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C. WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1926\nNo. 144\nBluenote May\nQUIT SCHOONER RACE\nSee Pate 7\nIP\nIMEE CARRIED TO COURT ON A CHAIR\niHANGHAI'S WHITE POPULATION THREATENED\nMSHPilT\nI   Involve   Expenditure   of\n$200,000 by Consolidated  Firm\nIII enable moyie\nmill treat ore\nmberley    and   J3t    Eugene\nMines Will Benefit by\nNew Addition\nRANBROOK, B. C, Oct. 19.\u2014\n\u00bbrk was commenced this week on\npreliminary operations at Moyie\noratory to the construction of a\nrue crushing plant there In ad-\nIon to the mill constructed last\nr and now operating.\nt is understood that the new plant\nI involve an expenditure of upward\n$200,000   and   will   .put   the   Moyie\nII in a position to take ore from\nmberley   if   necessary,   as   well  as\nore on the Bt. Eugene dumps nt\nlyie. The crusher will have a\naacity of 100 tons and, It ia hinted,\nty also be us.-\u00bbd for custom ore ii\noccasion demands, a privilege\npich several East Kootenay ship-\nig mines might desire.\nThe completion of this new plan*\n11 mean (hat the Consolidated cdm-\nny   has   spent   upward   of   $7f>0,000\ntheir new upder.aklng at Moyie,\nll whereas 20 years ago high values\nre being taken from the St Ett-\nne, it is being extracted in , con-:\nRftatos beyond, the reach of the\nMlurglcal 'practice of that day.\nHere's One Woman\nWho Can Keep a\nSecret, at Any Rate\nTORONTO, Oct. 19.\u2014There is\none woman who can keep a\nsecret. She is the wife of W.\nF. Nlckte, K. C, who has resigned as attorney-general of\nOntario. Mr. Nickle stated today how he managed to keep\nthe news of his reslgnat\/m out\nof the press.\n\"I'll tell you how it happened.\nMy wife wrote that letter for\nme on Friday night. It was In\nthe handy of the premier a\nlittle after 12 o'clock Saturday.\nThere is at least one woman\nwho can keep a secret.\"\nI\nE\nHertzog  Reports   Wish  From\nSouth Africa for Cooperation With Empire\nface murder\n;es\nQuesnel  Rancher  Says,   'I  Do\nNot\/ When Words 'Did\nKill' Are Read\nLargest Individual Taxpayer\nin the British Empire, Too\n^ONDON, Oct. 19.\u2014India's dele-\nIon to the Imperial conference is\nided by Sir Bijay Chand Mahtab,\nharajadhiraja Bahadur, of Burd\nHe is the premier nobleman\nBengal and the largest individual\n[payer    in     the    British     Empire.\nannual     assessment     averages\nsut  $1,500,000.\nThe Maharajah has extensive land\n\u25a0sessions on the western side of\nGanges river. His wealth is\n)ulous.\nthe estates are inhabited by near-\nmillion persons. They are\npflLrably managed and well\nJpped with hospitals and schools.\n3e iff $6 years of age and fcuc-\nded to* the  throne aa a six-yesr-\nthrough    adoption.\nThe  Maharajah   is  more  than six\ntall, has the shoulders of a\nestling champion and possesses\normons physical strength. In\n08 when an attempt wan made In\nleutta to aesamlnate Sir Andrew\naser, the lieutenant-governor, the\n.narajah simply picked Sir An-\niw upand put tjlm in a place of\nety. For hj\u00bb courage and cool-\nto, he was given the Knighthood\nthe Star of India. Last year he\nseived the Grand Crosii of the\nStan Empire. Sir Bijay'a two sons,\niq hefty youths, have come to\nndon with him to do some eight-\nting. One of them acts as his\nher's   private   secretary.\nQT'ESNEL, B. C, Oct. 19.\u2014Aaron\nKostl, 40 years old, Cariboo homesteader, through his counsel, yesterday told the story of his wanderings\nsince he left) his home in Transy-\nnatia, now a part of Rumania, In\n1*07, at his preliminary hearing on\na charge of murdering Morlce Orloll,\nhis old neighbor, whose body was\nfound near Kostl's cabin last month\nafter the latter had reported 3eelng\nhim shot down from ambush, The\nRumanian was committed for trial\nat Prince George assizes, commencing\nNovember., iS.\nWhen the words \"did kill Morlce\nOrioji\", were pronounced during the\nreading of the charge against Kosti,\nhe cried out, \"I did not!\" This was\nhis only comment during the proceedings, with the exception o( the\nfollowing statement given out through\nhis counsel at the conclusion.\n\"1 reported Morlce Orioii's death\nto the police and told them everything I knew. I assisted them In\ntheir search for the body and did\neverything I could to help. I want\nto get hack to my ranch, for I\nnever did any hurt to  Morlce Orloll.\"\narie, Decked Out\nin Jewels, Sits at\nRight of President\nWASHINGTON, Oot. in\u2014 Willing wltll the crown and Jewels\nDf her roy\u00bbJ RiusUm mother,\nQnren Mario of Rumania m.t tonight at ITetfitaent OooHdlfiVs\nright, hand, the first rdjriiliuc\nluivu ever to  he 'mtaTtaJraetl at)\nWhite House state banquet.\nDiamonds glltttwcnl In the\ncrown circling the slUngled, auburn twsec* of the \"most beautiful queen tn Europe.\"\n, Down the length of the flow-\nr-.'aden table were seated the\nireftdent'aj official family and\nleads of foreign mansions with\nheir wives.\nThe qveen wore the dlanwmd\nam with great pear-shaped\nlewl itrou* which she Inherited\nrom her mother, Grand Duch-\nMarle of Russia, daughter of\nftar AloMndVr. Across tho\nhunt of her georgette crepe\n(own she wore tho bine ribbon\nand the glittering star est tile\nOrder of Carol, highest Human-\nn  decoration.\nHor ramous pearls, three great\nitrands ot them, and large peart\ncar-rings comploted her orna-\nmenta.\nPrincess lleana's gown was of\n\u201eue crepe de chine, cat on\nTory simple lines with motifs of\nrtunestiones.    She wore no Jtnr-\nTwelve-Year-Old Boy\nKills Companion With\nGun; Says Accidental\nMALONE, N.Y., Oct. 19.\u2014Carl\nHutch in of Cooks Corners, 8 miles\nwest of here, was found dead with a\nbullet In his temple In the home of\nNoah Brooks last night. After an\nall-night search state troopers found\nPeter Berry, a 12-year-oid boy, employed by Brooks, hiding In a barn.\nBerry admitted killing the Hutchln\nboy.     He   said   it   was   an   accident.\nMan Married to Five\nWomen All Alve Sent\nto Jail, Five Years\nTORONTO, Oct. 19.\u2014\\V. J. bong,\nfound guilty of having married four\nwomen since 1902, all of whom are\nstill alive, was sentenced to five\nyears in Portsmouth penitentiary\ntoday.\nPREMIER KING HAS\nMESSAGE OF LOYALTY\nBaldwin Urges Desire of Con-\nference; Talks Navies and\nCommunication\nLONDON. Oct. 19.\u2014\"In essentials,\nunity; in nonessentials, liberty; in\nall things, charity.\" In these words,\ntraditionally attributed to St. Augustine, Premier Baldwin summed up\nthe spirit and ideals which the governments of the Empire should face\nthe future when for the second\ntime today he was extending a welcome to the Imperial conference\ndelegates.\nGathered about the table in the\nhistoric room where successive British cabinets have met since the days\nof Walpole, were representatives of\nall the dominions and India. They\nhad come \"from every continent\nand crossed all the seven seas as\nrepresentatives\"\u2014to cite Premier\nBaldwin's words\u2014\"of the great and\nfree nations, fellow workers in the\nservice of the crown and of the\ngreat traditions and high Ideals for\nwhich   it   stands.\"\nGeneral   agreement   and   the   ut\nmost  cordiality  marked   the  opening\nproceedings   of  the  conference.\nWill   Cooperate\nGeneral J. H. M. Hertzog, premier\nof South Africa, with regard to\nwhose attitude on Imperial relationship, there had been some uneasiness In certain quarters, declared\nthat South Africa was prepared to\ncooperate to the fullest extent in\nlaying as solidly as possible the\nfoundations of the British commonwealth.   He   added:\n\"The British community of nations has our hearty support and,\nwill ever have our hearty support,\nirrespective of parties or races, so\nlong as lt Is of the character of\ncommonwealth of free nations, each\nfree and striving to attain what is\nbest for itself yet in such a manner and in >uch a spirit as will conduce as much as possible to the well\nbeing  of all.\"\nEnsure Permaifccncy\nThe premier of South Africa urged\nthat ii was of paramount importance\nthat the foundations of the British\ncommonwealth should be such as\nwould stftltd the test of time. He\nurged that inquiry should be made\nto ensure the permanency and good\nwill of the  Empire.\n\"South Africa Is anxious to possess that good Will equally with\nevery other of the commonwealth.\nThat good will can be secured for\nthe future by thtt honest cooperation\nof the  iSmplre,\" ihe said.\nPremier Hertrtg hoped that the\nquestion of status would receive\nconsideration.\nPremier   Bruce   of   Australia,   de-\n(Continued   on   **age  Two.)\nenginThiis ti\nJapan Campaigns Against\nBobbed Hair and Short\nSkirts as Being Immoral\nTOKYO, Oct. 19.\u2014A\ncampaigrn against bobbed\nhair and the. short skirt is\nbeing waged in Japan by\nnewspapers, who assert\nultra western styles are\nimmoral and not suitable\nfor Japanese women, who\nhave not the figures for\nthese modern innovations.\nJudge Appoints Mrs. Heenan as\nOverseer in Best Interests of Girl\nWHITE PLAINS, Oct. 19.\u2014Frances\nPeaches Browning, 11-year-old wife of\nEdward Browning, wealthy real estate\nman, now has only one legal guardian,\nher  mother,   Mrs.   Carolyn  Heenan.\nSupreme Court Justice J. Morsehau-\nsor late today appointed Mrs. Heenan\nin place of M. Otis Kockwood, Pough-\nkeepsie, N.Y. attorney, on the plea of\nMaurico Smith, njttorney for Peaches.\nAfter hearing today's application for\nthe removal of Mr. Kockwood and substitution of Mrs. Heenan, the court\nsaid: \"I see no reason why the Infant\ndefendant's application ehould not be\ngranted. I am satisfied that her interests will be protected by making\nthe change.\"\nTwo Sets of Human\nBones Found in the\nRuins of Fired Barn\nSASKATOON, Sask., Oct. 18.\u2014The\ndiscovery of two sets of what are\nthought to be human bones, and of\na watch which stopped at 1:30, on a\nfarm seven miles northwest of Delisle,\nnear here, In the burned ruins of a\nbarn, is thought'by the police to be\nproof of a tragedy in which two harvesters lost thmir lives through the\ndropping of a. lighted cigarette. The\nbarn caught fire at 1:30 in the morning Of October 4, and the discovery\nwas made today. Provincial police\nwere rushed to the scene from Saskatoon and brought the remains back\ntonight  for  examination.\nCuban Area Is\nThreatened by\nHuge Hurricane\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 19.\u2014Tha tropical hurricane which is coming out\nof the Caribbean sea with increasing\nintensity, the weather bureau predicted tonight, will pass over the\nwestern tip of Cuba or through the\nYucatan channel tomo.-fow. Its center tonight was reports at latitude\n16.5, longitude 8*. and .it was moving\nin a north-northwesterly direction,\nthreatening strong winds as far norih\nas extreme south Florid*.\nA8KED FORM  CABINET\nVIENNA, Oct. 19\u2014Former Chancellor Solpel has been requested to\nform a cabinet to replace the Ramek\nministry, which resigned October 15.\nHe will submit his ministry list tomorrow.\nEngineer     Seriously     Injured\nWhen Thrown From Cab:\nLine Tied Up\nMOOSE JAW, Sask., Oct. 19.\u2014W. R\nThomas, engineer of Capadian Pacific\nrailway train No. 4, was hurled from\nhis cab and seriously injured when\ntbe front #nd of the train was thrown\ninto the ditch at 11:30 o'clock last\nnight, when the engine struck two\nhorses while passing through Side-\nwood, Sask., DO miles west of Swift\nCurrent.\nThe engine, mall car, express car and\nbaggage car, were wrecked, and the\ntrack torn up for 200 yards. There\nwns a delay of nearly 12 hours before\nthe debris Was cleared and the train\ncould proceed eastward.\nThe injured were: W. H. Thomas,\nengineer; A. G. Williams, Medicine\nHat, fireman, scalds; W. Page Calgary, railway mail clerk, broken ribs,\ncuts' snd bruises; J. Ironsides, Calgary railway mall clerk, cuts on face.\n\u2022am\nTolmie May Run for\nLeadership ot the\nConservative Party\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19.\u2014It it\nrepbrted her* that T. G. Coventry, Stftreich, haa offered to resign his seat in the legislature\nto make room for Hon. 8. F.\nTolmie. in \u00abv*nt of the latter securing the leadership of tho provincial 'Corttervati \u00ab(*\u00ab. Hon. H.\nH. Stevtns ie definitely out of the\nfight for the leadership, according to a statement by R. L. Malt-\n'land, president of th* provincial\nConservatives, who ttatod the federal member wanted it understood\nhs is not In ths running.\nBEWETCOUNTRY\nMajority    Estimated    Against\nProhibition    is\n111,000\nOSLO, Norway, Oct. 1\u00bb.\u2014The people of Norway have voted against\nthe continuation of prohibition. A\nplebiscite was held yesterday on\nthe question of rescinding the law\nprohibiting the sale of liquor exceeding 21 per cent alcohol. The\nestimated majority against prohibition    is    about    111,000.\nUp to a late hour tonight the\nvote  in  the  whole of Norway stood:\nAgainst   504,000;   for   393,000.\nLarge Number Pay Last\nTribute to G. W. McBride\nBuried at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER.   Oct   19\u2014A   large\nnumber   paid   tribute   to   the   late-\nGeorge   McBride,   pioneer   of   British Ccflumhia and for many years\na prominent Nelson  business man.\nPallbearers were: Dr. H. Pitts,\nF. C. Garde, E. J. Grant. W. W.\nWagg, James Townssnd, and W.\nM. Conklin. Despite ths fact the\nfuneral was private, a large number of floral tributes were in\nevidence.\nEngland Is Not Going\nto the Dogs, Says the\nBishop in ProvMence\nPROVIDENCE, K.I., Oct. 19.-\n\"England is not going to the dogs,'\ndeclared Rev. A. B\\ Winnington-In\ngram, lord bishop of London, this\nmorning, following his address to\nBrown students, referring to Dean\nInge's recent prophecy that disaster  lurked   in  Britain's wake.\n\"Only when Britain is faced with\nseeming disaster does her grit, ingenuity and pluck come to the foreground,\"   said   Bishop   Ingram.\n esO^s\t\nFaces Charge Securing\nMoney Falsely From\n,  Clergyman in Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19\u2014Having secured $10 from a local clergyman\nto bring a sick wife home. D. Strank\ntoday faced a charge of false pretenses.   His wife was dead two years,\nByrd of North Pole\nFame Has His Eye\non South Pole Now\nPHILADELPHIA, Oct. 19.\u2014Lieutenant-Commander Byrd, who flew In an\nairplane across the north po]>>, now\nannounces that lis may attempt a\nsimilar flight across the south pole.\nKootenay Students Pass\nCivU Service Exams\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19.\u2014Ths\nsuccessful candidates tt th* British Columbia civil service examination for stenograph:*** held on\nOctober 2  included:\nFsrnis, Junior\u2014Miss E. A.Johnston.\nNelson, Junior\u2014Miss N. M. J.\nCairns, D. M. Bowman and E. E.\nMatthews.\nKin\nReinforcements Fail to Arrive\nand Tense Situation\nResults\nEFFORTS MADE TO\nPROTECT WHITE FOLK\nForeiirn   Newspapers   Uncover\nPlot; Appeals for Help\nUnanswered\nSHANGHAI, Oct. lit.\u2014Revolutionary forces from Chekiang province\npenetrated to within 20 miles of this\ncity today. The foreign concessions\nwith their 8000 white residents are\nbeing policed for eventualities. The\ndefending trbops of Marshal Sun\nChuang-Fang are weak ln numbers,\nreinforcements having failed to arrive\nfrom Nanking in response to his\nurgent appeals.\nForeign newspapers of Shanghai\nhave uncovered an alleged plot of\nthe Manrhurian dictator, Chang Tso-\nLln to overthrow Marshal Sun\nChuang-Fang.\nThe newspapers assert that Chang\nplans to wrest Klangsu, Chekiang\nand Anhwel provinces from Sun's\ndomination. That dom1, he would set\nup the present governor of Shantung\nprovince, Chang Tsung-Chang. as\noverlord.\nSun    in   Tight   Place\nGenerals of Sun Chuang-Fang as\n\u25a0 he price of their treachery, say *he\npapers, would be 'made governors of\nthe provinces seized from Sun. One\nof the generals Is Hsfa Chao, gov\nernor of Chekiang, who has revolted\nagainst  Sun.\nNothing os heard from Sun\nChuang-Fang, who yesterday was reported at Nankins:, prepari\/lg to come\n.o Shanghai to take active command\nnt his troops defending thiR city. If\nChang Tso-Lin has declared against\nhim us reported, 'Sun's portion is said to be precarious. He is\nthreatened on three fronts, for the\nCantonese In his Kiangsl province are\nbelieved to br> Awaiting the weakening\nof his lines of resistance to continue\ntheir advance toward Nanking, Sun's\ncapital, and  eventually Shanghai.\nAPPEALS On'fACT THAT\nPICKETING IS LAWFUL\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19.\u2014Picketing\nis lnwfult according to W. W. Le-\nfeaux, counsel for local number 118,\nInternational Alliance Theatrical\nEmployees, which appeals from Mr.\nJustice Gregory's judgment in favor\nof John A. Schuberg, proprietor of\nthe FmpreftH theater, provided the\nplcketers are not guilty of unlawful\nacts and they picket to further their\ninterests  in a   trade dispute.