bblows, which\n\u2022dV place under the impetus of short\nivering Coco Cola, Woolworth, Cass\nbreshing    Machine   and    Commercial\njlvents B,\nRailroad   shares\nwithstood   the\nMl-\nif   movement   rel\n:her   stocks,   but\natlvely\nbetter\nthan\nclosed\nIrregularly\nwer.\nCall  money  hek\nat S\nper  cent  all\niy  and   time   money   rates  were   un-\nlanged.\nTotal  sales\u20141.927,700  shares.\nKew Yoi*\n<Jnot\u00bb1\nHigh\nions\nLow\nClose\nlllefl   Chem     ..,\n127*\n12514\n12614\nroer    Loco.    ..\n10414\n10314\n10414\nmer.    Tele.\nHfi\n14414\n116%\n14414\nmer.  Tobac.   ...\n118\n11714\nnaconda     \t\n47\n46%\n47\naldwin    \t\nalt.   &   Ohio.   ..\n144(4\n142%\n142%\n1178\n115\n115%\n101*\n100\n100%\nan.   Pacific    ...\n161%\n16114\nsrro  de   Pasco..\n84\n\u00ab3%\n64\nhlle   Copper   ...\n3ZVa\n31%\n32\nDm   Products   ..\nhrysler      \t\n461,\n46\n45%\n34%\n34\n3414\nodge    \"A\"    \t\n23\n22%\n32014\n14814\n22%\n324%\n148%\n29%\n75%\nen.   Motors    ,..\n152\n7\u00bb\n.   N.   pfd.    .\nisp.   Copper    ...\n76%\n24%\n351.\n2414\n24%\nitl.    Nickel     . ..\n85\n35%\nsane. Copper ...\n60 %\n60\n60%\nor.   Pacific   ...\n76%\n76\n76%\nY.   Central   ..\n132%\n130%\n131%\nhllllps   Pete\n47g\n46%\n4714\nadlo Corpn\t\n52\n60%\n61 %\nock   Island    ...\n6314\nCO\n61%\nbell   Union   Oil..\n27%\n27%\nInc.    Cons\t\n1814\n18%\n18%\n9U.   Pacific    ...\n104\n103%\n104\ntan.  Oil  Cal.   ..\n6114\n60%\ntan.  Oil N.  J...\n42\n41%\n42\ntudebaker    \t\n55\n64\nex.   Gulf   Sulph.\n4214\n41%\n42\nnloa   Pacific   ..\n15914\n167%\n158%\n.  8.  Rubber   ...\n54%\n63%\n,   8.   Steel   \t\n142%\n140%\n141\nLillys   Ovid    ...\n20%\nE\nL\nBrief Rally Clipped; Smelters\nMake Reliable Gain; Alcohol Up Fraction\nTORONTO. Oct. 11. \u2014 Although\nshowing; some tendency to rally In the\nlater dealings, the Toronto stock exchange today displayed a majority of\n\u2022declines at  tbe close.\nBrazilian moved between 107^ and\n110%. closing* at the latter, up IK\npoints on the day. Smelters closed at\n234 <4. which was the high of the day\nand a net advance of 4*4.\nIndustrial Alcohol was up %, to 24.\nMassey-Harrls common was 1% higher, at <8%, but the pfd. was down\n%,  to  101>i-    B.C.  Pish eased   M,   to\nIn the paper group, Abittbl sold at\n90 S to 91. closing at the latter figure,\ndown 2%\nTwin City lost 14, to 63%, and Winnipeg common lost  %, to  5BH-\nTorento Sale*\nTORONTO, Oct. 11. \u2014 Sales \u2014 UG\nBrazilian pfd. and 8525 common. 370\nB. C. Pishing. 370 Steamships, 125\nGeneral Electric, 294 Smelters, 840 Alcohol 450 Massey-Harria and 925 pfd.,\n150  Twin  City.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK. Oct. 11 \u2014 Sterling exchange mixed at $4.80% 60-dav bills\nand |4.84  11-16 demand.\nForeign bar  silver\u201466%c,\nCanadian  dollars\u2014Par.\nFrancs\u20142,86 %c.\nLire\u20144,12%C.\nNelson approximate rate sterling,\n$4.87.\nMarks\u201423.81.\nKronen\u201426.72.\nCanada Bonds\nManitoba Brightens; Rain and\nSnow,    Saskatchewan,    .Alberta; B. C. Fruit Moves\nurope Assured of\nFinancial Credit\nFrom United States\nKANSAS CITY. Oct. 11.\u2014Assurance\nUnited States financial credit for\n.rope was given on behalf of the ad-\nInistratlon today by O B. Winston,\nidersecretary of the treasury. Sta-\nllsation must be obtained first by\neso governments, he said, but he\nedloted that \"Europe would soon\nfain be In a sound position,\" and\nablllsation be accomplished\nCP.R.