\nThis was Mr. Lefeaux's contention\nbefore the court of appeal and counsel Insisted that it did not matter,\nIf in the course of picketing Injury was\ndone to respondent's business or\neven should respondent be put out\nof business. Judgment was reserved  by  the  court  of appeal.\nStraw Bal Is\nDealt Severe\nBlow, Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19.\u2014The practice of arrested persons of securing\nfreedom by means of a straw bail\nhas been dealt a severe blow by Judge\nCayley. Recently, when a friend- was\narrested in a liquor raid, J. Cefo secured his release on bail bonds. The\nfriend promptly disappeared, and ln\ncourt Cefo, who had claimed ownership of a motor car, admitted he\nowned nothing. \"I mtjst have been\nIntoxicated at the time I signed the\nbonds,\" he stated. Tho auto he mentioned was a taxi he was driving in.\nHeld In Jail for the past 10 dayB,\nCefo appeared today and was released after the case was prepared\nfor action by the attorney-general.\n am\nBurglar Raps Man\non Head With Bottle;\nSteals His Pants\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19.\u2014Awaken\nIng early this morning to flndl I\nburglar at his bedside rifling his\nclothes, G. Kansko, roomer on Keef-\ner street, was struck over the eye\nwith an empty soft drink bottle and\nseriously cut when the marauder discovered his victim had been aroused.\nAfter slugging him, the burglar flsd\ntaking with him the roomer's trousers and $7.SO from the till of the\nstore in the front part of the prem\nises. *j\nIS A SAMSON DOING\nBURGLARY AT COAST?\nVANCrrVEn, Oct. 19.\u2014Police he\nli.ve a ^Sam.on'' Is operating locally\naa a burglar. A 1000-pound winch\nrequiring four men to lift has dla-\nupiieafed   from  a  local atore.\nGuilty of Theft and\nMust Report at Holy\nMass Every Morning\nQUEBEC, Oct. 19. \u2014 Two\nyoung men charged with the\ntheft of goods amounting to\n$200, appeared in. police court\nhere today and received an\noriginal sentence at the behest\nof the owner of the loot, a\nmerchant who is of Jewish origin, and now a member of the\nRoman   Catholic   church.\n\"I do not want these boys\nto go to Jail,\" he told the\njudge. \"Simply request thsm to\nattend holy mass every morning for six months and have\nthem to confession once a\nmonth.\"\nThe judge acquiesced to the\nmerchant's demand with the\nunderstanding that the accused\nreport to the cure of their respective   parishes   every   morn-\nPAYS CALL TO\nTMEMEIT\nIs  Formally Greeted  by  Mrs.\nCoolidge. Too; Goes on\nSightseeing Trip\nWASHINGTON, Oot. 19.\u2014The\nQueen of Rumania tonight exchanged\ntho privilege of being the guest of\nthe nation for that of being the personal guest of its chief executive and\nits first lady.\nForty-one hours after her entrance\nthrough New York and 22 hours after\nfcer arrival in the capital, Rumania's\nqueen was formally received by the\npresident  and  Mrs.  Coolidge.\nHer reception at the White House\nat 4 o'clock, in the famous blue room\nthat has witnessed a century of presidential reception; the return call of\nthe president and Mrs. Coolidge at the\nRumanian legation shortly after, and\nthe queen's entertainment at a state\ndinner at the White House, discharged the traditional amenities ot\nnations.\nBrief   snd   Formal\nThe reception ceremony at the\nWhite House was brief and formal,\nand occupied less-than 10 minutes.\nThe queen, Princess Ileanc, Prince\nNicholas and other members of the\nroyal party left the legation this\nmorning   for  a   sightseeing   trip.\nThe queen wore a full-length moleskin coat with a huge punch of parma\nviolets pinned to the shawl collar.\nUnder her coat she wore a mouse-\ncolored wool crepe dress of straight,\nsimple lines, and a toque of crushed\nvelvet to match- The inevitable three\nropes of pearls, pearl ear-rings, beige\nstockings and kid slippers completed\nher costume.\nThe princess Ileane was smartly\nclad in a mahogany velour ensemble,\ncolored in black skunk worn with a\nmatching .plush hat on vagabond lines'.\nAIMEE WE\nShows   Same   Handwriting  \u00bbs\nThat of Evangelist's\nSermon Notes\nSTATE RESTS CASE\nAFTER THREE WEEKS\nDefence Witness Says Possible\nAimee to Walk Over\nDesert as Says\nDENOUNCE POLICY\nWill  Fight  Ferguson's  Liquor\nStand,   Says   Sinclair.\nLeader of Libs\nTORONTO, Oct. \u00bb.\u2014\"I find in It\nneither evidence of good government\nln the past nor assurance for the future,\" stated W. E. N. Sinclair, Liberal leader in Ontario, (n a statement issued today giving his views\nof the statement of policy issued last\nnight by Hon. G. Howard Ferguson,\npremier of Ontario. \"I am confident,\" Mr. Sinclair says, \"that even\nnow Liberals all over the province\nare arming themselves to oppose the\nFerguson policy with might and\nmain.\"\nThe statement continues:\n\"The liquor policy of Mr. Fergu-\nBon is diametrically opposed to the\npolicy of the Liberal party as decided time and time again and aa\nannounced by myself at the last\nsession of the legislature.\n'Liberals must battle to support\nthe will of the people. That expression of the people's will as shown\nby the Ontario Temperance act must\nbe  supported.\n\"Mr. Ferguson's policy of today is\nnot even In accord with his own\nstatement of policy announced not\nso long ago and Is in fact Its very\nantithesis. The change is attitude\nIs so violent that the premier may\nbe well suspected of having tried\nto divert the pdblic mind by desperate measures from a long series\nof acts and mismanagement committed against the province in regard\nto its natural resources and other\nwise.\"\nEARTH   SHOCK\nOSLO, Oct. 19.\u2014A comparatively\nstrong earth tremor was felt at 6:10\no'clock this evening along the coast\nfrom Lindesna to Arendal. It is believed that the tremor had its origin\nunder   the   sea.\nLOS ANGiBLEB, Oct. 19.\u2014After\nmore than three weeks devoted to\nefforts to tear down Mrs. Aimee Sem-\nple McPherson's kidnaping stojy and\nto the Introduction of evidence designed to shew that she lived In a\ncottage at Carmel with Kbnneth O,\nOrmiston for 10 days of the time\nshe says she was in the hands of\nabductors, the state rested late today.\nThe defence immediately opened\nIts case, calling W. K. Cross, mining\nman and desert authority ot Arlsona,\nas  its  first  witness.\nThe evangelist, suffering from an\nabscessed knee, smiled as she listened\nto the testimony against her. She\nwas carried Into court in a chair this\nafternoon, her attorney explaining\nthat the abscess had been lanced during the noon recess and prevented\nher from walking. Beside her sat her\nmother. No smile parted the lips of\nthe elder woman, whom a witness intimated yesterday had been \"hoodwinked\" by her daughter with Ihe\nkidnaping story.\nSam*   Handwriting\nCarlson testified tWit (he grocery\nslips found at the back door ot the\nCarmel rottage, following its occupancy hy Ormiston and a woman\nimmediately after Mrs. Mcpherson's\ndisappearance last May, were written\nby the same hand that wrote notes\non a sermon left behind by Mrs. McPherson at the beach when she\ndropped from sight. The handwriting\nexpert gave the same testimony with\nregard to the signatur.? acknowledging\nreceipt of a telegram at the Carmel\ncottage. He also declared that the\nwriting on the original of a telegram\nsent from Oakland to Mrs. Kennedy\nshortly after her daughter's disappearance was done by the same man\nwho had registered a t hotels as\nOeorge Mclntyre.\nGeorge Mclntyre was the name\nused by Ormiston at Carmel and the\nname under which, states witnesses\nhave t?stlfied, he stopped at the Clark\nhotel in Los Angeles.\ntaw   Her   l\u00bb   Ko\u00abpiUl\nCross testified he. saw tbe evangelist in a hospital at Douglas, and he\nsaid she looked like a very tired woman. He said he had walked 15 or 20\nmiles on the desert without water, and\nknew it could be done. Mrs. McPherson    declares    she    walked    about    20\nik'.s over the desert In her flight\nfrom  the  Mexican  shack.\nMrs. Mcpherson's shoes were shown\nCross, and he expressed belief that\nthe evangelist could have walked 26\nmiles in the shoes and they would not\nappear scuffed. The witness said he\nfollowed a woman's track seven miles\nInto the desert searching for the shack\ndescribed by Mrs. McPherson.\n ^\t\nWoman s Poison Club\nIs Unearthed;  Were\nKilling Off Hubbies\nBELGRADE, Oct. 19.\u2014A club of\nwomen poisoners, under the guise\nof a charitable organisation with tha\nsignificant name of \"Lucretla,\" has\nbeen raided by the police.\nPolice asserted that at secret meetings the club members were taught\nthe medieval art of mixing and administering poisons. Six women who\nwere unhappily married were declared\nthus to have found means of ridding\nthemselves of their husbands. The\nlemains ot these were exhumed, and\nin two cases taxicologlsts have determined   the   remains  of  poison.\nFive women of the olub were\nherged with being the ringleaders\nof the organization and arrested.\nThe Weather \/\nMln. Max,\nNELSON       Jl lit\nVictoria     44 58\nVancouver     42 50\nKamloops     34 56\nBarkervllle     II 50\nPrince Rupert    41 60\nEatevan     48 54\nDawROn      14        14\nCalgary     10        64\nWinnipeg      II        >\u00ab\nPortland      41        70\nSan  Francisco     64 71\nSeattle      44        68\nSpokane      II       \u2022!\nPenticton      J4 67\nVernon       14 65\nUrand   Forks     I\nCranbrook      1\nEdmonton   J\nSwitt   Current     I\nPrince   Albert     J\nQu'Appelle      \u00bb\u2022 ~ \"  .\nForecasu-Neison     \u2022\u00bb*     *K\"l,!r-\nPartly cloudy with froat at Blfht.\n__\n n|WWa\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1926\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\nT\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel ol the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nwith Running Witer, Private BtUu ml \u00bb \u00bbult\u00ab.\n\u25a0NdOUrtin  (or   all   travelling  Men,   Mining   Men.   Lumbar   IM\nand TourlaU,\n\u2022PBClaU, SUNDAY DINNER, $1.00. Rotarlan Headqnartera.\n\u2022ha Moat Comfortable Rotunda In tha City.\nHUME \u2014 J. And>d\u00abon KaBlo; S. S.\nAdam. T. 8. Harwnnd H. V. Croft.\nJ. Anderson. T). Wyllle \"W. H. BICKal,\nW. Webster, p. a. Haaley, W. S. Cnw-\n.11 W R Lett F. ('. Potter. N. Mus-\nKiave.   H    Waddlnjftt.n.   W.   A.   McDon-\nA. P. Smith Toronto; J. Craham w.\nL nob.on. cltj\". H. W. Adams, H. M.\nQ'ranahy Spokane; A. L. Sweeney F.\nC Dulse .1. B. Marshall. Calgary; C.\nK. MeWhorter, Chlcaao; VV. J Mltch-\nII     San    Francisco;    Mds.   G.    1'.   Fry,\nall   W.  J.  Chinnlik   Vancouver;  \u00bbi.  E.   Juekson's Point   tint.;  Mrs.  Gray. Mrs\n'-    Grand   Forks;   Mrs.   T.   White.   R.   U.   T.   Gray    Kettle   Valley;   J.\n\"   K.  Chatham.   J.   H.   Bardwall, ' 1'ilon.  Ottawa.\nrnfri!\nNEW SAMPLE  ROOMS.\nALL   DAYLIGHT.\nFREE   BUS   FROM   STATION\nAND BOAT,\nHotel Strathcona\nEUROPEAN PUN\n\"A Borne for Those Away From Home\"\nUNEXCELLED SERVICE\nIII\nMPEfflHL MEET\n(Continued From Pace One.)\njnurreil snnicwhat. For my part,\"\nhe LttM, \"I am certain that those\nconstitutional difficulties will disappear entirely when around this table\nWe come to discuss them.\"\nI\u00bbi inler King Talks\nPreniitr W. I,. Mackenzie King nf\nCana<l;t said th.it iti*- mcure of the\ngathering made one realise how grout\nan rrmr it wmihf ho tn overlook\nthe dtfferenOM in tha .siuintUin and\noutlook of thr> RMtlaM renrenente*.\nThis diversity \u00abras sometimes left\nout of account in the huMt which\nhad befn formel nf speak i.r: d{ -sti\nthe MUlltl .< s Of Lha Kmpire under\nthe \u25a0oUeativa term. 'The dominion*\"\nas if they wane not iiirferem coun-\ntries.\n\"On     the     nther     hnnd,\"     I'rcmler\nKing added,  \"-mi   wry presence here\nIndicates   that   we   share   in   common\nmany   (real    problem*,   many   com-\nmantftng    opportuoltlei    and    many j\nproud   mem or lea. > Ths moving cere- j\nmony     we     witnessed     thte    morning |\ncommeim j-:it< \u2022;  the greatest  nf  those j\neommnn  memories and  nol the least I\n<\u00bbf the  common  standards \"f  public!\nlife nnd  private  conduct.:    In countless way.   trade,  markets and  mtgra- j\ntion. nne  part  needs th1   complements ,\nof   ihp   oeher.\nFlfirffflgl   ol\"   I^.ya'ly\nThrough    this    iiniUf.td'nted    ex- j\nperiiii'in   in World organtafttion v.iiich\nNew Grand Hotel\n\u2022II VERNON  ST.  EAST S.  E.  MILL8,  PROPRIETOR\nHeadquarters   for   Everybody.     Hot  and   Cold   Water\nTelephones in All Rooms.\nFREE BUS FROM STATION AND BOAT\nJiEW GRAND \u2014 J.  Annett   city;\nC, Nichols. Castlegar;   H. J.  Mllson,\nT.   Flelm.   Trail;   E.\npeg; R Grant,  Vane\nO.   Noble.   Wlnni-\nSAVOY\nNELSON'S FINEST HOTEL ABSOLUTELY\nmi Hoot, Hot ind Cojd Running Water in All Rooms\nBLACKHEADS\n^L^M BlucklundM go iule!.!y hy a\nm^ simple tntthed thai Jusi ills-\n[\u2022gives them, Get two uuntw\nof peroxine powder from your tlrug-\ntist, rub this with a hot. wet clott\nbriskly over the blackhea.la\u2014and you\nwill   wonder   where   they  have  trone\nwe call the cotfflnPnwealth or community of Brltlah nations, one-\n{fourth of the world's peoples are\n, linked in friendship and pease. It\nI is Inevitable, simply because this\ngreat txperlment Is without precedent or parallel, that sometimes we\nfind difficulty In making foreign\ncountries understand our position\nor wholly understand it ourselves.\nBut perhaps In the next few week*\nwe may be able to explore method*\nfor n clearer underftandlng of our\npolitical relationship*, including problems nf foreign policy in Us several\naspects, methodi as w< 11 for closer\ncooperation ln economic matters, and\nfurther utilisation of the challenging\nopportunity whiah the commonwealth\npresents to fftdl and all It* members.\"\ni'remier King closed by moving a\nmess.-iRe of loyalty m the King and\nQueen which parsed unanimously,\nall delegates to ihe conference\nstanding.\nPremier Baldwin op) ned with a\nbrief review of the previous conferences ohstrving that in his \"iiinion\n\"our Nfdececsors have been wise to\ncontent themselves with gradual,\nsteady progress, rather than attempt\nto construe! some theoretical written\nconstitution which could no sooner,\nl,e tauped than it would have been\ni u psn isflsri \"\n\u25a0Th- problem before us,\" Premier\nBaldwin continued, \"if how to reo-\noacllfl ihe people of self government in external an well as domestic\naffairs with the necessity for a poli-\nei of (antral Imperial concern which\nj would commend itself to it number of\ndifferent fDwauaents and parliaments.\nIni|H>i1al    Hef<TK\u00bb\n!      He   desired    what   hail    been   done\n! in   the   development   of   communication   and   consultation    with   the   dominions   and   then   tmichett   on   Imperial    defence.       'The   principle   of\n[dominion   navies,\"   Premier   Baldwin\nj Kaid    \"is  established,   it  i\u00ab not mere-\njlj   Lecepted by whole-hearted.!* \u00bbup-\n, | orted   bv   the   admiralty.\"   He   wel-\ncamefl   ths   \u25a0**\u00bb   take   ny   India   in\n(Btabtlshtng a   Royal   Indian  navy and\nIntimated   that   ai   the   end   of   the\nprettnl  vear  the  British  government\nI WCUld    confer    with    representatives\n( the Irish   flt*# States with a view\no the undertaking by the Free State\not*   her  share  of   coastal   defence.\nOur navies,  on  which we depend\nL\n[IT IS\n\\\nJeopardize Railways and Canada Is Hurt, Says Thornton at Board Luncheon\nNelson's Best Cafes\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE\nOnly White Cafe Open Day snd Night.\nElectric    Frigid-Air   Cooling    System.\nSODA FOUNTAIN IN CONNECTION.\nA   trial   will   convince   you.\nOpen   Day   and   Night.\nPHONE    661 BAKER    ST,\nROYAL CAFE\nClastic    Restaurant\nRefinement   and   Delicscv   Prevail.\nOPEN     DAY    AND    NIGHT.\nLuncheon,  11: W  i . 2   36c\nSpTi il  Krmera, B:M t> s 35c\nWo  Bp*?la.*.M  In  Chop  Buey unil\nNVimies.\n\u2014 PHONE  132\u2014\nMany Ro >n s wi\nA. KERR. Prop.\nPrivate Baths or Shower\nSAVOY \u2014 D.   L.  fnnna    G.   flri-gorr\nSandvolnt:    J.    Oraffan,   i'aulsnn;   W.\nSham.  Oonultlam;  W.   J.  Owen,  Trail;\nC.  H,   Fraae'r   Vancouver.\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE CENTEROF CONVENIENCE\nHot and cold water in every room.\nSteam  hented.\nA.   LAPOINTE,   Prop.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nT. MADDEN, Prop.\nSteam-Heated   Rooma  by  tho  Day,\nWeak   or   Month.\nEvery conaideration ehownto guests.\nCor.   Baker  \u00abT:d   Ward   Sts.,   Nclein\nMADDEN\u2014P.\nV.  P.  Onloft.\nFoneroff\nQl'RENS \u2014 L. h. Roblnaon, J. T.\nMannings citv: Torzikuw, Bull Itiver;\nR. M.nkln. Huntinglon, Wash.; C\nMankerl.  Spokane:   A.   Milkmaid. Ymlr.\nSHERBR00KE HOTEL\nNear  C.   P.\nilooms at ftei\nR.   Station,\nsnnyble   Rates,\nH.   DUNK,   Proprietor\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n2>\/2   Block*   East  of   Post  Office\nSteam heated.   