\n.Closed   yesterday   at   161%.\nAt this price it yields\n6.18%\nThis is a sound business man's\ninvestment.\nVictory Bonds\nBought  and   Sold\nR. P. Clark & Co.\nLIMITED, VANCOUVER\nNataon   Branch\nPhon* 100\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 11. \u2014 The Dominion  war lsdue pricfs:\nWar loans \u2014 1931, 1100.50; 1937.\n1103.25.\nVictory loans \u2014 1927. 3100.35; 1933.\n$104.20; 1937,  $107b   J107.40a.\nWar loan renewals \u2014 1927 $100.20;\n1932,   $102.20b,   3102.26a.\nRefunding loans \u2014 1928 '3100.05b,\n\u00bb100.20a; 1944 396.10b, J\u00bb6:25a; 1940.\n396.10; 1946, 396.10b, 396.25a: , 1946,\n396.20.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK. Oct. 11. -\u2014 Copper \u2014\nQuiet; electrolytic\u2014Spot and futures,\n14%c\nTin\u2014Easy; spot and nearby, $70.62;\nfutures.   $67.75.\nIron\u2014Steady; No. 1 norftiern, $20.50\nto $21.50; No. 2 northern, $19 to\n$20.50.\nLead\u2014Steady;  spot   $8.50.\nZinc-\u2014Steady; East St. Louis, spot\nand   futures,   $7.30.\nAntimony\u2014Spot,   $14.25.\nAt London\u2014\nStandard copper \u2014 Spot f 57 15s;\nfutures, \u00a358 10s. Electrolytic\u2014Spot,\n\u00a365   15s;   futures    \u00a366   5s.\nTin\u2014Spot,- \u00a3315 5s;, futures \u00a3303\n16s.\nLend \u2014 Spot, \u00a330 IDs; futures,, f30\n7S  6d\nZinc\u2014Spot.   \u00a334   2s  6d;   futures,   \u00a334.\nWINNIPEG. Man.. Oct. 11. \u2014 That\noptimism js again prevalent with respect to the crop, and in the crop In\nmain will be a profitable one were the\nkeynotes of report issued this morning\nby the agricultural department of the\nCanadian Pacific Railway company.\nThe weather during most of the past\nweek was favorable and much thresh\ning was done. On Friday and again\nthis morning rain and pnow fell in\nparts of Manitoba and Saskatchewan\nThis means' a suspension of threshing\noperations  for at  least  two days..\nYields In many localities are reported  as phenomenal.\nWarm la Manitoba\nWarm weather and wind in Manitoba\ncreated .excellent drying conditions.\nLocal rain over the Portage division\nand on the Bredenbury subdivision\ncaused some delay. Yields In Manitoba have been fully up to expectation\nand from 46 to 50 per cent of the\nthreshing of both wheat and coarse\ngrain is complete. Grades have suffered reduction due to bleaching and\nsprouting.\nRain fell on portions of central and\nnorthwestern Saskatchewan.\n..Further showers and snow was reported today from Secretan to Swift\nCurrent, and from Eyebrow to Ker-\nrobert and on McMorran subdivision.\nSnow was reported from the-Odore\nWest the Alberta boundary. Threshing continues In the other districts of\nSaskatchewan. In the central and\nsouthern districts from 80 to '86 per\ncent of the grain is threshed, and from\n60 to 55 per cent In the north. Yields\nnro turning nut well and grades are\ngenerally better than expected.\nIn Alberta cutting and threshing\nContinued until Friday, when rain\nhalted operations. Threshing will be\nresumed in all pnrts of Alberta today\nwith the exception of Suffield and the\nwest end of Brooks subdivisions.