Hot and cold water.\nRuuma   by   day   or   week.\nAlso  Furnished   Suitea.\nP.   H.   BUSH.   Prop.\nlitii\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA.   C.  TOWNER,   Proprietor\nThe   home   of   plenty.\nFifty   rooma   of   wolid   comfort\nWe  serve   the   best  meals   ln   Nelson.\nIt's   the   rook.\nTrail Hotels\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nftnest -Bqurppt I H staui inl I i ths\nCity. OPI-.N DAY AM) NI3HT.\nSPECIAL\u2014 \\rr Cream, Soda Water\niun; Hot Drinks, M'e. clean, luf-\nMshed ronma4!  h<    ..nd cold wsw>.\nWc   Cater   t)   Priva't   Pa tici.\nSTANDARD CAFE\n320   Baker  Street,   Nelson.  B.  C.\nOPEN    DAY   AND   NIGHT.\n11:30 to llWl   Special   Lur :h      35c\n5:30  to   8:C0   p.m.,   Supper    35c\nPHONE 154\nKEEP LIVER AND\nBOWELS REGULAR\nWITH \"CASCARHS\"\nNo more Headache, Bad Golds.\nsour stomach and\nconstipation\nSAINT JOHN Oct. 19.\u2014Sir Henry\nThornton, president' of the Canadian\nNational railway, declared, here to-\nnljrht at the Canadian board of\ntrade dinner, that Canada now stands\non the threshold of the greatest opportunity that has ever faced any\ncountry. The dinner was a \"New\nHrunswick production\" one and was\nliven by the Saint John board of\ntrade to the visiting delegates to\nthe first annual convention of the\nCanadian   board   of   trade.\n' UY've got to have prosperity,\"\nhe said, \"whether  we like lt or not.\"\nSir Henry aleo came out strong\nln favor of the nationalization of\nthe port of Seint John, under the\nadministration of a harbor commission\nadding that the port belonged not\nto Saint John nor the maritimes,\nbut to the whole of Canada. He\nnisi touch* d on the matter of rates\nby d>H'];iring that a happy medium\nwhich would allow the railway sys\nterns of Canadi. to remain solvent\nand at the sima time promote the\ngrowth of every aoction of the Do\nminion,   was   possible.\nDevelop Nationally\n' Speaking of tho development of\n<-;in;id, as a nation, Sir Henry said\nlhat If there was one thing that was\nneeded more tlnn anything else, it\nwas the dsvelopment of the national\nviewpoint    instead    of   tho   provincial.\nTransportation, continued the speaker, was not merely the moving of\nproducts, and the matter of freight\nrates; It should permit every part\nof the country to market its products\nin other markets with freedom.\nTransportation did not !nte-*?re with\nthe development of trade but promoted   It.\nMust   Reap   Moving\nThe     Canadian     National     railway\nMOTHERS I\nAND THEIR  CHILDREN\nUNIQUE   INVITATIONS\nOne Mother Says:\nSmall kodak pictures of Helen,\nmade unique invitations for her\nfifth birthday party and they were\nhighly prized by recipients. We\npasted the small photographs on\nheavy cards. Underneath was written, \"Please come to my party,\" and\nthe   date   followed   with   the   hours.\n(let  a  10-ceni  box now.\nHo odds how bid your liver, stom-\nh li of luv. !m; how much your head\naches, how mlseraMe and uncomfort-\nu'>le you are from constipation, indices ion. biliousness aad sluggish\nbowels\u2014you always get the desired\nresults   with   Caacargta.\nDon't ht youp Btuinaeh, liver and\nbow i Is make you miserable. Take\nCascar-Tts H.niRht. put an .id to ths\nheidivhe,  bili )unness,  doziness, (MTV*\nousneas. sb-k. bVOuTi CM*? stjaajioh,\nbiwkorhe aad all nViei- distress;\ndjsnns i your toa'ide organs of all the\nIM    and    eonstipatod    matter\nrfctcti   1\u00bb   pio.urir.g   ;he  misery,\nA (O-'Tiit box nuans h.'allh, happl-\n 1 | clear head for months.    No\nmore  days of gloom  and distress  if\nvon will ta l-;e a Casenret now nnd\nthen. All druggists sell Casrarets.\nDan't forget th;> children\u2014the'.r little\nInsldM   B\u00ab\u00abd   :i   fftHtl.i   chansing,   too.\nfor our corporate eKlstence,\" Premier Baldwin continued, \"remain and\nwill, 1 + venture to say, continue to\nremain one of the strongest possible\nbonds   that  unite  us.\"\nIm).\u25a0(\u25a0im-iii \u25a0nt.'-' Nccticii\nTurning again to foreign affairs,\nMr. Baldwin observed that the most\nimportant question was the admitted\nnecessity for improvement In the\npresent system of communication\nand consultation between the British government and the Dominion\ngovernments.\nPremier Baldwin concluded by\nurging cooperation in the development of Empire trade and the economic resources of the Empire to the\nbenefit   of  all.\nPremier Monro? of Newfoundland\nsaid his message was that Newfoundland was entirely satisfied with\nthe f.ag. \"We arc perfectly satisfied that the ministers' in charge of\nBritain's affairs tatl.iy are fully cap-\naide of dealing with them without\nany assistance. If their deliberations\nshould ever bring' an Empire war,\nwe are perfectly satisfied to come in,\nfeeling satislfied that we are fighting   for   a   Just   ca use.\"\nPremier J. G. Coates spoke for\nNew Zealand, the Maharajah of\nBurciwan for India, and Premier W.\nT. Cosgrave for the Irish Free\nState.\nThe  Old   Reliable\nCROWN POINT HOTEL\nA.   DERMOTT,   Prep.\nEvery Courtesy Extended to Tourists\nand- Others   Visiting   Trail.\nSteam  Heated\nThroughout\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\nE. L. AND A. GROUTAGE, Prop*\n\u25a0ox 606 Phone 263 Tmil, B.C.\nA WANT AD IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT\nchief took up the matter of freight\nrates, declaring that as he did so he\nprobably \"took his life In his hands\",\nThere were two greater systems at\npresent in Canada, the Canadian\nPacififc railway, privately owned,\nand the Canadian National, state\nowned. Anything that would tend\nto jeopardize the credit of either of\nthese systems would Injure Canada\nherself. Speaking for the Canadian\nNational, he would eay. that tha\nsooner the system was able to finance itself and stand on its own\nfeet, the better off would Canada be.\nHe would say to Canada that It\ncould reduce, rates and pay deficits\nor reasonable rates could he put In\nforce and the railways given fair\nchance. But the people could not do\nboth. He believed a sane and reaaonable acale could be put ln force\nwhich would not only allow the system to maintain solvency, but at\nthe same time permit it to help in\nthe  development  of  the  country.\nSETll!\nHON. DR. IE\nEl\nEast   Kootenay   Conservative]\nToo Interested in Provincial Convention\nCRANBROOK. Oct. J9. \u2014 Hon.\nKing left Monday in hla private\nfor Fernie, and after spending a da\nor so there will return to thia ell\nand Kimberley. He plans to visit tl\nWindermere aad the northern part\nhia riding before going on to tl\ncoast. It la a foregone conclualo\nthat he will not be opposed in tin\nforthcoming byelection here. Coi\nsarvatlves are more Interested In tl\nquestion of representation at the pn\nvtnclal convention now announced, an\nwhich will no doubt be attended by\nstrong   East   Kootenay   contingent. ,\nTry the New\nCutieura\nShavlnd Stick\nFndy Uthwinf\nPresident   and   Vice-President\nPick Sides for a\nSeries\nTo net handicaps for the season's\nbowling tournament, the Nelson bowling association wili iiolil a president\nversus vice-president competition during the next week. Two sides were\nselected at a meeting ol the executive in the store of the president,\n,1. I'.. Oray, last night, consisting of\nabout 20 men to a aide, and the\ncompetition will be run off in a\nseries of five-men-on-a-slde matches.\nThe first of theso is set for tonight\nat   8  o'clock,  and  the teams will   be:\nPresident\u2014J. B. Gray, Nick Cassios,\nJimmie Allen, H. H. Hinitt, <J. W.\nDill.\nVice-president\u2014.T, B. Conway. Jack\nBell, E. L. Buchanan, E. C. Hunt,\nand C. W.  Tyler.\nTo Ladies\nTake Oar Xet*al Bsntadiaa\nBook on Skin Diseases, 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 mall; 30\nyears' experience. Without criU-\nclzfng or disparaging your local\ndoctors, write us before losing\nhope. Treatment hy mail our\nspecialty.\nENGLISH   KXXBAL   DWPEW-\n\u00abABY  \u00a3TD.\n1359 Davie,  Vanoouver,   B.C.\nThe Oldest Herbal Institution\nWHEN YOU CATCH COLD\nRUB ON MUSTEROLE\nMusterole Is easy to apply ai\nworks right away. It may prever\na cold from turning ipto \"flu\"\npneumonia. It does all the good wor\nof   grandmother's   mustard   plaster.\nMusterole Is a clean, white oint\nment, made of oil of mu.stard an\nother hom.'s simples. It is recom\nmended by many doctors and nurse\nTry Musterole for sore throat, col\non the chest, rheumatism, lumbago\npleurisy, stiff neck, bronphitl\nasthma, neuralgia, congestion, pain\nand achaa of the back and joint,\nsprains, soro muscles, bruise, chil\nMains, frosted feet\u2014colds of all sorb\nThe Muitero.e Co. of Canada, Ltd\nMontreal\nHot and Cold\nWster\nFERNIE FLASHES\nFERNIE OeL 19.\u2014Fire Chief A.\nGoodmund returned Monday after\nspending two weeks' vacation in Calgary and other Alberta points. During his stay in Calgary he looked Into\nthe operation and management of the\nCalgary fire department, and was given a cordial reception by the chief of\nthat organiaatlon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nD. Q White of Vancouver chartered\naccountant, has spent several days in\nthe city on the periodical audit of the\naffairs of the city. Following his departure from here Mr. White will go\nto Kimberley for quarterly Inspection\nof the books and accounts of the Consolidated  Mining  &  Smelting  company.\nDr. D. Corsan left Tuesday morning\nfor Kelowna, where he will attend a\nmeeting of the British Columbia executive committee of the Anglican\nsynod.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nA delightful afternoon tea and sale\nof homemade candirs was given by1\nthe members of Robert J. Black chapter, I.O.D.E., Saturday afternoon. Mrs.\n8. Herchmer regent of Mount Fernie\nchapter presided over the tea table,\nwhile the candy stalls very tastefully\ndecorated, were ln charge of Miss D.\nKelman assisted by other members of\nthe Junior chapter, Musical numbers\nwere played during the afternoon.\nMr. and Mrs. Paul Whlttock, now\nresidents of Vulcan Alta. accompanied\nby A. Muts. all former residents of\nthis city, are spending a couple of\ndays here. Mr. and Mrs. Whlttock are\nreturning from an extensive motor\ntour.\nBetter than a mustard plantar\n\u2014\nINDIGESTION, GAS,\nUPSET STOMACHI\nInstantly! \"Pape'sDiapepsin\" j\nCorrects Stomach so\nMeals Digest\nThe moment you eat a tablet\n\"Pape's Diapepsin'' your indigestion\ngone. No more distress from a sou\nacid, upset stomach. No flatuleno\nheartburn, palpitation, or miser j\nmaking gases. Correct your digestlfl\nfor a few cents. Each package guaj\nanteed by druggist to overcome ston\nach trouble.\nCHICAGO, Oct. 1\u00bb.\u2014Investigation\nof the political situation in Indiana,\nwas decided upon today by the senate campaign committee. Subpoenaed\nwere issued for Clyde Walb, chairman of the Republican state convention and for a number of former\nofficers of the Indiana Ku Klux Klan,\nI whose  names  were  withheld.\nTHE  GUMPS \u2014WHEN  THE  ROBINS  NEST  AGAIN\n\u00abjy\\CJr\\ES   V>r\\RM>.Sfc\nWE   W>\u00bb   KTTO   VOOK.\nOUT  FCK. \"vV\\fc  CARS-\nRUSK \"W.t ValOWti-\n\\ TOU> \"\u00bb>V6   SW\u00a3tT\n\\ *.M*T0O NCTWaJ\n\\Va.T* HM>\\->M,*r\\-\/\nTHE CNR UME\nOOdHT \"\u00bb VrVCKEKSt\nTAfc YMAJE OF\npwspwr.\n\u25a0\\MCRENSfc TWt MfvUlV TWKT CfaRUHe tt> ivjVT  DW>P?\\N&\ntv. COW) VUN\u00a3   \u00bb\u00bb   rAX FROH\"* \"<\u00bb0 - \\F \"W\u00ab \\*j\u00a9  fcOUO\nCOUO OR TRUCVt-S \"TyVWWOV ftRMK^C  NVSTN \\  COUVD\nM=H>V.fc TO VM f Cr?. -Wtl* OOT OF W< 0\\NV\u00bb VOCVST MAO\nKn *MW\u00bb> VtfT OH WMA STREET HEW *P*X<\u00abM\u00ab- \"WW\n^I^r^^T <^\u00a3Fot \u00a3 \u00abK?*\n*5SS ^&TOT\u00bb2^OUG*v\"S (MM M-V. TWE WSW*\n7MUWW  TO  CX*6   FO* N  FV^TJ-M^rAT-    -\nci*'\nrrl\"\nTHE .&NI UNC <NVVA. \u00abfc TVMEWE\nV\u00bbE*T   WWU<^   BUT   V* >NC\u00bbJ!T *EE\n\u00ab-    V&'U,   ^E %v.TTAV*t* \\H \\r\\\\^\ntaVWET>   (X.\\X 'BRW.G.VHtr   W0\u00bbN\nW^ UEVN  VaVlMtMT-AKCXtT\nW.VS  SVKVT  N C\\T<\na\\iT  OF   OCrWER\"WCTVO\u00bbA\n\u25bamu wev-v. ^oou\n\\\n4\nII,,.\nu 1 rat OM:\nettUCUssm\nw\nstrains\nsprains\nstop the pain -keep \/\naffected part limber\nAbsorbinej'i\nj     r HI   \/.NTtStPriC    UNlMtNI\nAt all Druggists^ 1.^\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1926\nPage Three\nI SOCIAL BRIEFS FROM\nTRAIL AND TADANAC\nThis column Is conducted br Mrs.\nThomas Weston of Trail. Phone\nher of all social eventa ln Trall-\nKoasland  territory.\nTRAIL. 0\u00abt. II. \u2014 Mr. and Mra. C.\naillette of Fernie are visiting Mr. and\nwe. H. Hope of Bay avenue for a\nlew days.\n.   .    .\n_ Mr\u00ab- *. C.  Major and aon. Colin, ot\niTocter.  who  drove   over  on  Saturday\nto vlalt Mr. And Mrs. N. Major of Spo-\nKane etreet, returned yesterday.\n...\nMrs.   A.   G.   Lang   of   Milligan   kill,\nentertained   with   an   Informal   bridge\nparty at her home this afternoon\n...\nMr. and Mrs. D. Porteath of River-\naide avenue celebrated their ninth\nwedding anniversary with a delightful\ndinner party at their heme. Covers\nwere laid  for  eight.\n.  CoghNn of Ce\nentertained    P.    Morrison\nDr.  and Mrs.\ndar   avenue    e.\nand O. B. 1*. N. WIHrie Dominion \"land\n\u2022urveyore, and Mrs. Wllkie of Victoria. Saturday as they passed through\nthe city en route for their home.\nMra. T. H. Ollls of Riverside avenue entertained a few friends at the\ntea hou\u00bb yesterday ,,\nPOLICE TO STOP\nT\nTrail Council Starts War Upon\nOffenders; .Has Been\nProblem\nTRAIL Oct. II.\u2014An epidemic of\nbroken street light globes and consequent protests again nt Ill-lighted\nstreets has get members of the council\nto thinking of the days when shooting\nwith catapults and practicing stone\nthrowing wen alluring, but forbidden,\nlines of sport.\nLast night when R. W. Savage reported the street light on Birch avenue was not functioning, and various\naldermen recalled other unaccountable\nlight omissions, the council desided\nthe youthful sports must b.. directed\nto less expensive targets and directed\nB. Downes, chief of police, to arrest\nend prosecute anyone breaking street\nlights. It was farther ordered that a\nreward should be offered for information leading to the arrest and convlc\ntion  of   tbe  offenders.\n'GRAY TERROR'\nThe Astonishing Adventures ot the Gray Phantom\nBy HERMAN LANDON\n(Copyright by Street A Smith Corp. Serialised by Ledger Syndicate.)\nthe   DvkB\nFor a while, remaining before the\nmlfror, the Gray Phantom practiced\n! the ficlal expressions, the voice, and\n> the mannerisms of his enemy. Then\nI *e stepped out ln the bedroom.\n*2**lto, Swell,\" he said, bending\n\u25a0Ifntly over the man lying on the\nbed and striking an attitude characteristic of the Duke.\nSwell fixed him with a long, incredulous stare, and then hie lips\nbegan to twitch, and in his excitement he strained violently at the\nbounds  around  his  hands and  feet.\n'The\u2014the Duke!\" he stammered\nin awed tones, and then a grin of Immense relief broke out on his face.\nthe Phantom chuckled. Swell's expression waa an eloquent tribute to\nWa talent for dissimulation.\n\"Starry to disillusion you, Sam,\" he\npaid In his natural tone, \"but you\n\u00bbre making a mistake. The Duke is\n\u2022till In prison, and there I trust he\nWill remain.\"\nThe relieved look died out of\nSwell's face, followed by a blank expression of bewilderment, and then\none of dazed \\ comprehension. \"The\nPhantom!\"   he   groaned.\n\"Right that time, Swell.\" The\nPhantom scowled. \"You're a nuisance, Swell. WiBh I had obeyed my\nfirst impulse and put you out of the\nway, It would have served you\nright after what you did to me.\"\nSammie \u25a0whimpered, Land the\nPhantom ran hla hand along the\n\u2022cratch Inflicted by the knife. A\n\u25a0typtlc pencil which he had found\non a shelf in the bathroom had\nitopped the trickle\" of crimson, but\nthe  gash   was  still   noticeable.\n\"I'll decide about you later,\" he\nSeclared, turning away. He paused\n,fter a few steps, as If something\nhad suddenly occurred to him. \"You\nSid a rather good job putting the\n[gloo ln order,\" he told the man\nto the bed. \"Did you carry out\nMies Winton's other Instructions,\niso?\"\n\"You mean about watching the\nlug up the river ? I attended to\nhat. 'Big Bill' Yost dropped in on\nme  at the  hotel  thia morning, and\ntold   him   to   talce   the  Job.\"\n\"You ' consider him a capable\nman ?\"\n'One of the  best   ln our crowd.\"\nH*m! Big Bin Yost, whoever he Is,\nWill have ample time to admire the\nscenery up that way. I suppose he\nwill take a select company of nature lovers wlh him. By the way.\nMiss Winton is probably wonderlnjg\nflrhy she hasn't heard from you. She\nwould doubtless like to know that\nyou have carried out her instructions.\"\nHe hesitated, then took Sammie in\nhis arms, being careful not to disarrange hla own clothing, and carried\nWm Into the other room. He had\nalready seen a telephone on a stand\nIn a corner beside the desk- Now he\ndropped Swell into the chair and\nplaced  the  instrument  before  him.\"\n'Just a test,\" he explained. \"I\nWant to see If you can make yourself\nsufficiently useful to warrant me in\n(paring your life. I want you to call\njp Miss Winton, tell her how you\nlave carried out her orders, and ask\nler If she hae any further faistruc-\n:lons. Not an unnecessary word.\nJnderstand.\"\nBy way of emphasis the Phantom\n.ook the knife from the desk drawer\nind held it in close proximity to\nJwell's jugular vein.\nI\u2014I get you!\" gulped Swell.\nThat won't do! You must get a\ntrip on yourself and apeak naturally, not as If you are having a tooth\nBXtracted. Remember that nothing\nis going to happen to you. for the\npresent at least, If you do as I say.\nIt you are tempted to try any tricks,\nIttat bear In mind that I am standing behind you with the knife.\nReady?\"\nSwell, knowing ht- was m no im-\nnedlate danger, calmed down a little.\nSince Swell's hands were incapaci-\n:tted, the Phantom held the receiver to his ear, meanwhile taking\nialns to Impress upon him that the\npoint of the knife was not far away.\n[Jetting his connection after a brief\niralt, Swell managed to speak In a\nFairly steady voice, and he was careful not to overstep the boundaries\nlaid  down  by the  Phantom.\n\"What did Miss Winton say?\" M-\nBUired the Phantom when the conversation was finished.\nSwell drew a long breath. Beads of\nmoisture stood out on his forehedd.\n\"She says I'm to stay here till further orders, She expects\"\u2014Swell gave\ni short hoarse laugh\u2014\"that the\nDuke's going to get out of stir some\nime before morning.\nThe Phantom considered for a moment.    \"Thai makes It all the bet-\n\" he murmured.\nI think she told you last night,\nSwell, that she has unbounded faith\nn the Gray Phantom's ability to per-\norm difficult tasks. Unless I am\nnlstaken she ventured the opinion\nhat the prison officials would not\nllscover the (Duke's absence until\n\u2022 had been gone several hours.\"\nSWell, turning in the chair, gave\nllm a dased, uncomprehending look.\n\"That would be my definition of a\n(lean   getaway,\"   the   Phantom   de\nclared, and then he carried his prisoner   back   to   the   bathroom.\n\"You acquitted yourself Creditably\nthis time.\" he said approvingly,\nglancing at his watch, \"There will be\nanother and harder test later\nAfter that we shall see. It Is nearly\n7 o'clock. Any food on the premises?\"\nSwell nudged his elbow In the direction of the olOset door. Inside\nthe Phantom found a choice and\nabundant supply of cold meats and\nrelishes. He filled two plates and\nentered the den where Culllgore,\nhaving long since recovered from the\neffects of the blow, was engaged in\nfruitless efforts to release his hands\nand feet. He desisted suddenly and\nstared  at  the  figure  who  entered.\n\"Holy blueflshr\" he exclaimed\nthickly. \"The Duke!\"\n\"Wrong, Culllgore,\" said the Phantom In his natural voice. \"I must\napologize for the smash I gave you\non the Jaw. Really, though, It was\nyour own fault. I gave you fair\nWarning.\"\nHe set the plates down on the\nsmnll table. Culllgore's stupefaction\nPleased him; It was added proof that\nhe was currying hs assumed role\n.successfully.\n\"What\u2014what's the Idea?\" asked\nthe lieutenant shakily. \"Going to a\nmasquerade?\"\n\"You can call  It that.     Hungry?\"\nCulllgore growled beneath his\nbreath.\n\"What a bear you are, Culllgore!\nYou will feel better after a bite. Tell\nyou what I'll do. Give me your word\nthat you won't take advantage of\nyour temporary freedom, and I'll release your hands while you partake\nof a little sustenance.\"\nThe lieutenant glanced desirlngly at\nthe food. \"I'm starved,\" he muttered plaintively. \"You haves my\nword.\"\n\"And I know It's as good as my\nown,\" said the Phantom, releasing\nthe lieutenant's hands. Then he filled\ntwo glasses from the decanter on the .\ntable. \"Let's begin by drinking the\nDuke's health  in  his  own  liquor.\"\nCulligore drank and smacked his\nlips, then attacked the food with\navidity. The Phantom followed his\nexample.\n\"You don't accept my proposition,\"\nhe said genially, \"but it stands Just\nthe same. Before the night is over I\nshall make you a present of the\nringleaders of the Duke's organization. The entire credit for the\nachievement will go to you. As you\nknow, I don't care for that sort of\nthing. I trust tomorrow afternoon's\npapers will carry a full and florid\ndescription of how a certain hardworking lieutenant broke up the\nDuke's gang and captured the murderer of Ward and Mrs. Slade.\"\nCulligore looked as though he felt\nacutely embarrassed, but he tried to\nmask his confusion with, a feeble\nshow of bluster.\n\"I've got a hunch,\" he muttered,\n\"that If I hadn't given my word to\nkeep still, I could reach out my\nhand right this moment and nab\nthe murderer.\"\n\"Your hunches die hard,\" suid the\nPhantom with a laugh. \"You will see\nthe error of your ways before morning.    Pipe  or  cigarette?\"\nThe lieutenant expressed an Inclination in favor of one of the\nDuke's handsome briars.\n\"Take your time,\" said the Phantom affably. \"I can't go ahead with\nthe rest of my plan for a while yet,\nao we might just as well have a\nfriendly chat before I put the cords\nback on your wrhd-s. By the way, I\nwonder if you will give me one more\npromise? It would spare me the\nnecessity of gagging you.\"\n\"Shoot.\"\n\"I should like to leave the door\nopen a crack so that you can hear\nthe  murderer's confession.\"\n\"The   what?\"\n\"I expect the murderer to talk\nquite frankly about his crimes. You\nmay be interested in hearing what he\nhas to say. You must give me your\npromise, however, that you will keep\nyour mouth closed, no matter what\nyou hear.\"\nCulligore considered while he\nsucked hard on his pipe. \"I see,\" he\nmuttered complainlngly. 'You aren t\nsatisfied with tying my hands and\nfeet You want to tie my tongue,\ntoo But all right\u2014go ahead and\nmake a thorough Job of it. I. won't\nmake a sound.\"        '\nThey chatted a while longer, and\nthen the Phantom tied the lieutenant's hands again and, after extinguishing the light, went out in the\nother room, leaving the door open\na fraction of an inch.\nHe sat down at the deBk and began rumaging at the drawers, glancing at old letters and memoranda,\ngarnering struy odds and ends\nof Information that would enable\nhim to play his role to better advantage. From time to time he\nglanced at his watch\u2014or, rather, the\nDuke's, for he had found It among\nthe other articles of Jewelry in the\nwall safe. It was a superb example\nof the watchmaker's art, and the\nmassive geld chain, with a diamond-\nstudded charm, wae scarcely less\ndistinctive.\n(To  Be Continued.J\nTil\nTl PHI ill\nThirty Washington Dignitaries\nTour Snielter During\nDay at Trail\nMilligan's and\nHdlett's Bowlers\nWin Trail Games\nAMERICAN CAPITAL\nWILL COME TO SOUTH\nWashington Industries at Zenith, State Speakers\nat Banquet\nTRAIL, Oct. 1\u00bb.\u2014Memorial hall\nbowlers are getting into form. Ijuit\nnight teams skipped by Hallett and\nMilligan had aggregates of 2078 and\n2004. respectively. Mllllgan's man\ntook two out of tho thre\u00ab games\nand rolled the iiigheat game score\nat    787.\nIn the second match Freeman's\nteam took two games out of three\nfrom Barnaul's team with an aggregate score of only 1828, as against\nBarnava's U48. Freeman rolled the\nhigh Individual aggregate at 528 and\nthe high individual game at 196.\nIn tonight's game Vanatter defeated Woolf, taking two of the three\ngames.\nVanatter'a   team\u2014\n1st.    2nd.    3rd.   Ttl\nM.  J.  Thomson   189    128     166  423\nI'.   Morrlsh    116    137    103\u2014 35\u00ab\nA. Kellernian   ..163    127    166\u2014 447\nVannrtter   ,:...16S    192    174\u2014 635\nTotal     577\nWoolf's team\u2014\nlat.\nP. n. McDonald 117\nA. Kelao    lit\nJ.   Nappler    128\nA. Woolf    179\n684    598\u20141759\nTRAIL, Oct. 19.\u2014About 30 members\nof the visiting party of Washington\nlegislators and prominent business men\nwere  today  banqueted  by  Trail  board! Total   538\nof  trade  in  honor of their  visit and       Barnava's team\u2014\nthe  success attending yesterday's con- ' 1st.\nclave  regarding  a  provincial  and state j Letsle         9M\nhighway   to   connect   Trail   with   Spo-1 Rutledge    113\nkane    via    Rossland     Patterson    and iMartlnelll     139\nNorthport.    D.  McDonald,  president  of   Pasquale     146\nthe    Trail   board   of   trade,    presided.   Barnava      134\nSmelter officials and prominent busi:\nness men numbering about 40, at-\ntended.\nSenator O, W. Hall of Colfai, ln a\nfraternal speech, briefly recounted the\nhistory of his' successive visits to\nBritish Columbia In the last 50 years.\nSenator Dan Morgan of Spokane\nagain enthused on the Washington desire for a good state highway from\nSpokane to Northport. As representing\nthe Spokane chamber of commerce\nand its 800 members, he Invited the\nTrail board to make a fraternal visit\nto Spokane, to become the guests of\nchamber.\nlaaok to British Columbia Industry\nCol. T, Aston, S.O., assured the Trail\nboard that Washington had developed\nall the wheat lands It could. Its famous Coeur d'Alene mining area was\nat the xenlth of its pronperlty and\nprobable expansion. Washington business men looked to southern British\nColumbia as the field in which to\nexpand further by developing mines,\ntimber and other natural resources\nwith American capital,\nD. McDonald, for the Trail board of\ntrade, officially accepted the invitation to visit Spokane and become the\nguest of the chamber of commerce al\nseme date In the near future.\nThe distinguished Washington party\nleft for that state this afternoon, confident that Its mission had been satisfactorily  accomplished. '\n2nd.\n109\n174\n149\n169\n3rd.    Ttl.\n\u00bb\u00ab\u2014 822\n146\u2014 434\n158\u2014 485\n151\u2014 4(9\n601     651\u20141690\nStore   Stock   Suffered   From\nRain Floods; Man Ordered\nMove House\nTRAIL, Oct. 19. \u2014 The request of\nC. Laurlente for damages amounting\nto 351 for alleged damage to his store\nstock by recent rain floods submitted\nby his solicitor to the council has\nbeen  referred  to  the  city  solicitor.\nA petition of about 30 residents of\nDaniel and Topping streets fur a night\nof steps to connect the two through\nlot 1, block 40, was held over by council   for   further  consideration.\nSpokane Btreet. between Green and\nTamarac avenues Is to be closed temporarily While gradlnc and refilling\nnecessitated by recent rains is dune\nby the engineer'^ department'.\nMust Move House\nGeorge W. Webster, owner of a\nhouse on P.obertson sifiet blast Trail\nwas last night jrdtred by council lo\nre.r.ove   the   l.ousc   wlthlr.   90   d:iys.\nMr. Webster squatted on the site\nbefore tnat section came within the\ncorporation limited of the city.\nThe house is now on city properly\na^trect, the city cannot grant water\nnor sewer services nor collect taxes\nwithout thereby tacitly assenting to\nhis  legal ownership of the  property.\nO. E, Carlson, contractor, who has\nneglected to removes the dirt excavated\nfor the basement of the Anglican\nchurch on the corner of Eldorado\nstreet, through advised to do so will\nbe billed with the cost of the'work\nwhich Is now undertakes by the olty\nThe council last night ordered that he\nbe prosecuted If payment\nforthcoming.\nnot\nTrail's City Hall\nIs Condemned by\nFire Authorities\nTRAIL, Oct. 19.\u2014Trail's city hall\nIs under thu indictment of officials\nof the provincial fire marshal's office as unsafe, and a fjru hazard\nthut should not be longer tolerated.\nInspector Oswald of the Vancouver\noffice, together with Chief A. Turner\nof Tra.ll, acting fire marshal, yesterday prepared a report condemning\nthe building. It will be ijresentod to\nthe provincial marshal along with\nreports on other buildings similarly\nsurveyed ln the last few days, on\nInspector Oswald's return to Vancouver   today.\nCondemnation of the city hall has\nbeen under consideration by Cht;>f\nA. Turner for some time. It Is of\nframe construction and old. Besides\nthe city clerk's department and the\nengineer's office, It contains the police\noffice,  courtrooms and  the  city Jail.\n2nd.\n126\n99\n146\n116\n122\n3rd. Ttl.\n124\u2014 848\n117\u2014 829\n152\u2014 437\n146.\u2014 408\n170\u2014 426\nTotal     630\nFreeman's team\u2014\n1st.\n\u2022Auffy    .120\nHudolkln   .. 116\nC. Laurlent  113\nProvot     140\nFreeman     .168\nTotal   652\nHallett's team\u2014\n1st.\nKelderman   .... 126\nLang     109\nBradbury    118\nMurdock     140\nHallett      165\nTotal     \u00ab\u00bb2\nMllllgan's team\u2014\n1st.\nDodimead        86\nRoss    177\nYoung     132\nCrawley    1*9\nMilligan    182\n609    709\u2014191\n2nd.\n199\n142\n129\n150\n170\n3rd. Ttl.\n117\u2014 326\n126\u2014 384\n110\u2014 361\n128\u2014 418\n196\u2014 529\n690    686\u2014182s\nL'liil.\nit; (i\n128\n142\nlis\ntil\n3rd'. Ttl.\n134\u2014 421\n162\u2014 39U\n136\u2014 391\n139\u2014 406\n160\u2014  '61\n684    733\u20142078\n2nd.\n\u00bb7\n144\n114\n118\n128\n3rd. Ttl.\n144\u2014 327\n185\u2014 498\n137\u2014 383\n135\u2014 362\n136\u2014 426\nTotal     666    601     787    2004\nThe tournament standing of the\nteams at the opening of the third\nround was, on points:\nBarnava, 4; Hallett, 3; Woolf, 1;\nFreeman, 4; Postlll, 3: Vanatter, 3;\nHanson, 4; Forrest, 3; Weir, 2; Milligan, I.\nChurchmen's Club,\nTrail, Entertains\nWith Whist Social\nTRAIL, Oct. 18.\u2014St. Andrew'*\nChurchmen's club tonight entertained\nabout 80 guests at a. pleasant whist\nsocial in the parish hall, their first\nsocial event of the season. Nineteen\ntables were In play, and the prize\nwinners wete: Mrs. j. Melvln, ladles'\nfirst; Mrs. I. G. Johnson, ladies' second: J. Poole, men's first; J, ' C.\nVipond, consolation. Refreshments\nwere served by the committee in\ncharge, who wltc: H. Hope, president; J. C. West, T. B. Spencer and\ni\u00bb. Maconachle. Dancing followed,\nwith L. Shuttleworth volunteering at\nthe piano.\nBapt'st Young People\nat TraiPHave Good\nLiterary Meeting\nTKAJU Oct. 19.\u2014Trail Baptist\nyoung people's society held a special\nliterary session last night at the\nchurch, when A. B. S. Stanley gave\na brief outMne of Shakespeare^ history, with particular reference to the\nexpansion of hi*, genius as exhibited\nIn the chronological ordec ol hln\nwork.\nEntertaining musical selections Wtrte\ngiven, including a piano duet and a\nsong, \"Down the Vale.\" by A. H,\nFreeman.\n\u25a0\u2014 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 eeMOm      '   '   '\nLodge Founder Dies\nTORONTO, Oct. 19.\u2014Edward E.\nSmith, 86, died here today. He was\none of the founders of the Sons of\nEngland  society.\nWhat would happen If a fire started\nut night, with prisoners in the cells,\nhas b*$en no pleasant imagining for\ncity officials.\t\nSour Stomach\n\"Phillips Milk of Magnesia\"\nBetter than Sa4t\nInstead of soda -hereafter take a\nlittle \"Phillips Milk of Magnesia\" hi\nwater any time for indigestion or\nsour, acid, gassy stomach, and, relief\nwill come instantly.\nFor fifty years genuine \"PhllllpB\nMilk of Magnesia\" has heen prescribed by physicians because It overcomes three times as much acid in\nthe stomach as a saturated solution\nof bicarbonate of soda, leaving the\nstomach sweet und free from all gases.\nIt neutralises acid fermentations In\nthe bowels and gently urges the souring waste from the system without\nparging. Besides, lt la more pleasant\nto take than soda. Insist upon \"Phillips \"   Any drug store.\nCANMORE   BRIQUETTES\nThe Fuel You Have Been Waiting For\nNo  Rock,   Slate   or   Bon*.\nNo  Clink.r.    No Watte.\nNo Trouble.    NoRagrarts.\nGiWatar   Heat   Than   Anthracits,     Price  $ 15.00  p\"'   T\u00b0\"-\nWEST TRANSFER COMPANY\nPHONE  33\nDegree of Frost\nRegistered Here\nClear weather Monday, caused the\nm\u00abrcur> to drop Monday night and\nTuesday morning to 81, one degree\nbelow   freezing.    Maximum   was  fi*.\nAnother clear, sunshiny day foi-\nlowed Monday's break of the clouded,\nrainy   weather.\nThe weather lorecaet is continued\nclear weather, partly cloudy and\nwith   frost  at   nighte.\nMILLARD STAPLES\nOF YAHK IS DEAD\nCRANBROOK.   B.C..   Oct.   lit,   \u2014   The\n=a\ndeath   Un k   [dut\nof Mill\ncook     in\nbrought    i.,    thi\nlowing  .,\nII   and   '\n\u2022\u2022 hospital here |\n\u25a0In cf Yahk, a\niff. who was |\n.n Sunday fol-\nRa was be-\nof \u2022 age.   aad   a !\nrunswlck.    He had na\nln   this   part   of   lb*\n...   il-kuuwa   at\nhad     made    many\nleral   taken   place ben*\nanser\nC\u00bb.a,\nFarmers\nRanchers\n\\v,\nha\nt'venil Used. Auto\nK.igintH an.I ;i large slock of\nspore parte\u2014Ford, Dodge, Chevrolet, Overland.  Maxwell, etc,\nYuu OOVlD obtain a chi'iip \u00ab;is\n-ugilie \u2022 fijv general pUfpawg\nfrom ;ln'M'.