\nHalf Tare*Mag Dons\nCutting is completed with the exception of the Crow's Nest and Red\nDeer subdivisions, where from 10 to\n25 per cent of the grain remains\nstanding. Threshing is about 50 per,\ncent completed. Reports of wheat\ngrowing Jn stook are exaggerated and\noutturns are expected to show less\ndamage than rumors indicate. Sugar\nbeets are being harvested and are\nshowing a greater tonnage than last\nyear. Live stork market is active and\nquite a number of cattle have hern\n\u25a0hipped.\nOn the Edmonton, Dun vegan & British Columbia railway weather conditions have been showery, but on the\nwhole sufficient favorable to permit\ncarrying on wltlY threshing operations.\nThe crop (a exceptional in this district\nand most of the grain going into the\nelevators  is grading  No.   1.\nOnions and Tomato** Hurt\nIn British Columbia the apple crop\nIn the Okanagan is being harvested\nunder more favorable conditions. The\nmovement of fruit through the prartes.\nhas been slow owing to weather conditions there. Packing houses are\nfilled to capacity. The onion crop was\ndamaged from 36 to 50 per cent by\nfrost on September 26 and 27. This\ndoes not mean that all this quantity\nWill not be shipped, but that there\nwill tho very few Btandard grad*\nonions fit to sell from this territory.\nThis frost completely wiped oflt the\nbalance of the tomato crop, but the\nfruit  trees  were not  hurt.\nAmerican Crop Yield\nUp to Average of\nthe Past Ten Years\nAfter    Depression    at    Start,\nMontreal Market Picks\nUp\" in Afternoon\nMONTREAL    Oct.   11.   \u2014   The   trend\nof values on the Montreal stock exchange today showed a distinct Improvement in the afternoon sftcsion and\nat the dose good gain.* had been recorded.\nBrazilian closed nt 110% for a net\ngain of 1% after having sold as low\nas 107% in the early trading, Alcohol was the second moat active stock,\nclosing at 24 xd for a net gain of\n%, Smelting closed at 233 for a net\ngain of 2%.\n8hawinigan was the strong feature,\nclosing at 243 for a net gain of 4\npoints.\nTotal sales\u201438,885 shares; bonds \u2014\n$406,100.\nClosing Prloss\nAsbestos Ui Abltlbl. 92; Ind. Alcohol., 24; Brsiil 110%; Breweries, 67%;\nBrompton. 35%: Cement. 107; B. C.\nFish., 70; Laurentide 109; B. E. Steel\n2nd pfd., 1%; Spanish pfd., 104%;\nSpanish common. II.\".; Steamers pfd..\n88; Steamers common, 27*4; Hontffll\nPower. 74; Quebec Power XD., 161;\nSmelters ..33; Steel nf Canada, 107%;\nXD; Atlantic Sugar M%: Textile. 92;\nWinnipeg Elec., 66%,\nTMar's Salts\nMONTREAL Oct. 11 \u2014 Rales \u2014 708\nAhitlbi 270 Asbestos and 276 pfd., 125\nSugar, 20,717 Brazilian, 185 Brompton,\n4761 Alcohol. 100 Steamship and 455\npfd.. 120 Bridge, 1280 Laurentide Paper,\n2430 Montreal Power and 717 pfd.. 496\nBreweries, 125 Penmans 355 Quebec\nPower, 448 Shawinigan, 2900 Smelter?.\n270 Spanish River 310 Steel of Canada 123 Twin City, 240 Winnipeg Electric.\nPOSSIBLE ZING\nSHORTAGE SEEN\nAmerican Zinc Institute Head\nReviews Mining  Activity\nof Metal Over World\nWeather Sends Wheat\nPrices to Higher Ground\nCHICAGO, Oct. 11. \u2014 Influenced\nboth by unfavorable weather in Canada and by fears that Canadian crop\nreports would be reduced, wheat values\nwent higher today. Closing quotations on wheat were firm, %c to l%c\nnet higher, with corn l%c to l%o advance; oats showing %c to i%c gain;\nand provieions from 17c decline to n\nrlse^of 120,\nSASKATCHEWAN BUYS\nSOME PRIZE RAMS\nWINNIPEG, Man.. Oct. 11. \u2014 The\nlive stock branch of the Saskatchewan\ngovernment has Just effected the purchase of a carload of Rambouillei\nrftml for breeding purposes, and will\ndistribute them in tho district along\nthe Canadian Pacific lines between\nMaple Creek and Moose Jaw. The\nprize animals are now in transit from\nHelena. Mont., and were selected by J.\nO, Robertson, Saskatchewan live stock\ncommissioner.\nOPTIMISTIC TRADE\nON MINE MARKET\nTORONTO, Oct. 11. \u2014 Trading was\nbrisk on the Standard mining exchange\ntoday. The market was inclined to be\noptimistic, gains being recorded In tho\nmajority of issues. Argonaut was up\n4%. with 126.650 shares dealt. In.\nBarry Holly was 3 points higher, at\n68. and Tecfc Hughes was up 2 at\n$4.60. A 5c decline was registered by\nMclntyre, at $28.55; while Dome Mines\nwas  1  lower   at 760.\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 11. \u2014 British Columbia's sine production annually is in\nexcess of 100.000,000 pounds of a\nvalue of approximately $8,000,000. In\nview of that tremendous yield the possibility of sine ihorflge on the world\nmarkets ia of great Interest to this\nprovince. Practically all of the sine\nin Canada is produced in British Columbia with quantity being turned out\nyear by year gradually  increasing.\nA. J. M. Sharpe, honorary foreign\nsecretary of the American Zinc Institute, estimates world stocks of sine,\nSeptember 1, at 33,200 metric tons of\n2204.6 pounds each, compared with 37.-\n200 tons August 1, a decrease of 4000\ntons in August. World stocks, July 1.\nhe estimated at 40,600 tons; June 1,\n49,200; May 1. -M.IOQ; 36,400 April 1;\nand   33,500  March   1.\nMr. Sharpe, in viewing the world\nsituation as It pertains to sine, sees a\nshortage of sine in Europe, in face of\nan abundance of ore, provided that the\nEnglish coal strike is settled this\nmonth, as he expects. A possible reason for apprehension that he warns\nagainst Is an Increase in American\noutput which must reflect Itself In uneasiness in, European prices, even if\nAmerican prices should stay above\nEuropean parity,\n\u25a0\u2022litres British Strfk. About Over\nIn discussing the situation In detail,\nMr.  Sharpe says:\n\"September has opened very quletlv\nfrom a market point of view, and ft\nis doubtful whether there will be any\nreal liveliness until the prolonged coal\nstrike in Great Britain is over and\nthe miners return to work. Undoubtedly, the back of the strike is broken,\nand with the near approach of winter\nIt becomes Imperative for the union\nloaders to make the best terms possible for a settlement. The crisis is\nnow on its last legs and It will surprise e^-eryone if the dispute is not\nsettled (luring the current month.\n\"Meanwhile, the British zinc industry remains entirely closed. The 20\ntons reported to have been produced\nin August were obtained from experimental work. It will be at least n\nmonth after the coal miners return to\nwork before the zinc smelters can obtain full operation.\nAustralian Stooks\n\"Fair stocks of Australian concentrates exist, and to prevent any undue\naccumulation and locking up of money\nthe bulk of the arrivals has been\nturned over to the Belgian smelters.