\nCall   and    Lt    Us   Show   You\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nP. O.  Box 693\nPhona 119\nHakes Hair Behave\nBut Doesn't SHOW!\nThere's a way to keep your hair\niust so, without any of that objectionable, 'VI:\u00bb\u00abteTtHl-do\\vn\" look. .lust\nuse a few drops of Danderine\u2014ivml)\ni through hulr, or UHe a Dandorim.-\nlampened tow;>l\u2014you'll be amazed ai\nthe way your hiiir then in haves, and\nit.s   beautiful   lustre!\nAny permanent wave or wataf wave\nlasts much longer and looks much\nnicer when Danderine is used instead\nof water to \"set\" th:- wave.\nOf course, you know what Dan-\nSerine does to dandruff! Dissolve*\nevery bit of it. l'uts tfealp in the\npink of condition. Invigorates hair\nand hair roots. Why use anything\nelw?\nAsk Your Druggist\nGet a bottle of Danderine and Marl\nits benefits today. Kveiy drag utOM\nhas It, for only He. for the finest\ndressing yon could find, and the best\naid to hair health (yet discovered, jus;\ntry\u2014*\nDanderine\nMAtE INCANADA\nKITCHEN Utensils,\nSink*, Bathrooms,\nFloors are safely clean-\nid with Old Dutch. It\nis a natural detergent,\nI and contains no lye,\nacids or hard frit to\nscratch or mar the finest\nenamel surfaces. For\neconomy, comfort and\nsafety's sake use Old\nDutch Cleanser. There's\nnothing else like it.\nOld Dutch\nrimmsM\nu&cmumeM\ns=S5=-.:-\n\\Z   \u25a0\n\\Cl\n.iW^'V\n*tfitTr*L \u25a0\n' '-.taHVOl\n.j.\n*\u00bbi.fi\n\/Iff j\nF\nIflWWlTWRl\nPRINTING\nPULLS\nPROFITS\nTHE more people you see, the\nmore goods you sell. But physical limitations interfere. Thus\nthe success of printed matter. For\nevery person can be reached at a\nvery low cost.\nYour printed piece is your salesman. You want it to have a refined, convincing, pleasing personality. A good printer can inject\nthat atmosphere into ordinarily\ncold type. Our man will explain\nfully.   Just call for him.\nThe Daily News\n!job Dept.^\nPhone  144   (Two lines)\n'\"\"\u2666af,\n\/\u25a0*=.;\n'*&\n.*;'r.\n,jN<y\n**\n Page Four\nTHE-NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20,-1926\n4\nTHE   DAILY   NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by The News Publishing company,\nlunlted. Nelson, B.C.\nBuetnes* letters should be addressed\nV\u00bb\u00ab checks and, money orders made\nbuyable to The News Publishing company, limited, and in no case to individual members of tbe staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A.B.C\n\u2022taterrients of circulation mailed on\n\/equeSt, or may be seen at the office of\nsny advertising agency recognised by\nhe Canadian Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION HATES\nBy man (country), per month I    .*0\nPer  year        s.00\nS^1?^1^01^*' p\u00abr y*\"1 \u00bb\u25a0\u00ab\nuutslde Canada, per month  71\nPer year     7>g\nDelivered, per week   26\np\u00ab\" X\u00abr    is.oe\nPayable ln Advance\n_ Msss>erAasit\"imreamef Otocjdirttom\n_WE\u00abfo>IEHDAT.   OCTOBER   1!Q,   182g\n'Keep Off the Grass\/ or,\na Play Center\nSome cities have such a conception\nof thtfr duty to the children as finds\nexpression in the warning, \"Keep\nOff the Grass.\"\nProhibition, restriction, is \"\"'their\nmethod of controlling old and young.\nThe children are turned into the\nstreet. ,\nEnlightened communities have a\nconception of their duty In that regard that finds expression in public\nplaygrounds, public sw.nunlng places,\nand  similar facilities.\nAccommodation for the young generation to grow in stature\u2014In body\nand mind, in muscle and character\u2014\nis their reaction to the boy and girl\nquestion. They do not believe In the\nstreot as a jilayground and aa a\nschool for character.\nIf provision for summer play is\nwise, is provision for winter play in\na  different category?\nIs play to have all the emphasis in\nsummer, and work and study be alone\nconsidered   for   the   winter?\nAs a matter of fact, the tim.; will\ncome when the community that has\nnot a recognized play centtr for the\nhoys and girls for the winter season\nwill be considered hopelessly out-of-\ndate.\nIn (he case of Nelaon, the Armory,\nabout.to become vacant, is a standing\nsuggestion for a first-class winter\ngymnasium and game center, without\nmore expense than the maintenance.\nA few months' maintenance ought not\nto  be  beyond  tho community's  purse.\nThis idea should receive serious\nconsideration.\nQueen Marie the Headliner\nNow\nNot since the Prince of Wales via-\nItuJ the United States on his holidays\ntwo or three years ago have th;' good\ndemocrats on the other side of the\nline felt such thrills as are now\ntingling them as they welcome Marie,\nQueen  of  Rumania,\nFrom her embarkation from Europe,\nthe dainty little lady with the beautiful and sad face has bailed in the\nglare of publicity.\nNo doubt star reporters have been\nassigned to the Job of keeping her in\nsight wherever she goes, with \"money\nno object.\" Sob sisters will inveigle\nstories from htr suite. For \u2022 front\npages  she  will  have  no  competition.\nMonster crowds will dog her.\nRoyalty has no peer as a drawing\ncard In the land so especially and\navowedly one ot democratic ideas.\nLeader   of  Gang   Slain   Week\nAgo; His Lieutenant Is\nNow Victim\nBOSTON, Oct. 19.\u2014Open gang\nwarfare with further killings was\npredicted by the police Monday night\nas a result of another street shooting\nIn   Boston's   north   end   today.\nMichael Dl Pietro, chief lieutenant\nof Charles (Big Brooklyn) Gaglione,\nwho was slain a week ago, was* today's ylctim. He was shot down\nfrom ambush as he left the house\nof his friend, whose funeral will be\nheld  tomorrow.\nDl Pietro walked Into a raking\ncrossfire of revolver bullets before\nhe had gone 10 paces from the\ndoor. One weapon barked from a\nwindow across the way and the second, |n the hands of a gunman, a\nfew doors behind him, spat three bullets Into f->l Pletro's back. As the\nman dropped to the pavement, the\nsecond gunman tossed his weapon\nbeside the body and sprinted away,\nbowling over two boys ln his escape.\nThe\nLighter Side\nReaders of Tbe Dally News contribute many of tbe best items to\nthis column. Just sign your nam\u00ab\nor Initials, or nom-de-plume, and\nsend fn your brightest Ideas. \u2014\nEditor,  Lighter Side.   \u25a0\nAHNTHET\n\"It ens, hard to conquer Pa.\nBut the first time he talked\nrough to me I fed him on hash\nnine days an' he's been polite\never   Since.\"\nBoys have changed some. In 1890\nthey merely^ longed to be bandits.\nThe interesting question is not\nhow the other half lives, but wh< n\nlt sleeps.\nThe final test of personality Is\nthe ability to pacify the man who\nbought your old car.\nTHE SEASON IS HERE WHEN\nTHOSE WHO DIDN'T IIOCK THE\nBOAT WILL CIIAWL THROUGH A\nFENCE WITH A SHOTGUN\nCOCKED.\nNote to France: A debt settlement ie like castor oil. The longer\nyou put off taking tt, when you\nknow you must, the madder you\nget.\nAnd. praises be! Many a young\nman learns to his sorrow that io.je\ngirls   are   too   hot   to   handle.\nMatrimony has 9M.li.1i dmvn to\nnormal whi'll they can qunn<l\nwithout really knowing what It's\nabout.\nThe reason more people had shoes\nhalf-soled tn the old days was because  the   uppers  were  worth  it.\nIf plants really feel pain, you\nCan't blame a nettle, poison Ivy\nand a grape fruit for hitting back.\nDoubtless the first man who ate\na carrot persuaded the second to\ndo It Just as a Joke.\nFable:   The  man   was  very  happy.\nHis   wife    had    Just   aaid    that   she I\nwould  learn to play golf with  him.\nTHERE'S NO PLACE LIKE\nHOME. AT LEAST THERE'S NO\nPLACE LIKE THE REAL ESTATE\nMAN DESCRIBES WHEN ITS FOR\nSALE.\nEfficient\nBy LAtraa a. kxbkmam\nErrrTfaTTr- ;.;;\nGOOD    CI1KESK    DISHES\nTOMORIKAV'K MEM\nBreakfaK\nBananas\nCereal\nScrambled   Eggs\nCoffee\nl.HIM'tit\n1lO.ll\nCheese   Fun dm-\nl.ert-Over    Cold    Slaw\nWhole  Wheat  Bread Jum\nTea\nDiiuur\nBaked  Slice  uf  Ham\nBaked   Swtet   Potatoes\nSpinach\nSteami'd   Frui'.   I'uddlntf\nHard   Sauce\nCoffee\nlt always seems to me a pity when\na family does not like cheese dishes.\nFor cheese Is one of the principle\nmeat aubs'.ltutes and Its frequent use\nenables the thrifty housekeeper to\nkeep within her food budget. Most\nfinancial budget experts tell us that\nwe should figure $G a week per uilult\nIn building our food budget. But\nwhere meat mui'. be used daily, never\nsubstituted by cheese und egg dishes\n(.beans, milk, nuts und ris4i are also\nmeat-substitute*^ the housekeeper\noften has a struggle to make budget-\nends meet. The following cheese\ndishes make a hearty luncheon; or,\ncombined with two vegetables, u salad and a dessert, they offer a satisfying dinner\u2014\nCheese Fondue\u2014Into a mixing\nbowl put one-half cup of dry bread\ncrumbs. Add three-quarters of a cup\nof hot water, one und one-hulf tablespoons of butter, one cup of mild\nAmerican cheese finely chopped, and\none-fourth teaspoon of salt. Beat the\nyolk\u00ab of two eggs and to them add\none-half cup of cold\/sweet milk, then\nstir this liquid into the first mixture.\nBlend thoroughly before folding in\nthe stiffly beaten whites of two eggs.\nTurn all into a butttred dish to bake\nin a moderate <\u00bbven for 30 minutes.\nServe at once. (Too hot an oven will\ntoughen  cheesre.) *\nTomato-Chpene Dish \u2014 Heat the\ncontents of one can of tomato soup\n(a good biand) then stir in three-\nquarters of a cup uf soft bread\nCrumbs and one-half pound ot mild\nAmerican cheese finely chopped.\nCook over mild heat till the cheese\nmelts,.stirring constantly, then serve\nat once on crackers or hot buttered\ntoast.\nTomorrow--\u2014The Progressive House,\nkeeper.\nAddress inquiries io Miss Kirk.imn\nand inclose stamped-add re sued envelope for reply.\u2014Editor.\nThat fiody\nof Yours\nBy JABUU W. BARTOW, M.D.\nIILIMIWIIIII1W \u25a0! WMSBBBSJSJIII  i    11 ill! 11\nLow Blood Prewure\nin tiie^e days when the words\n\"high blood pressure\" are being used\nfll frequently, it Is refreshing to\nread, about, low blood pressure and\nits   meaning.\nWe know that high blood pressure\nmay mean a stroke of paralysis in\nlater days, to some heavy or even\nlight individuals. In Hit- meantime\nthese folks are enjoying sife, eating\nand sUei.itiK well, ami able to work\nor   play.\nltut what of our low pressure Individual?\nHe is usually \"tired' all the time,\nhas cold h:inda and feet, is often\nmentally depressed, can lies cold easily, is slow to throw off a cold or\nother ailment. He tfl often thin or\nLindernuuiUshed, and has generally a\n\"saggy\" appearance.\nA southern phylum maintains\ntliat low blood pa-essutv is found in\npeople whose heart and abdominal\norgs ns are not well \u25a0 u pported. He\nluggssti thut tluy eat well so as to\nput on \u25a0 little lat Which supports the\norgans to some extent, and also to\nwear an abdominal belt 'as a support.\nThis is good advice of course, particularly to elderly folks, but tor the\naverage person it only goes part way,\nEating  good   food   and   plenty   of   It\nLa quits ftllrtgat If you use it up\nIn the development of strength and\nmuscle.\nThe actual force of the heart Itself\ncan be increased by a dally walk,\nwhich can be gradually increased\n(nn week to wtek, until a matter\nof two ov three miles, or even more,\nIs  accomplished,\nThe abdominal suppjrt .should come\nfrom the development of the abdominal musicls which run up and down,\nobliquely, and across ths abdomen.\nAnv bi nding of the body, such as\ntrying to touch the toes, with knees\nstraight, lying on the back and raising the legs to right angles with the\nbody, say 12 to 20 times, twice daily,\nwould  soon  tighten  up  the  front.\nThe general health would Improve,\nnnd the blood psessure would Increase, It would be well expended\ntime \/ nd energy. In fact lt pays a\nlarger interest than any other investment. ,\nKeep up your blood pressure to\nnormal, utxr you'll got more out of\nlife  and give more to it.\nDied Suddenly\nFOUR MEN DIE AS\nTRAIN HITS AUTO\nMexican Roman Catholic\nPolice Sent to Jail\nfor Conducting Service\nMERIDA, Mexico, Oct. 19.\u2014 Fran-\nci.-co Rlvero, Roman Catholic priest,\nsentenced to 15 days Imprisonment\nfor conducting reBgious services in\ntlxcocob  wilhout  r.gisterlng.\nCHURCHILL KEEPS WARM\nSpain's Queen on\nWay to England\nStops in France\nCBHBBERE, France. Oct. IK.\u2014\nQueen Victoria of Spain, on her way\nto England for a visit to the British\nloyal family, arrived here today from\nBarcelonla. She was accompanied\nby the1 Spanish amabassador and\nwas welcomed at the frontier by the\nFrench authorities. The queen left\nfor   Parts   this   evening.\nWithin almost a stone'e throw of\nParis, partridges, hires and other\ngams may be brought down in the\nenvircgi* of Versailles, a pijolific\nbunting ground.\nIt Is estimated thut 2 per cent\nof the old-timers who rave about\nthe beauties of the. waits know how\nto   dance   It.\nIt might he possible to convict\nAmerican murderers if prosecuwrs\ntried as hard aa they do in perjury\ncases.\nPerhapa Uie most forlorn figure to a defeated candftdato who\nremembers that he once oom-\nI dl 11teii t I t he voters on their\ngood judgment.\nWell,   if   Coolidge   had turned   out\na   doctor,   as   his   father wished,   he\nwouldn't have talked  to his patients\nabout  ont> another.\n(Drama: American visits foreign\nland; frisks the natives out of 80\nsquare miles; yells to .Washington for\nprotection.\nAnyway, the champion straddler\ncume  through  the  season eufely.\nA lot of British Columbians coming back from Surope are broke\nand   others   were   not   tourists.\nNew version: Greater love hath\nno man than this, that he perjure\nhimself for a friend.\nThe two things that cause the\nmost unhappiness are envy and\nstatic.\nThe world moves. Once people\nslaved for bread; now their progeny\navoid   it  because  It   is   fattening.\nCorrect this sentence: \"Well, well,\"\naaid the householder; \"The plumber\ngot through with that Job much\nquicker than I expected.\"\nBaxter Warns Members\nto Remember Part of\nMaritimes in the Put\nSAINT JOHN, Oct 19.\u2014\"Remember\nwithout the maritime gateways you\ncould not have made Canada,\" declared Hon. J. B. M. Baxter, premier\nof New Brunswick, in his welcoming\naddress to the delegates attending the\nfirst annual meeting ot the Canadian\nboard of trade here today.\nHe urged the people not to talk\nabout the wrongs of the maritimes,\nbut to remember that these provinces werVlft ths end of the long trail\nover which the trade of Canada\nshould pass to reach the ocean ports\nof the country \"from which your\nships should sail.\"\nROBERT   LIVINGSTONE   BRACKIN,\nK.C.\nOntario Liberal M.P.P. fur West\nKent, who died suddenly on October 11 in a Windsor hotel. He\nhad a remarkable career und one\nwhich has been compared with that of\nHon. R. J. Manlon. Both early distinguished themselves, the one at law,\nthe other In medicine. The most famous case wllh which Brackin was\nconnected was the defence of Rev.\nJ. O. L. Spracklln, who some six\nyears ago waB charged with the murder of a border cities hotel man.\nThe trial aroused widespread attention, and the acquittal ot Spracklin\nwas looked upon as a distinct triumph\nfor his counsel.\nMBDFORD,   Mass..   Oct.    19.\u2014Pour\nmen were killed and a fifth suffered\nprobable fatal injuries late toda^\nwhen an automobile In which they\nfere driving home from work w*s\nstruck by a Boston and Maine passenger train at a crossing near -the\nWellington  station   here.\nCrisp, flavory shreds of\nSHREDDED\nWHEAT\nPour hot milk over it\nA warm,nourishing meal\n'\"\nBandits Rob Bank;\n,\u00a5iity Persons Are\nEngaged in Hunt\nDOWAUIAC, Mich., Oct. la.\u2014Police and a posse of 50 persons are\nsearching roads leading from Do-\nwaglac to Chicago for the automobile In which five bandlta escaped\ntoday after holding up the Lee\nState   bank   and   obtaining   *75.000.\nHalf the loot obtained was in\nmoney,   officials   of   the   bank   said.\nOccupants of a building opposite\nthe bank saw the holdup In progress' and attempted to interfere but\ntwo of the bandits who awaited\nin their motor car oulside sent a\nfusih.de of shots into the windows\nacross   the   street.\nAfter the robbery, a posse started\nin pursuit.\n>\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022';\nI\n1\n-\u2022!\"'-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022-'\u25a0\u25a0     \u25a0'.    ' \";;.- \" '.\nEVERY MONTH A CHEQUE\n$50   \u2014   $100   _   $150\nas you hare arranged.\nThis Monthly Income guaranteed to yourself In\nold age or to your  family If you die.\nA small annual saving does lt.\nHoward    Farrant,    Dii.rict    Manaqtr,    Rogers\nBuilding, Vancouver,  B. C.\nVV.  L.  G.   Munn.  General   A^ent,   Nelson,   B.  C.\n;*\u25a0 '\u25a0*\nr\n\u25a0\u25a0\nCONFEDERATION LIFE\nASSOCIATION\nAt Bedtime\nWIN8T0N   CHURCHILL\nChancellor of the British exchequer, is shown in a late photo leaving\nDowning street, apparently in cheerful mood, despite the coal\" strikes and\nkindred evils. . -\nLet U8 figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nMaterial   john burns & son\nBuilding\nFurnaces\nMow is the time to get that\nnew Furnace you nave been\nwanting.     