\nThus the nre supply has been superabundant, a factor which has influenced n hardening in the returning\ncharge and the practical cessation of\nImports of ore from the Tri-State\nfield.\n\"The Belgian zinc industry has attained its pre-war scale of production, and the main concern in that\ncountry today is its ability in the\nyears to come to compete successfully\nwith the ever-increasing output of\nhigh-grade metal produced by the electrolytic and electro-thermic methods of\ntreatment. High-grade 99.9 per cent\nIS becoming increasingly popular as\nits premium over the selling price of\ncommon zinc lessens. The premium\nhas steadily come down from \u00a33 a ton\na few months ago to \u00a31 17s 6d, and as\nit becomes necessary to place larger\nquantities, so will the spread between\nthe two grades contract, In my opinion.     Belgian   zinc   interests   are   not\nunnaturally somewhat apprehensive of\nthis cheaper method of producing\nmetal, which they are unable to employ in their own country. For this\nreason, we may be assured that the\nBelgians will leave no stone unturned\nIn improving their distillation practice\nat the same time trying out the new\nmetallurgical  processes.\nOouraptloa is Swops Oood\n\"Consumption in Europe is well\nmaintained and highly encouraging,\nhaving regard to the disturbed political and economic situation. The galvanizing trade keeps busy and the\nrollers are still so heavily occupied\nthat no fresh business can be accepted\nfor delivery nearer than three months\nahead.\nIncreased number of retorts operating in the United States at the end\nof July has caused a certain amount\nof perturbation on this side, lest It Is\nths forerunner of another   in*3\u00bbaae tt\nAmerican  production of  slab tmc. j*\n\"One point I would desire to \u00ab*\u00bb*\u25a0>\nphastse is that if the United States\nsmelters do inflate their output again\nand have to press sales st ths sacrifice of market prices, there will aa *\nrepercussion on this side of ths Atlantic. While It is true that ths St.\nLouis quotation Is above London *\u2022*\"-\ntty there must always b\u00ab a certain\namount of sympathy between tne two\nmarkets and any decided trend hi\nAmerica would be promptly reflected\nin  England.\"\nTVaEVCK VO XKFO\u00bbT WH11\nPARIS, Oot 11. \u2014 Owing to shortage in French wheat crop. 44.000,006*\nbushels of wheat will have to be Im-r\nported.\nBank. Accounts\nLarge or Small\nhi*\nTHE Bank of Montretl, which\nfor over a century has been\nserving the industrial and farming interests of Canada is equipped to handle large bank accounts and financial\ntransactions of first importance.\nAt the same time, it renders the fullest and most\ncareful service to smaller accounts, which are\nequally welcome.\nBANK OF MONTREAL\nEstablished i8l7\nTotal Assets in excess of i7so.o0o.00o\nVancouver Stocks\nBid AskMl\nB.   C.   Silver           1.76 1.80\nDunwell    ...'.       1.03 1.04\nGlacier       .OR\nIndian   Mines     05 .06\nInt.    Conl     18 .19\nLucky    Jim      16 .17\nNat.    Silver     05 \t\nPremier           2.08 2.09\nSelkirk*      .04\nSllvercrest       .11\nLeadsmith   ,  .13\nNat.   Sll 17 .20\nB,   C.   Mont OOVfi .00%\nBr.    Petr 10 .12\nMaple   Lenf      .40\nTrojan      01 .02\n -aafta.\t\nDominion Live Stock\nlaboratories\nCustom Astayers and\nAnalytical Chemists   *\nill Work Out Same Day as\nReceived\nVim   Solicit   Your   Patronage\n110 Baknr Strw*   -   P. 0. Drawer 1073\nNELSON,   B.  C.\nEDMONTON. Oct. 11. \u2014 Receipts \u2014\nCattle 136,  calves 31, hogs  16.\nButcher   cows\u2014Oood    $3.7B   to   M.\nFeeder steers\u2014 Good, f4.25 to $4.GO;\nplain to fair, $3 to J4.\nStocker  heifers\u2014Oood,   $3   tn  $3.25.\nVeal calves\u2014Oood, f4 to jr.; common, (2.50 to $3.50\nHog?-~Thick   smooths,   $12.50.\nCALGARY. Oct. 11. \u2014 Receipts \u2014\nCattle -133. calves 51, hogs 329, sheep\n517.\nSteers \u2014 Choice, $5.75 to $6; fair\nto  good.   $5   to   $5.50.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice ?4-50 to $5;\nfair  to  good.   $4   to  $4.35. i\nButcher cows\u2014Choice, $3.75; fair to\ngood,   $3.35   to  $3.50.\nBulls\u2014Good,   $3   to   $3.25.\nStocker steers\u2014Choice, $4.75; fair to\ngood,  $3.50  to   $4.50.\n[Stocker heifers\u2014Choice $3.50 to\n$3.75;  fair  to good,  $3  to $3.26.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choice, $5; fair to\ngood.   $4   to   $4.75.\nCalves\u2014Choice,   $5.35   to   $5.75.\nLambs\u2014Fair tn good,  $9.50  to  $10.\nSheep\u2014Fair   to   good,   S8   to   $?.\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 11. \u2014 Cattle 2700,\ncalves 33R, hogs 1292, sheep Sll,\nSteers\u2014Choice. $5.75 to $6; fair to\ngood,   $5.25  to  $5.50.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice, $5 to $5.50\nfair to good. $4  to $4.75.  '\nButcher cows\u2014Choice, $4 to $4.25\nfair  to good.   $3.25   to   $3.50.\nBulls\u2014Good.   $3   to   $3.65.\nOxen\u2014Good.  $3   to $4.\nStocker FteerB\u2014Choice, $4 to $4.50;\nfair to  good,   $3   to  $3.75.\nStocker heifers\u2014Choice, $3.25 tn $4;\nfair to good, $2,75 to $3.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choie*. $4.50 to $5;\nfair  to good.  $4  to  $4.25.\nCalves\u2014Choice, $8 to $8.50; good\n$6  to $7. I\nHogs \u2014 Select bacon, J13.47U; thick\nsmooths $12.26; heavies, $11.25; lights\nand feeders.  $12.26.\nLambs \u2014 Fair to good, $11 to\n$11.50.\nSheep\u2014Fair to good, $6 to $7.\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffice  Smelting  and   Refining   Df?artmant\nTRAIL\/BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of GoW, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Oim\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC, TRAIL 0\nWASHINGTON. Oct. 11, \u2014 Prospective crop production showed very little\nchange during the past month, according to the October crop forecast today\nby   the  agricultural  department.\nGrowing conditions during September for the whole appear to have been\nfavorable. Further Improvement was\nshown, and instead of the short crops\nthat seemed probable during the\ndrought of early summer, It now appears that crop yields will approximately equal the average of the last\n10   years.\nCorn  Crop Drop*\nCorn lost about 18,000,000 bushels\nin prospective production in September with the crop now indicated at 2,-\n679,988,000 bushels. This is 8 per cent\nsmaller than  last  year.\nSpring wheat improved slightly and\na \/crop of 213,336,000 bushels is indi-\ncafed. With a winter wheat crop of\n626,482,000 bushels alrendy harvested.