We   have\nHOUND OAK   Pin and  I'ipeless\nCLABE BKOS.' Mye and Plpeless\nPrice ta   Fit  the   House\nCall  snd Get  Ettimate\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNELSON PHONE    21 B.   C.\nWhen the day is done and all the big and little\nworries are crowded into the background\u2014\nBefore you go to sleep, revel in the delight of\na Lifebuoy bath.\nLet the creamy, mild, antiseptic lather cleanse the\nclogged pores, sooth and relax the millions of tiny\nskin nerves, and give you that exquisite sense of\nperfect cleanliness no other soap can give.\nThen your weary muscles and fagged nerves.will\nrelax, gratefully, your eyes will grow heavy and\nyou will drift off to a slumber such as you have\nnever known.\nAnd in the morning you will awake feeling like a\nnew person.\nJust try it.\nMother is the\nHealth Doctor\nLIFEBUOY\nHEALTH   5DAP      '\njurifies and Protects\nThe cleanly health odour\nvanishes quickly, but the\nprotection remains.\niLb-573\nmswm\n\u2014__^__\n\u201e,,^H.^\n\u25a0H\n  ,\t\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER. .20, lft26\nPage Fire -**\n\u25a0B*3SH\nBad\nWeather\nDemand*\nSturdy Shoes\nfor     .\nSturdy Boys\nKeep the little ones' feet\nwarm and dry and avoid\nthat cold.\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nLIQIME\nTHEDOMtNIQN\nAppeal by Premier Ferguson of\nOntario Brings Comparisons by Provinces\nBONNINGTON BOYS\nHOSTS AT DANCE\nBONNINGTON PALLS Oct. 19. \u2014\nThe hall'wan a brilliant and animated\nscene on Friday evening on the occasion at a. dance given by the Bonnington boys ia honor of Mr. and Mrs. P.\nB. Hardin Mrs. Hardin having recently arrived' from Vancouver to Join her\nhusband, who Is engineer on the construction, work of the new plant and\nwho haa been with the West Kootenay Power A Light company for the\npast two years.\nThe arrangements were perfectly\ncarried .out the committee having\nspared ho pains to ensure the enjoyment of ' tne guests. The beautiful\nrainbow fiffect of the decorations wae\ncarried out' with numerous shades of\nbrightly colored crepe streacers radi-,\natlng from a large Japanese lantern.\nEncircling the center lantern were\nvaried colored balloons attached to the\nstreamers, which were carried to the\nsides of the wall and caught by small\nlanterns,.'the whole giving a kaleidoscopic  effect.    The  stage  was  beauti-\n1 in l'i ,       I\nfully decorated with evergreens which\nscreened the orchestra as they ren-i\ndered the latest popular dance music.\nThe moonlight waltzes were a delightful feature, the only light being from\nthe rays of a fantastically painted\nmoon.\nAn Interesting event was the presentation of a lovely bouquet to Mra\nHardin. Mr. McNeil expressing the sentiments of the company In welcoming\nMrs. Hardin to their midst. Little\nMiss Betty McDonald, daintily attired\nIn pale pink, made the presentation.\nSupper was served at midnight In the\nlarge dining hall where 250 guests\nsat down to a most delectable repast.\nThe hosts were H. McDougall. B. McNeil R. *T. Kennedy, F. Stevenson, J.\nVyman C. Fisher, w. Burklnahaw. C.\nBland   J. Carvell and W. Batley.\nSILVERTON NOTES\nWILLIS   PIANOS\n\"Canada's   Best\"\nSole distributors, from the factory, for\ntiie Kootenay District:\nKOOTENAY  MU8IC  HOUSE,\nNelson,   B.   C\u2014\"The   Piano   Stor.\"\nPeppermint\nPatties\nA   Few   More   Pounds   Left\nDaintily put u? in pound boxes.\n39\u00ab^   Par   Lb.\nJuit  tha  Candy   for  Halloween\nPartiaa\nTbe Poole Drug Co.,Ltd.\nThe    Remit   Store\nBOX   SOS PHONE   26\nOne-Cent   Sate,   Dec.   2,   3,   4\nSILVERTON. Oct, 19.\u2014Mrs, J. Emerson and son. Lance, who have been\nin Nelson the last two months, returned to town oh Monday.\nR. A. Grimes, mining man of Kimberley. spent a few days here last\nweek.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Ironside had *M\ntheir guests during the week-end Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Thompson from Idaho-\nMiss Dorothy Brown, nurse-ln-train-\nIng ln the Jubilee hospital Victoria,\nis visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nT.  Brown,  for a few \u2022months.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Barron spent tho\nweek-end  in Slocan City.\nW. Eccles of Nelson spent Sunday\nln  town  visiting friends.\nDependable\nLadies' Wrist\nWatch\nGreen    or    White   Gold    Cases,\nin Tun Designs.\n$12.00\nA. T. HOfcON\nYour Jeweler\nAgent    for    Heintzman    Pianos\nTORONTO, Oct. 13\u2014Premier Ferguson's appeal to the electorate df\ntho province of Ontario, for return\nto power on a platform providing\nfor important amendments to the\nOntario Temperance act, recalls \"infinite variety'' of the respective\nliquor laws of the several provinces\nof Canada. The following is a brief\nsynopsis:\nPrfnce Edward Isla\"d\u2014Liquor obtainable through government vendor\nby   medical   prescription.\nNova Scotia\u2014Liquor under government control and obtainable through\nvendors  by  doctors'  prescriptions.\n.New Brunswick\u2014Sale of liquor\ncontrolled by board of commissioners.\nSold through government vendors on\ndoctors' prescriptions. Vendors must\npurchase  supplies from board.\nQuebec\u2014Government control, administered through a commission and\nshops in non-local option districts.\nCommission Is also wholesale buyers.\nBeer sold in taverns and beer and\nlight wines lh cafes and hotels.\nLiquor shipped by express to individuals  in   province.\nOntario\u2014Present law which th\u00bb\nFerguson government seeks endof-\naatlon to amend Ontario Temperance\nact, a prohibitory, measure - which\npermits of the purchase of spirit one\nliquors under doctors' prescriptions.\nBeer of 4.4 strength on sale at tables\n-tn standard .hotels and authorized\nrafeg.\nManitoba\u2014Liquor control act enacted in 1934. Sale by permit. Pe-\n,Avery to residence only, Prices fixed\nby    government    liquor   commission.\nSaskatchewan \u2014 Liquor purchased\nfrom government stores. In smaller\nrural centers there are. stores for\nfftle of beer only. Subject to local\noption. Sales restricted to one quart\nper jTerson per qay of hard liquor,\ntwo gallons  of  beer.\nAlberta\u2014Sale of beer by glass in\nlicensed hotels? sale ' of wine and\nspirits from government vendors and\ndelivery of beer by brewery to permit   holder'^   residences.\nBritish Columbia\u2014All persons 21 or\nover holding government permit can\npurchase any quantity from government vendors. Beer sold by the flats\non   licensed  premises.\ntmw\nPacking Staffs\nEnjoy Dance at\nWillow Point\nThis column is being conducted\nby Mrs. M. J. Vtgneua. All news\nOf a social nature, including receptions, private entertainments,\npersonal Items, marriages, etc., Will\nSppear in  this column.    Telephone\nIra.  Vigneux at her home.\nMr. and Mrs. Eric P. Dawson have as\ntheir house guest Mrs. Dawson's sister\nMtts  Kathleen Jackson  of  Victoria.\nB. T. O'Grady, M.K. left yesterday\nwrth Dr. Pulmage of Vancouver of the\nfederal government department of\nmines  for the Golden Age mine at Hall.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nJames Anderson of Kaslo spent yesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Aileeti Mansfield has as her\nguest her friend, Miss Elaee Curtis of\nRegina who arrived in town last night\nvia the Great Northern from an ex-\ntehded visit'to Portland, Ore.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. L. A. Lepper. who have\nreturned from a four-mqnths' honeymoon spent in Montreal, Toronto, Detroit and Windsor and prairie cities,\nhave arrived in the city to reside, and\nare at present guests at the home of\nMrs. Lepper's parents Mr. and Mrs. W.\nE. Coles until permanently established.\nv \u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Ethel Doughdy of Trail has returned home after a visit Is Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nA. G Larson of Spokane, who has\nbeen spending the past few days in\ntown on business, leaves this morning\nby motor for the Lucky Jim mine at\nZlncton.\n\u2022 *    *\nH. Jackson, now a resident of Slocan\nCity, spent yesterday in town.\nMr. and Mrs\u201eR. E. Morton and daughter Carmen, have returned from a motor trip to Spokane.\nW. T. McDowell one of the director:\nof the Yankee Gfrl mine at Tmlr, returned to Nelson Monday sight from an\nextended vist In the ea^t. after which\nhe proceeded to Florida where he visited friends ln Miami shortly after the\nhurricane   '\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. J. G. Bunyan spent yesterday\nat Nelway.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Colin F. MacDougall\nhave as thetr gtirst Mrs. Rod McPherson\nof New Denver, who is visiting her\ndaughter, Miss Irene McPherson, of th<\nBritish Columbia Telephone company-:\noperating staff.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nEdgar Jamleson of Passmore waa i\nvisitor In town yesterday.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. J. Murray of South Slocan spent\nyesterday m Nelson,\n\u2022 a   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. D. Kerr of Longbenoh\nwere city shoppers yesterdav.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nFleet Robertson provincial mineral\nogist of Victoria, left yesterday for the\nKaslo district.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs.    Charles    Watts    has    returned\nfrom a fortnight spent at the home of\nher brother. F. J. Kennedy, Kamloop!\nColeman Quicklite\nLamps and Lanterns\nJust the thing where electricity is not available. Uses\ngasoline fuel and gives a soft white light of great intensity.\nAbsolutely safe and odorless.\nCOLEMAN GENERATORS  AND  MANTLES\nBuy your Mantles by the dozen and save money.\nHIPPERSOIN HARDWARE CO.\nLook for tho Red Hardware Store\nPHONE  497\nBOX  414\nWhy Cables\nCrack\nTelephone cables expand and contract with changes in temperature.\nThis movement often results finally\nin \"crystallization,\" which causes\nminute cracks to appear in the cable\nsheath.\nThough these cracks may be practically invisible to the naked eye,\nthey permit moisture to enter the\ncable, putting telephone lines out of\norder.\nB. C. Telephone Co.\nWILLOW POINT Oct 19.\u2014Crystal\nhall was filled with\" ;i Jolly crowd on\nSaturday night when the growers of\nthe. district were at home to the. whole\n-wptnil 1411 ity nt ;i. dance given in honor\n\u25a0of the staffs of the two packing\nhoXises. Almost every family in the\nsettlement was represented, and a\nnumber of friends from Nelson were\nnoticed Including Mr. nnd Mrs. A.\nBrown, Mr. and Mr.\". Knowles Mr.\nand Mrs. Led Ingham and Mies Burse,\nMr. and Mrs. Katies, the Misses Lillian\nand-Jean   Hunter,  and   R.   Foxall.\nMrs. A. Scott and I\u00ab. U Doyle received the guests Mrs. J. J>. Macdonell\nwas lh charge of the supper arrangements  assisted   by   Mrs.   T.   Airey.   Mrs.\nBABY'S\nOWN SOAP\nXMEAL\nD. Heddle and Mrs. M. Heddle. whll.\nW. P. Dickson acted an master of cere\nmonies, \"calling off\" tlte circle one\nsteps in true old-time fashion. Th<\ndance, broke up at 12:80 everyone\npresent voting it a most enjoyahl\naffair\nHARVEST FESTIVAL\nAT SOUTH SLOGAN\nChurch Decorated With Fruit*.\nFlowers, Vegetables; Miss Etter Soloist; New Pulpit Used\nSOUTH SLOCAN. Oct. 19.\u2014St. Matthew's church was crowded to capacity\non Sunday evening on the occasion of\nthe harvest festival, Th\u00ab> service wae\ntaken by Ret. Wr j. Sflverwood, vicar\nof the parish, who preached an appropriate sermon from the text \"Prosper\nthou   the   work  of-our   hands.\"\nSpecial harvest hymns were sung\nwith Mrs. F. H. Russel as organist.\nMiss Enid Etter of Nelaon rendered\nWhittier's hyWin *Immnrtal Love,\" a*\na solo during the service. The new\npulpit which has recently been Installed was finished for the occasion\nand very effectively decorated with\ngrapes and leaves, white berries and\nasparagus fern quantities of pink\nchrysanthemums were used, with potted plants ami autumn foliage ln every\navailable apace and as a setting for\nthe arrangement of all kinds of fruit\nand vegetables. Mrs.K H. Russel and\nMrs. T. A. WhtHdon were responsible\nfor the decorations assisted by Winnie\nRussel, Esther Anderson Eliza Edwards  and  Roberta   Saunders.\nThe   Rev.   W.  J.   Sllxerwood was   the\nguest of Mr, and Mrs. O. W. Humphry\nat  Summerhill   for  the   week-end.\n  mjfu\nKudo's Mayor and\nFamily Are in Auto\nSpill on Sunduy\nKASLO, Oct. 19. \u2014 Mayor William\nBurgess with Mrs. J}urgess and children received 'a shaking up on the road\nbetween here and Mirror Lake on Sunday afternoon. The automobile which\nMr. Burgess was driving became uncontrollable on a slippery road. In\nattempting tn right it, the driver\nswerved too near the bank and the\ncar mounted it and turned over on its\nside, throwing the occupants out Only\nminor Injuries were sustained. Mrs.\nBurgess and family were taken to\nKaslo by a car that happened along\nshortly after. The overturned car wa.=\nrighted about f.:,,o in the afternoon and\nbrought back to town not much the\nworse for the spill.\nWILLOW POINT~N0TES\ntil BOcer Street,  Phone too\nWednesday Morning Specials\nBetter value* and the same quality merchandise for Wednwday Morning Shoppers. The quantities are limited in many cases, so our advice is to get here\nearly. Mfltat\nWOMEN'S GOWNS\n85c Each\nMade slip-on style of good quality White\nFlannelette. Pin|t or Blue trimming.\nWEDNESDAY MORNING SPECIAL,\n85* EACH.\nWOMEN'S HOSE.\n98c the Part\nSilk-and-Wool Hose in\nall new colors. Made\nwith seamless feet\nand legs, and ribbed\ntop. All sizes. WEDNESDAY MORNING,\nSPECIAL, 98* THrT\nPAIR.\nif\nWOMEN'S VESTS\n75c Each\nFall-weight Cotton Vests. Made with\nplain tailored top. Sizes 36, 38 and 40.\nWEDNESDAY MORNING SPECIAL,\n76* EACH.\nWOMEN'S\nBLOOMERS\n$1.00 the Pair\nGood quality Satinette\nBloomers, in assorted\ncolors. All full sizes.\nWEDNESDAY MORNING SPECIAL, Sl.OO\nTHE PAIR.\nCHILDREN'S SWEATERS\n$2.95 Each\nChildren's Pullover Sweaters in good\neoJor combinations and in assorted sizes.\nWEDNESDAY MORNING SPECIAL,\nS2.t^S  EACH.\n\"NEMO\" CORSETS\n$2.95 the Pair\nOdd lines of \"Nemo\" Corsets. Medium\nor low bust. A splendid corset for full\nfigures. Sizes 25 to 33. WEDNESDAY MORNING SPECIAL, $2.96\nTHE PAIR.\nFLANNELETTE BLANKETS\n$2.75 the Pair\nFull-size Blankets. Made of extra heavy\nFlannelette. Finished with Pink or\nBlue borders. WEDNESDAY MORNING SPECIAL, ?2.75 THE PAIR.\nWOMEN'S GLOVES\n75c the Pair\nTwo-button style. Made of good quality\nChamoisette. Colors: Sand and Mode.\nSizes 6 to 7i\/j. WEDNESDAY MORNING SPECIAL, 75* THE PAIR.\n=\u00bb\nWrite The Borden Co. Limited,\nVancouver for this helpful book\nahowing ho>x to prepare appetizing, nourishing dUhes. Many\nnew recipe*. Imperially valuahle\nto mothers of under-nourished\nchildren or little ones who an\nhard to please at meal-time*.\nCendeneary  at  South  tumasa  \u2022.  C\nWILLOW POINT. Oct. 19.\u2014Mrs.- W.\nJ. Mohr hae left to take up her residence In Nelson where she Intends to\nspend the winter.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Ollroy had as their\nguests ever the wsek-end the Misses\nLillian -and  Jean  Hunter  of  Nelson.\nMrs. K. Metcalfe and daughter, Mary\nspent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs\nN.  O.  Brown of  Bonnington.\nPROCTER SOCIAL NOTES\nPROCTER. Oct. It.-\u2014O. W. Stuart\nof Victoria was a Procter visitor on\nThursday.\nA party consisting of W B. Kin*\nand O. A. Gllker and son, Arthur, of\nNelson, motored up on Sunday and\nspent the day fishing.\nW. Brown of The, Dally News of\nNelson landed a 13% pound salmon\nhere on H;ituni,.y.\nJ, Blrt teaching at the Procter superior school waa K Nelson shopper\non Saturday-\nMrs. W. A. Ward of Procter returned\non Friday night after spending three\ndays  visiting her friends  ln  Nelson.\nWhile out walking near Procter,\nMiss T. Jesty of Victoria, who is visiting at the Outlet hotel, encountered\ntwo bear cubs.\nA party consisting of C. Coates O.\nHill. W. Hodge awd C. Sewell attended\nthe dance at the armory In Nelson on\nSaturday evening\nMiss Margaret Halg-Smlllte returned\nfiere op Saturday evening after spend-\nng a week in Trail,\nMiss Margery Severn, wHo Is teaching at Wynndel. rpent the week-end\nvisiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H.\nSevern.\nU Halg-Smlllle. who is attending\nhigh school at Trail was the guest of\nD.   Blacknutre over  ihe  week-end.\nMrs. H. Severn and daughter, Margery, spent Saturday ln Nslion shopping.\nSIR   REGINALD   GRAY\nSpeaker of fti* legislative assembly\nof Bermuda, who haa het-n visiting\nCanada  on   a  vacation.\nAPPLEDALE NOTES\nSOUTH SLOCAN NOTES\nSOUTH SLOCAN Oct. lt. \u2014 Miss\nMolle Messes Qf Nelsoa Is the house\nguest of Mrs. Kenneth tJampoell for a\nfew days.