\ntho total wheat crop now is placed ot\n839,818.000 bushels. Wheat production this year will exceed the five-\nyear   average   by   38,000,000   bushels.\nTWENTY THOUSAND\nFURS FOR AUCTION\nSEATTLE, Wash.. Oct. 11. \u2014 Twenty thousand furs are to be offered at\nauction by the Seattle Fur exchange,\nOctober 20. Skins from Canada and\nAlaska include 3000 white fox. 1000\nred  fox and 110 bear.\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA. Oct. 11 \u2014 Toronto\u2014Extras 46c to 47c; firsts 39c to 40c;\nseconds.   30c.\nMontreal \u2014 Dealers paying extras,\n44o to 48c; firsts, 40c to 43c; seconds, 31c to 34c.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Extras, 38c to . 89c;\nfirsts   33c to  36c; seconds,  26c  to  29c.\nSaskatchewan \u2014 Extras 35c; firsts,\n32c; seconds,  24c.\nCalgary \u2014 Extras, 35c; firsts, 82c;\nseconds,  25c\nVancouver \u2014 Extras 44c to 45c;\nfirsts 41c; pullet extras. 36c; peewees,\n26c to 27c.\nChicago \u2014 Spot, 38 \u00a3c to 40c; Decembers,  86 \"&c.\nNew York \u2014 Extra firsts. 42c to\n46c;  firsts,   37c  to  40c;  December   37c.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL. Oct. 11. \u2014 Eggs firm,\nbutter dull  and  cheese  unchanged.\nButter\u2014No. 1 pasteurixed. 82c to\n32 He.\nStorage eggs\u2014Extras, 43b to 43;\nfirsts, 38c to S9c; seconds. 33o to 34c.\nFresh eggs-\u2014Extras, 52c; firsts, 46c\nto  47c.\n\u2022WIXKIFIQ     Uin     QVOTATTom\nWheat\u2014\nOpen\nHigh\n\"Low\nClose\nOct.     . . .\n13714\n188*\n13\u00ab*\n138*\nNov.    . . .\nU7S4\n138*\n186*\n188*\nD.C.    . . .\nm*\n135%\n134*\n135',(,\nMay\n189\n140\n138*'\n140\nnam\nOct.    ...\n6\u00abW\n67*\n66*\n67*\nNov.   .. .\n56*\n66*\n65*\n56*\nDec.    . . .\n52%\n68*\n62*\n63*\n66*\nMay   ...\n6<H\n56*\n64*\nBarlay\u2014\nOct.    ...\n\u00aba*\n\u00ab4*\n63*\n\u2022 4*\nNov.    . . .\n6\u00abH\n\u00ab4*\n64*\n64*\nPec.    .. .\nMay   .. .\n6S %\nMl*.\n64*\n67\n63*\n66*\n64*\n67\nFIsx\u2014\nOct.    ...\nNov.   ...\nDec.    .   .\n19514\n1>5*\n194*\n195*\n196*\n197\n19714\n197*\n205*\n196*\nMay   ...\n205*\n204*\n2*5*\nRye\u2014 .\nOct    ...\n14\n94*\n93*\nStf\nDeo.    ...\n9514\n191H\n9614\n96*\nMay   ...\n10!*\n101*\n101*\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Oct 11. \u2014 Flour\nunchanged at J5.05 \u00bbo 18.10; shipment.\n60.841\nBran\u2014$22.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 northern $1.41 to\n$1.44;   May.   $1.47%;  December,   $1.43.\nCora\u2014No.  3 yellow,  74c to 76c.\nOats^\u2014No.  3  whit,1, 41 *c to 43*c.\nPlax\u2014No.   1.  $2.17*  to $2.27*.\nToronto Mines\nBid\nPremier    ,       2,08\nHollinger          18.70\nWest   Dome    23\nDome       9.95\nKirkland      98\nLake   Shore         13.80\nMclntyro       >,     23.60\nNoranda         18,85\nVipond            1.71\nAsked\n2.10\n.98-v4\n23.'70\n'i.72\nToday's Dividends\nAm    Chain   com   q. ....,60c\nAm. Chain Class A q 50c\nAm.   Glue- pfd  q 82.00\nAtlantic   Refining  pfd  q    $1.75\nCollins & Afkman com init $1.00\nCollins   &   Aikman   pfd   q $1.76\nFirestone  Tire &  R  com q    $1.60\nFirestone   Tire & R.  6% pd q iWfc\nMilwaukee E.   K,  AH. pfd a. \\\\%\nSpokane Stocks\n(Reported by C. W. Appleyard)\nCanada  Steamships common....$ 27-\/6\nAmer.   Can $48H\nBraillian     $110%\nWinnipeg $ sew,\nImp.    QU     $35\nSmelters       $232%\nAmer.   