\nMrs. William Lister, who lias been\nvisiting ln Nelson for a few days' since\nleaving tiie hospital, has returned\nwith  her  baby   son.\nMias    Roberta    Saunders,    who    has\nbeen the guest of Mrs. Wilson\nley for a week, has returned\npledale. -\nMrs. Jack Thompson' has\nword of the dwuit of her\nPeter Llndnay fc'rlTnion. Ore.,\nleft, for thai point to atend\nrite* x <. \u2022      -,'t\nMrs. J. D. Teatman and\nMurrrfy were Joint hostesses\nat the badminton club on\nafternoon,\nreceived\nhrothar.\nand has\nthe  lapt\nMrs   WI\nfar  tea\nMonday\nrwerworK.\n\\\\. \u25a0im If you are ill from overwork\" or worry\n^e\\\\\\w you can quickly get Back to normal by.\n00\nAPPLEDALE Oct. 19. \u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. D. F, Peters, Mrs. B. Lansdown,\nO. Haugen, Mr. and Mrs. J. Brown,\nMr. and Mr*. E. W. Kopecki Mrs. W.\nT. Wynne, Mrs. H. V. Meyer Mrs. W,\nJ. Laurie and Mrs. E. Q. Maclean motored to Nelson on Thursday to see the\npresentation of \"So This  Is London.\"\nMrs. E Q. Maclean returned to her\nhome at Trail on Friday after spending the week with her mother, Mra.\nW.  T.  Wynne.\nMrs. A,- Cant went to Trail on Saturday to take further medical treatment; her daughter, Mrs. W. J. Laurie,\nwho  is visiting here,  accompanied  her.\nC. Herman and W. Herman arrived\nhere from Empress. Alta. today. They\nsay there is still a' lot of threshing to\nbe done.\nMr, and Mra. H. W. Schorlemer of\nRossland were guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nWoyna on  Sunday,\nTHEKOOTENAY\nLAUNDRY KIDS\nWi LCAVE THE WEA.TV\nAND COLOR.  IN --\n\u25a0 JuSTHOV-VwE N*IN  I    |\nI ^VERY ahirt that we\n*41 launder and every\n\u2022ollar that leaves our place\nis laundered up to perfection. Just exactly as\nour .customers want them.\nWe give pernonar attention to all laundry that\nromps. In and that Is thn\nreason that we do such\ngood vrfork. If you are\nnot satisfied with your\nlaundry work, send It to\nus;  you will be then.\nThe Kootenay\nSteam Laundry\nC.  A.  Laratn.  Manager\nPhona   1-14\nmawmmmmmmmmmmm\ntaking a course of this wonderful tonic.'\nRaoommendad by the Medkat Profetaion.i\nPrice 50c.\n\u25a0I E**ry Drug Store S\u00abIU it.\nW. R. Beatty U Co., Vancouvtt,\n* Western Repreitntativet\nMalt Ionic \u201e\nTHE REAL STRENGTH  BUILDER\nWhen appetite is poor\nYou need a cup of\nIT IS SO GOOD FOR YOU\nmm ni,i..L-4^i.\u2014AiMi     \"   .\"\nSocial Stationery\nInvitations, Visiting Cards, Notepaper and Envelopes\u2014everything in social stationery.\nGood printing on high-grade material.\nTHEDAILYNEWSJOBDEPT.\nPhone 144 (Two Linei)\nPRINTING-RUUNG-BOQKBINNHG\naJk\n rPfeg\u00bb.Rx\nrTHE NELSON DXILY NEWS,\" WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1926\nOH A\n|JttUWMAN PACIFIC\nSHIP\nMontreal\u2014Hot. IT, SI Hlnnadoaa\nQnebeo \u2014 Wot. IB, \u00bb.S. Montnalrn\nKovtnal\u2014Hot. 1\u00bb, M. Montcalm\nMontreal\u2014\u00bbot. ae, tvs. Montciar.\n.40 Charbovrr, Southampton, Antwerp\n. to Belfast, G-lasgow\n. tO TalTaVpOOl\n. to xav.rpool\n+\u2022% Special Christmas Sailings\t\n\"%%, John\u2014See.   1, 8.S. MtUU    .. to Chtrbourr,  Southampton, Antwwp\nm% J(*\u00bb\u2014 Dec   7, B.l. Bfontroral to Btlfaat, Urarpool\n\u25a0t. JoBB\u2014B*\u00bbo. ll.S.a. XiUfima to OUuPffow, Liverpool\n*fc Jotar\u2014\u00bbto. 16, S.8. maaedoM to O^rbonrtr. Southampton, Antwerp\n\u25a0t. John\u2014 Hoc 15, B.S. Montcalm to Ball art, Idvarpool\nBt, John\u2014 Dec 83, B.B. Moataalm to (Haaffow, Uverpool\n\"Wt John,\u2014Dec 31, S.S. Montclan to .Liverpool\nT\nFURTHEST EffEE\nTotal for year   Now Exceeds\n450,000-Ton Mark\nin Ore\nLARGEST  and   FASTE8T  8HIP8   TO   and   FROM   CANADA\n....  Ask. .about new tourist third cabin accommodation, berth reserva-\nI'.'njlons, llterat-ure, fares and full details from any agent, or write\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent\nNelson, B. C.\nProved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for\n\u00ab'\u00bb<joWs     Headache      Neuralgia       Lumbago\n\"   Pain      Toothache     Neuritis Rheumatism\nDOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART\n\u00abW\n\u00bb\u2022} ^^-^ Accept  only  \"Bayer\"  package\nf^S^      which contains proven directions.\nHandy  \"Bayer\"   boxes  of   12  tablets\nAlao bottles'of 24 and 100\u2014Druggists.\nAspirin ti t0\u00ab trade mark (rtjjriitertM in Canada) of Barer Minn fact nw nt Mnnoaeettc*\nacMMlcr of flallcrlicacld (Acetyl Salicylic Arid. \"A. 8. A.'1). White It la well known\nthat Aspirin meana Bayer manufacture, to aaslat tbe piiMle ajralnst Imitations, tbe Tablet!\nat Barer Company  will bt attained with  their funeral trade mark,  tbe   \"Bayer Croat.\"\n\"first\nthinfe\nin tne\nmorning\"\nIT is a most refreshing and healthful practice to\ndrink, first thing in the morning, a glass of\nwater sparkling with a 'dash' of Eno's \"Fruit\nSalt\". There is no safer and surer way than this\nto clear the system of impurities and keep you\nfit and eager for the work and play which fill\neach day.\nBut it must be ENO I Eno\u2014never varying in\nquality and purity. Eno\u2014containing nothing\nthat may possibly do you harm. Eno\u2014with its\nfifty years' reputation. Eno\u2014approved and\nused by doctors and nurses. So, for your health's\nsake, be sure you get\nENO'S\n-\"FRUIT SAIF\nTha words \"Fruit SMt\" and ENO, and tha labtl\nshown on tha pmckags, arm ragistarsd trad* marks.\nSale* Representative! for North America: Harold F. Ritchie\not Co., Limited, 10-18 McCiul Street, Toronto <7\nAnother milestone waa passed by\nTrail smelter with the week <ndinr\nOctober 14, when, with the week'a\nreceipts ot 9387 tons of ore and concentrates, the receipts for the year\nto date came to 462,6*3. For the\nfirst time ln history. Trail receipts\nIn a calendar year have passed the\n450,000   ton  mark.\nIn  the  9187   tons  weekly   total,  the\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting Co.'s\nown properties contributed 714-J  tone.\nA  new   Washington   shipper  la  the\nSubmarine,   ot   Orovllle,  which   ship-\nped  four  tons  of  dry  ore.\nWeek   in   Detail\nShipments   for   the   week   ln   detail\n\u25a0Jby   tons   were* '\nCopper \u2014 Allenby Copper company,\nAllenby,   353.\nLead   \u2014   Alice,   Creston,   27.\nZinc \u2014 Metals Recovery, Retallack,\nS3;    Silversmith,   Sandon,   36.\nMilling ore \u2014 Aurora, Moyie, 140;\nBlue Bell, Riondel, 208; Duthie, Smlthers, 35; Homestake, Louis Creek,\n116; Lucky Jim, Zlncton, 286; Mountain Chief, New Denver, 40; Stem-\nwinder, Kimberley, 221; Whitewater,\nRetallack,    129. , [\nDry or\u00bb \u2014 Lajst Chance, Republic,\n171; McAllister, Three Forks, 92;\nSubmarine, Oroville, 4; Qullp, Republic, J62; Trevltt, Republic, 47;\nYankee Girl,   Ymir,   51.\nReceipt- foi che year to date are:\nConsolidated\nCompany mines    324,642\nNelson-Arrow  Lakes\nAlice,  Creston   (lead)   \t\nBluebird,' Deer Park (milling)\nEmerald,   Salmo    (lead)    ....\nEmerald, Salmo  (sine)  \t\nGoodenough, Ymir (dry)   ....\nGoodenough,   Ymir    (lead)    .\nGoodenough,  Ymlr   (milling)\nGranite, Taghum  (copper)   ..\nMultiplex, Cambourne\n(milling)   \t\nSilver Hill, Crawford Bay\n(lead)    \t\nSilver Reef, kelson (milling)\nQueen, Salmo (lead)   \t\nQueen Victoria,  Beasley,\n(Copper)        IS\nYankee Girl, Ymlr (lead)        484\nYankee Girl, Ymir  (milling)  ..      117\nYankee  Girl,   Ymir   (dry)  12,782\nRossland\nVelvet,   Rossland   (copper)   ...      IM\nBoundary,   Okanagan,   Similkameeti\nAllenby Copper Co., Allenby\n(copper)     \/. W.788\nAmes   Co.,   Rock   Creek\n(milling)  4\nBeaver,   Beaverdell   (lead)   .... *     18\nBell,   Beaverdell   (lead)           736\nBoundary Mercantile & Equipment Co,, CJreenwood  (dry)  .        14\nPounty,   Beaverdell   (lead)   .... 4\nBrboklyn, Greenwood (copper) tl\nElkhorn, Greenwood  (lead)  ....        12\nEureka,  Nicola   (lead)     J\nGold Pick, Greenwood  (lead)   , 3\nImperial,  Rock  Creek\n(milling)          H7\nJ. S. Logle, West Summer-.\nland    (lead)  1\nMerritt,   Coyle   (copper)             43\nOkanagan  Mining Co.,\nBeaverdell    (lead)         80\nOliver,  Oliver   (dry)           8$\nPenticton  Mining Co.,\nPenticton   (lead)     I\nProvidence,   Greenwood   (dry).,       '20\nPlanet, Nicola (dry)    \u00ab       14\nRevenge, Beaverdell (lead) ...\u00ab       14\nSally. Beaverdell  (lead)          492\nThelma,   Merritt    (letfd)      ]\nWellington,   Beaverdell\n(lead)            84\nYankee Girl, Grand Forks\n(dry)     -,       11\nSlocan -Ainsworth'Lsrdsau\nAlamo, Alamo  (lead)           2o\nAlpha,   Sllverton   (lead)           tl\nBlack Colt, Sandon (lead) .. 26\nBlack Colt, Sandon (milling) . 188\nBlue Bell, Ulondel (milling) .. 18,498\nBosun, New Denver (milling) . 189\nRoSun. New Denver (sine) ... 82\nCanadian Group, Sandon (lead) 80\nCharleston,   Retallack   (zinc)    ,        81\nColonial,   Sandon   (lead)            86\nColonial, Sandon  (milling)  ....        70\nCork-Province, Zwicky\n(milling)      v    2,621\nStem winder,   Kimberley\n(milling)  14,194\nW. L. Ben, Louis Creak  (milling      IM\nOther   District,\nAtlm, Atlln  (lead)    \u201e. 106\nDuthie,  Smlthers  (lead)     1,248\nDuthie,   Smlthers  (milling)   ... 1.001\nDuthie,   Smlthers   (dry)     M\nDunwell, Stewart (milling)  .... 10\nBsperansa, Alice Arm (lead) .. 8\nHomestake,   Louis   Creek\n(milling)    ....\"  1,146\nPorter Idaho, Stewart (lead) .. 48\nStewart, Stewart  (lead)     46\nRenfrew, Penticton  (lead)   .... 28\nTredway, Doreen  (dry)     38\nWashington\nKnob Hill, Republic (dry)   .... 866\nlast Chance,  Republic   (dry)   . 1,916\nLone   Pine,  Republic   (dry).... 180\nOld Hickory, Republic (dry)  .. 88\nSliver Star,  Chopaka  (lead)   .. 1\nSubmarine; Oroville  (dry)   \u2014 4\nTrevltt,   Republic   (dry)     1,824\nQullp,   Republic   (dry)     4,123\nQullp, Republic  (lead)     117\nOverentertainment of\nDelegates Feared by\nMorning fast, London\nLONDON, Oct. W.\u2014Social invitations have been showered on the\ndelegates. There are enough invitation* to luncheons, dinners and receptions, to take all the delegates'\ntime If a 1 were accepted. The Morn-\nlnp Poet utter* a warning  in Beawm.\n\"Veterans of many oratorial field\nbattles,\" the Post whimsically adds,\nsurvivors of thousands Of banquets,\nthey nwy well survey with some\nlittle sinking of heart, the gilt edged\narray of invitations to lunches, dinners and receptions, to ceremonious\nmeetings at week-ends, opening\nbazaars and awarding prices,' They\nwill behold tr.e glories of England\nwhich   will   demonstrate   the   natural\nTotal     ,. 452,693\nTWO INSTANTLY KILLED\nWHEN TRAIN HITS CAR\nMONTREAL* Oct. 19.\u2014Dr. Hon-\norlus Aubrey, 32, and Dr. Eeckert,\nfield Inspectors of the department\nof agriculture, were instantly killed\ntoday when the automobile In which\nthey were riding was struck by a\nO. P. R. flyer at St. Emnmnual,\nhear St CleV Que., 34' miles from\nhere. Both were residents of Montreal.\nForesees Added Growth\nin United Church\ndesire of the English\u2014or should we\nsay British\u2014to be Jolly hospitable\nto her guests.\"\nThe Post asks. \"Would it not be\nkinder If the nation would leave\nthem to what seclusion they may\ngather  in   the   intervals?\"\nArt Salesman Facet\nCharge Stealing Statue\nBRANDON, Oct. 19!\u2014With the arrest here today of C. 8. Thompson,\naa art salesman from 'Toronto, police\nhave traced a v:t tumble Chinese statute alleged to have been stolen from\nK. Sjoden\u201ea miner of Verwood, Sask.,\ntwo months ago. The statute said\nt-o he an ancient Buddha, was valued\nat   *1000. \u25a0\nThompson will be taken to Saskatchewan to face the charge of theft.\nMONTREAL BOY DIES\nFROM HYDROPHOBIA\nMONTREAL, Oct. 18,'\u2014 Boger\nPlnessonnault, six years of age, oT\nL'Ange Gariene De RouvJIle, Que, IP\ndead, a victim of hydrophobia, cause*\nby a bite from a mad dog on October\n2. This bi the first death triced t#>\nthe epidemic or rabies among dog|i\nwhich has been' prevalent tn Monti\nreal   and   district  for  several  montht,\nUNIVERSITY PROFESSOR1\nIS DEAD AT SEATTLE\nSEATTLE, Wash., Oct. 19.\u2014BdwiH\nJ. Saunders, assistant professor p\u00a3\ngeology In the tTnlversity of Wash*-\nIngton, died yesterday. He was grad*\nuatcd   from   Toronto   university.\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 19. \u2014 A new\nstrength and vigor ,wlll come to the\nUnited church as a direct result of\nunion In the opinion of Dr. James\nSfodicotf, moderator of the United\nflhurch, who addressed the opening\nsession   of  Manitoba conference.\nDr. Endlcott forsaw ra tremendous\nnerease In membership, and the opportunity for wider missionary effort\nwith the influx of new settlers in\nthe years to come. Any immigration\nprogranl on the part of the Dominion\n\u2022lovernment which excluded the church\nwould not welcome, he asserted.\ntop\n_ Winchester\n'^km^''   ^md Blended Cigarette\nSave these liucrta\u2014the, art\nvaluable In exchange for pack.\not high B^ade playing c.rda. etc.\nCork Province, zwicky (zinc)\nDaybreak, Zwicky (lead) ...\nDaybreak. Zwicky (milling)\nEcho, Sllverton (milling) ...\nEnterprise, Enterprise (milling)      480\nGalena   Farm,   Sllverton\n(milling)     1,161\nHewitt,   Sllverton   (milling)   .. It\nHewitt,  Sllverton  (lead)     86\nLucky   Jim,   Zlncton   (milling). 15,235\nMcAllister,   Three   Forks\n(*y)       5,721\nMetallic,   Sllverton   (lead)     24\nMetals Recovery, Retallack\n(zinc)    .* i 494\nMetals Recovery, Retallack\n(milling)    .\u25a0 ' 31B\nMolly Hughes, Zlncton  (milling     II\nMonitor, Three Forks  (milling) leg\nMountain   Chief,   New\nDenver   (lead)  .    88\nMountain Chief, New\nDenver    (milling)      .,... 128\nOttawa, Slocan City (dry)  .... If\nQueen Bess, Alamo (lead) .... 41\nRambler, Cariboo, Rambler\n(milling)       18\nRambler,   Rambler   (lead)   .... 86\nRambler,  Rambler   (mtlllng)   .. ltl\nRosebery-Surprlse, New Denver.\n(lead)        Tl\nRosebery-Surprlse, New Denver\n(milling)     785\nRuth Hope, Sandon  (milling) 878\nRuth Hope, Sandon (lead) .... II\nSilver Hoard, Alnsworth (lead) 59\nSilversmith, Sandon (lead)    2,338\nSilversmith,  Sandon   (zinc)   ... 1,775\nSilversmith, Sandon (lead concentrates)    '.  lit,\nSilversmith, Sandon (zinc concentrates)  ii\nStandard, Sllverton  (lead)   .... 11\nStandard, Sllverton  (zinc)   .... 88\nSovereign,   Alamo   (milling)   ... 35\nSurprize, Howser (copper)  .... 6\nSurprise,  Sandon   (lead)     31\nSurprise,  Sandon   (milling)   ... 108\nTariff,  Alnsworth   (milling)   .. 188\nVictor. Sandon  (lead)     4%\nWhitewater, Retallack  (lead)   . 20\nWhitewater, Retallack\n(milling)     7,381\nWhitewater, Retallack (zinc)\nWonderful,  Alamo   (milling)\nEast Kootenay\nAurora,   Aldrldge    (milling)   ,\nRhode  Island.  Kamloops\n(milling)   \t\nParadise, Lake Windermere\n(lead)    \t\nI Simmons, Galloway (copper)  ..\n'Star, Windermere (lead) ....\u00ab,\n20\n62r,\n1,418\n11\n717\n1*\nt\nHie Nelson Daily News\nDISTRICT   WORLD,    SPORT    MARKETS\nNEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nHEWS\nThe Daily News Is Proud of the News Service Which It\nIs Supplying Its Readers\nCable and General News\nIt is proud of its Canadian Press leased wire service, which gives it every day, in\ncommon with the largest papers in Canada, a complete 15,000-word service of foreign, British, Canadian and British Columbia news.\nDistrict News\nIt is proud of its corps of correspondents who cover the news of Trail, of Cranbrook,\nof Rossland, of Fernie, of Grand Forks, of Greenwood, of Kaslo, of Creston\u2014of several\nscores of cities and towns and villages throughout the two Kootenays and the Boundary\n\u2014every day. ,\nThus do Daily News correspondents give the people of this district a news service !\nwhich they can get in no other way.   It costs money to bring in news from all over this\nwide district day after day by telegraph and telephone, but it pays.   It pays in the improved service to Daily News readers\u2014which brings more circulation, more advertising.\nSport News\n.The Daily News is proud of its sport page, which is one-of the best in British Columbia.\nMarkets Page\nThe Daily News is proud of its financinl, market and business news page, which it believes to be the best in the west.\n:\u25a0!.\nBright Features\nThe Daily News takes pride in its features. \"The Lighter Side,\" \"The Gumps,\" \"Jiggs\"' f\nand \"Aunt Het\" are read by more people on this continent than any other features which'\ncan be purchased.   They cost more money than others, but The Daily News' policy is to ''\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u00ab\ngive its readers the best. ,,. , - .';\u2022\u2022)\nWomen's Special Features\nIt believes its special women's features\u2014such as Laura Kirkman's Efficient Housekeeping, and Mothers and Their Babies, to be of unusual value to women readers.\nDr.