Loco        $103?i\nc.   p.  b.   ,\u25a0 :$isi\nHowe   Sound $ 41%\nd     Northern     $ 75^\nDodge    Bros    $ 22 \u00a3\nAbltlbl      $ 9114\nInter   Nickel     $ 35^4\nSilversmith     44c\nbeadsmi th       jc\nLucky   Jim        ific\nRichmond            994c\nGoldsmith     16%c\nCan. S. Ships pfd $ g;\u00ab\nGranby      $ 29%\nDupont  V1, $324\nBRITISH  COLtriCBIA  EOOS\nFresh extras, 50c; fresh firsts 47c\nto  48c;  pullets.   42c  to  43c.\noiTjB taxms oomwa\nWINNIPEG, Man., Oct It \u2014 Commencing thla week and'continuing till\nthe end of October, the boys and girls'\nclub fair will be held throughout the\nprovince, it was announced today by\nThomas S. Acheson. general agricultural agent of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway. The winning teams will compete in Winnipeg during the first\nweek in November.\n\u20141 \u00ab\u00bb\nNEW    GOSSIP    CENTER\nLONDON, Oct. 11.\u2014Gossip \\s to\nhave a recognized center In London.\nThe new theater is being transformed\ninto an amusement center, similar\nto the Potinfere. in ParH Both the\nstage and auditorium are being altered to make the place more Intimate and the management announces that tho entertainment will he\naltered each week; so an to include\nthe gossip of loondon, England, and\nthe whole world In fact.\n\u20141    m\nHundreds of pigeons, flocking In\nfriendly intercourse with loiterers on\nthe steps of the New Yotk fifth avenue library, make It look like a Venetian plaxa.\nBarrymore Rugs Possess\nDistinguished Beauty at an\nEconomical Price\nThat new rug your home\nneeds can be advantageously chosen from our new\nstock today.\nWe have all sizes and\npatterns for every room in\nthe home.\nVisit our rug department and select yours now,\nwhile assortments are\nchoicest.\nFOR THE LIVING ROOM\n\u2014Dominion Linoleum\nRugs are made in attractive colors and designs, in sizes 7 ft. 6 in.\nx 9 ft. 9 in., 9 ft. x 9 ft.,\n10 ft. 6 in. x 9 ft., 12 ft.\nx 9 ft. Prices ranging\n $12.50 to S19.75\nFor the Boys\nBOYS' NAVY BLUE NAP ENGLISH- MAKE REEFER COATS\u2014Correct style,\nwith gilt buttons.    Sizes 21 to 27.   Price  $5.50\nBOYS' MAN-O'-WAR  NAVY BLUE SERGE SAILOR SUITS\u2014English make.\nMade with middy and long pants or blouse with short knickers.   Sizes 21 to 27.\nBOYS' MAN-O'-WAR CAPS\u2014English make.   To match suits.   Each  $1.25\nPrices, suit $5.25 to $6.50\nShoe Department\nWe Hare Just Unpacked a Very Nice Selection of Bedroom Slippers, Which\nAre Exceptionally Good Value\nLADIES' SOFT CUSHION SOLE BOU DOIR SLIPPERS-In blue, red, tan or\nblack Kid.   Rubber heels, pom-poms  .81.25\nAnd in Patent, in same make  81.50\nMISSES' BLACK KID BOUDOIR SLIP PERS\u2014Spring heels $1.00\nBOYS' BLACK KID BEDROOM SLIP PERS\u2014Rubber heels  $1.35\nMEN'S  BEDROOM  SLIPPERS\u2014In   so ft black or tan Kid or in grey Leather.\nCushion soles, rubber heels  $1.50\nMEN'S BLACK PATENT BEDROOM S LIPPERS\u2014Soft cushion soles ma rubber\nheels _..$l.ra\nesMi\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1926_10_12","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0403157","@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":"1926-10-12 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1926-10-12 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\/1.0403157"}