* Barton's Health Article\ni\nEveryone recognizes the excellence of Dr. Barton's health column, which is one of the\nm\u00bbst regularly read columns of The Daily N ews.\nThen there is the daily serial, chosen alw ays for its strong human appeal and compelling interest.\nGet the Paper Daily\nTo obtain the full value of The Daily News, it is necessary to receive it every day.\nOrder it from your local agent, or send in a subscription direct. Delivered by carrier,\n25 cents a week.   By mail, outside Nelson, flO cents a month, $3 for six months.\nThe Daily News\n\"All THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\"\ni...m\n\u25a0H\n \t\n\u2014\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1926\nPage Seven\nNamed First Contender for Tunney's Title\nirp\nIN TIE III\n>ecide Extend Time and Have\nAnother Race; Bluenoae\nCaptain Quits\n*AYS BOAT. HAS \"SHOWN\nRACING SUPERIORITY\nialigonian Finishes 22 Minutes\nLater; Will Be Awarded Cup\n.   if Bluenose Withdrawn\nHALIFAX, N.8., Oct. 19.\u2014The Blue-\nioae again fullttd In today's race to\nlmch the championship of the Cane-\nIan fishing fleets, by her Inability\nfinish |he race within the time\nWilt of five hours, stipulated by her\nfcptatn, Angus Walters, as a condition\nf the contest. The champion defeated\ntic challenger, Haligonian, Capt. Moyie\nrouse, by 22 minutes 12 seconds on\n\\\\B 87-mlle course, but was unable to\nInlsh in  tbe time limit.\nAt the meeting of the sailing committee tn charge of th\u00ab series, held\nMight, lt was unanimously decided to\nXtend the time limit to six hours,\nnd to resail today's race tomorrow.\n\u25a0apt. Angua Walters of the Blusnose\nttended the meeting, and informed the\nammlttee that he would race.no more\npd was leaving for Lunenburg in tho\ndoming. Walters, while previously\nMisting on a flv\u00ab-ho0r time limit, con-\n\u2022nded thut he should be awarded the\n\u2022ries on tht^.. showing of his boat to\nlate. It \u25a0 Is anticipated that if he\nitlcks to his decision to sail home,\nIke Haligonian will be sailed arouna\nhe course and awarded the prize\nnotiey. \u2022\nlanitoba Golfer\nGets a 'Birdie'\nbut It's a Blackbird\nSPORTIT1S\nBy   JINKS\nThe fourth game of the world Berl;^, flayed at St. Louis and won by New Tork 10 to 5, was featured by three\nhome runs by \"Babe\" Huth of the Yankees. The photos shows Huth crossing tho home plate after knocking his\nfirst homer  off  the  first  ball  ln  th.;  first  Inning. |*  '    \u25a0\n-Outdoor rinks for kiddles, far\nup on dry land, that la what Nelson should provide thla coming\nwinter for its youngsters. A start\nwaa made last year? but the weatherman was not so kind. Plans\nshould be started now, ao that\nwhen the first cold spelt arrives.\nNelson will have several outdoor\nrinks for the tinier kiddles who are\ntaking their first skids on the\nsteel blades. There are adequate\ngrounds throughout the city for\nopen air rinks. Now is the time to\nget busy, not next January or\nFebruary.'\nWhat of the Gyro park on the\nbluff? If it could be suitably\narranged this spot, which pleased\nso many with their bathing suits\nall summer, could be made Into a\nnice winter playground for the\nchildren. What better spot for an\nopen air rink could be found than\na nice sheet of Ice over the swimming pool? There are also adequate places where toboggan slides\ncould be constructed at little expense.\nWith the advent of professional\ntenuis, much more Interest than\never   will   be   taken  In   the   game\nboth In the United States and\nCanada, Its following has Increased enormously In the pest few\nyeoYs. To add further interest to\nthe game the United States lawn\ntennis organisation haa had films\nmade of the preat players in action, and these are shown over the\ncountry. The latest film !t\u00bb that\nof Rene Lacoste of France, who\nrepeated H. L. Doherty's feat In\nbeing the only foreigner to win\nthe American title In 23 years.\nAccording to the authorities, Lactate's backhand and forehand\nstrokes are not only the utmost ln\ngrace, but the utmost in economy\nand strength.\nDealing with Susanna turning\nprofessional, It is interesting to\nnote that there are but four women professionals in the \"ancient\"\ngame, golf. Mrs. Harry Healey Is\nconnected with the Lincoln Park\nOolf club ln Chicago. Mrs. Bob\nMacDonald aids her husband, and\ntogether they are known as the\nlongest drivers in the world is\nconducting an indoor golf school.\nMrs. J. Harrison of Cleveland and\nMrs. A. a Huspel of New York,\nformerly Mrs, Dunn Webb of Los\nAngeles, have been teaching golf\nfor 10 years.\nSWUKET GETS\nFIRST CHANCE\nAMTIlEf\nAthletic Commission Recognizes\nChallenge;  Wilis  Suspended for Fouling\n;.(\nEMERSON,   Man.,   Oct.   19.   \u2014   A.   D\ntcher    customs   officer   at   Emer-sim\nmsm     \u25a0\u00ab,     \"\"\"iviiid     uiiiici      ,<i      i.iiii i.mh.\ndan.,  had an  unusual  experience  while\n,ir\n\u00bbying  a  gunie  of  gulf  on   the   local\nInks  recently.\nAs he placed his ball on the tee he\nremarked Jocularly to his companion\n\" flock of blackbirds ro.'e Into the\n\"Watch me get one.\"\nTo his surprise he drove the ball\n.bout 10 yards, and struck \"one of the\nilrds under the win?, killing It Intently. The bloodstained ball and\nhe bird arc on exhibition in the club\nteuse.\nle Got a\nBirdie and\nKilled One, Too\nON* CROWN MORE\nOR LKSS IS NOTHING\n1 IN YOUR LIFE, POPPY!\nBY   AL   DEMAREE\nFormer   Pitcher   Nik*   York   Gianta)\nThe freakiest golf shot I ever saw,\"\nlys <Selorge Von Elm, the brilliant\noung golfer who spoiled Bobby\nones' dream of winning three con-\nscutive National Amateur champion-\nHips und also tying Chick Evans'\niat of winning both the .National\n!pen   and  Amateur  tournaments  the\njne year,  \"happened  one  afternoon\nhen  I   was  standing  near  the   first\nI\n\"A player coming up the fairway,\nitched for the green but played his\nfill   with    much   more   power   than\nas necessary, so that it appeared\neund for rough territory at the rear\nthe   green,   with   a   recovery   shot\n*er a trap necessary to get back to\ne green.\n\"However, a robin flew over just\nt the right moment. The ball hit\nnd killed the bird and dropped dead\no  (eet  from  the  cup.\n\"The man sank his putt for a\nlrdle   three.\"\nSCOTCH'\nWHISKY\n\\resis1ibki\nThla advartinmant la not pub-\n\u25a0had ar dliplayad by tha Liquor\noard or tha Government of Brltlah\nalumbia.\nCOIF CHAMPION\nFoar Mil\/ion See\nTwenty-three World\nSeries Contests\n1903 -\n1905 .\n1906 .\n1907 .\n1908\n1909\n1910\n1911\n1912\nPraise for Von Elm and Sorrow\nfor Jones, Who Made Hit\nin British Play\nLONDON, Oct. 19.\u2014'There waa\nIn mentation at St. Andrews when\nthe news came through that R. T.\nJonex had failed to win the amateur\nchampionship of the United States.\"\nsays A. C. M. Croome in the London\nPost. \"A dinner had been arranged to ctlebrate his victory, because, although he entered from the\nAtlanta club, Georgia, he is a recently   elected   and   highly   esteemed   19U\nnumber   of   the   Royal   and   Ancient   1914         4\nOolf club of St. Andrews In the King-   1915         5\ndom of Fife.    His success might have   '\u2022'*      J\nbeen   in   some   sort   reckoned   as   a   Jqjl         S\ntriumph  for  British  golf,  and a set-   ,,{9         ;\noff to American victories in our open   1920 '\"!\":'.\"!   7\nund amateur championships. 11921         8\n\"If   our   friend    Babby   has   been   1922         5\nbeaten,  however,  it  Is Some consola-   1|*23         6\ntion  to   know   that   his  conqueror  is   i??-     '\nthe  man   whom   we   at  St.   Andrews   Ii(26 7\nconsidered to be the second best golfer of the American team, which we\nsaw maintuin posseaaloVi of the Walker cup In the matcli phtyed over the\no'.d course. It was not without some\nsearchings of heart that We placed\nVon Elm in front of Oulmet, who,\nlike Jones, Is eligible to play for the\nKing William IV medal. Oulmet Is\na polished artist, and he plays the\nholes on the old course in the right\nmanner and with properly affectionate respect. But Von Elm Is\nthe younger and stronger man, nor\nis he conspicuously Inferior In the\nmanipulation of clubs which are required for playing the small, heavy\nballs now  in  general use.\n\"There Is this to be said: If Jones\nhad won, besides our open championship and the American open\nchampionship, the American amateur championship, he might have\nbeen bored by success and retired\nmore or less completely from competitive golf. Now that he has still\na world or two to conquer, we may\nhope to welcome him as our guest\non future occasions. It would be\nquite dreadful to know that we must\ncross the Atlantic ln order to see\nhim golf and otherwise to renew\nassociation  with  him.\"\nThe 23 world's series that have\nbeen -played since 1993 have drawn\nan attendance of'4.084,641 and the\nreeeipts for all the games played\ntotal 310,820,312. In all 141 games\nhave been played, this including the\ngames. The following table shows\nthe number of games played in each\nnerii's, the total attendance for each\nseries and the gate receipts:\nYear       tlaines    Attendance        Receipts\n100,429    *\n91,723\n99,845\n78,068\n62,232\n145,296\n124,222\n179,852\n252,037\n151,000\n111,009\n143,351\n162,859\n186,664\n128,483\n236,928\n178,737\n269,976\n185,947   .\n301,450\n283,665\n282 848\n328,051\n50,000.00\n68,435.00\n101,560.00\n101,728.50\n94,975.50\n188,302.50\n173,980.00\n342.164.50\n490 449.00\n325.980.00\n225.739.00\n320,301.50\n385,590.00\n425,878.00\n179,619.00\n722,414.00\n564,800.00\n900,233.00\n605,475.00\n1,063,815.00\n1,093.104.00\n1,182,854.00\n1,207,864.00\nTotal-Ill    4.S84.641     JIO.820,312.1\nMORGAN BEATS\nE\nReady  for  Bout   With   Foley,\nVancouver   Boy;   Two\nPounds Difference\nMONTKBAL Oct V.*. With the exceptor, of the naming of the ret* res,\narrangements have been completed\nfor the title bout between Leo Roy,\nMontreal. Canadian featherweight\nchaiTi;>Ion, and Vic Foley of Vancouver, here tomorrow night. The choice\nof referee will take plac; tomorrow\nmorning.\nFollowing his workout today, Roy\nstated he would maku the featherweight limit of 126 pounds. Foley\nwill  enter the  ring at around 124.\nInjured Right Eye Ends Bout\nin  Ninth;   Manitoban\nHad the Edge\nPORTLAND Ore., Oct. 19. \u2014 Harry\nDillon of Winnipeg scored a technical\nknockout over Russell Dockstader of\nPort Haney, B.C., here tonight when\nDockstader walked to hie corner ln\nthe early part of the ninth round and\nrefused to continue the bout. An Injured right eye was given aa the\ncause  for Dockstader quitting the- ring.\nUntil the ninth round the Manitoba\nbattler had a decided edge in the\nfighting, winning every round but the\nfourth and seventh.\nBritish Bantam\nDefeats Mexican\nin New York Ring\nNEW YORK, Oct. 19. \u2014 Eddie Bol-\nduc, British bantamweight, won a decisive six-round verdict over San San-\nTDHIS TITLE\nDundee's  Wrist Broken;  Uses\nLeft From Second On;\n14,000 Fans Out\nBAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 19. \u2014 Tod\nMorgan <>\/ Seattlf successfully defended Ills Junior lightweight title here\ntonight when he easily defeated Johnny\nDundee In New York In 10 rounds.\nDundee used his left almost intirely\nfrom the second round on and took\nu hard beating from the youthful title-\nholder. Handlers of the boxer said\nDundee suffered a broken right wrist\nIn  the  second  round.\nDundee chased Morgan around the\nring at the opening of the fourth,\nfinally landing a left to the face.\nMorgan landed a right to the body.\nDundee went Into a. clinch after an exchange of leftB. Dundee came out Of\nth'' fifth round bleeding from a series\nnf rights and lefts to the Jaw. Morgan's left beat a tattoo on' the challenger's face at the opening of the\nsixth, forcing Dundee into frequent\nclinches.\nKe*l   Hltttng\nDundee landed three lefts to the\nbody In the seventh after absorbing\ntwo rights to the Jaw. Morgan chased\nDundee around the ring In the eighth\nafter applying four lefts lo the face\nand a  right  to  the  body.\nDundee was retreating before a two-\nhanded attack as the round ended.\nMorgan landed almost at will In the\nninth, rocking Dundee's bead .with\nrights  and   lefts.\nMorgan climbed into the ring a\n2H-to-l favorite to retain bis Junior\nlightweight title In the 10-round bout\nwith Johnny Dundee of New York.\nThere was  a  crowd  of  14,000.\nTITLE MIT\nEnglish Critic Says Should Be\nLonger Bouts; Dempsey\nSquarely Beaten\nLONDON, Oct. 19.\u2014Ten-round\nring battles for championships are\nunsatisfactory, but, fortunately for\nthe .sport, that objection has little\npoint so far ns the recent content\nfor the world's mavywelght- title\nbetween Jack Dempsey^tar* *)0\u00abr,fe\nTunney. This is the opinion expressed by the boxing correspondent\nof the London Times. \"There have\nbeen some\" plausible enough explanations of a staggering, complete\ndef'ut says the writer, \"but they all\nsimmer down to this; that Dempsey's\npunishing \u00bbtyl\u00bb of fighting, overwhelming In Its intensity white he\nwas actively engaged as a fighter\nnot -merely a performer training to\nkeep himself outwardly fit\u2014failed\nhopelessly against a younger man\nof the true championship class.and\nspirit, who could* box and fight,\nwhose left stops were well-timed\npunches, not pushes; whose right\ncould hurt, whose mind could concentrate as furiously aa Dempsey's\nonce could do and so creafca his own\natmosphere.\nTunney   Was  Good\n\"No wonder, then, that the Dempsey so many English sportsmen discovered to be the right sor^of man\nfor bis fighting life readHy hdmltted\nat the end of 10 rounds, not one of\nwhich he had won, that there was a\nnew and worthy champion. Although Dempsey was not the old\nDempsey, his failure must not all\nbe attributed to worry and lack of\ntraining und the difference Of age\u2014\nno more than three yeart. Tutmey's\ndefence was brilliantly safe, but it\nnever became merely passive. His\ncountering was cool and Severe\u2014\ncounterfighting well done, after the\nmanner of Peter Jackson and Jack\nJohnson,   l\u00bb  the   most  severe  of all.\n\"The defeat of the champion\nboxer of his day has \u00bb,lways been an\nen thralling event In the sporting\n.world, and, If one could spy and\neavesdrop sufficiently, there is little\ndoubt that millions of unlikely and\ntiuiwartil'y indifferent people outside\nthat world would be discovered reading or discussing the downfall of\nthe great oms of the prise ring.\nThere n something so intensely personal and poignant in the battering\nto defeat of the man whose physique\nund fists and fighting spirit had\nstood for invincibility that even\nthose who shrink from erode violence in any form fall to wondering\nhow it came about\u2014and ao to read,\nand finally,  no doubt, to deplore.\nCunudiun Billiard\nPlayer Claims New\nHigh Run Record\n\"WINNIPKQ, Man.. Oct. 19. \u2014 Jim\nOleeson, one of Winnipeg's foremoBt\nbilllardlsts, and at one time professional champion of Manitoba, claims\nto have established a Canadian record\nfor a high break In a match here recently with C. Horton of this city.\nHe complied the excellent count of\n79. Of this total 402 were made off\nthe red ball. Mr, Gleeson fell down\nfinally  on  a  long  losing  Jenny.\nFrance Has Golf\nCourse Only for\nMillionaire Players\nThe Prince -of Wales may have a\nvilla near Blarrlts-Anglet, the new millionaires' golf course between Biarritz\nand Bayonne. It is In the heart of\nthe wealthiest district in Prance, for\nthe promoters of the club are selling\nproperty   only   to   millionaires\nThe golf course, when finished, will\nbe one of the show places of Prance.\nMore than 25,000,090 francs already\nhas been  eipended.    A piCe  forest wsi\nche.{  of  Mexico   here   tonight.    Sanchei    uprooted  and   200.000   tons  of soil  and\nweighed 11*H  and Bolduc  120V 3\u00b0d have been laid.\nON TRECK TO ERST\nHockey Stars Leave to Assume\nProfessional Duties in New\nEastern Circuit\nWillie Hoppe Will\nMeet Balhline Chump\nEarly Next January\nNEW YORK. Oct. 19.\u2014The challenge match for the world's 18.2\nbalk line championship between Eric\nHagenlacher, champion, and Willie\nHoppe, challenger, will be played ln\nNew Tork sometime between Jan,\n7 and 16, It was announced yesterday following a meeting between the\nplayers and tbe billiard officials.\nThe match will be at 1600 points,\nplayed on three nights In blocks of\n600 points each. Negotiations have\nbeen started to secure either the\nPennsylvania or Astor hotel for the\nscene of the title cue clash. The\noriginal date for the match had been\ntentatively set.for  December.\nRichard Granted\nLicence for Race\nTroth in Mexico\nSIX TEAMS IN\nNEW    YORK,    Oct.\nMate  athletic   rmmnliifciii   tosMj\n\"placed on file\/' the rtwUmm <jf '\nJack    Sharkey,    Burton    heavyweight  and conqueror of H-erry\nWills, for a title match wmTthe'\nnew champion, Gene Tunney. It\nfe the fInst challenge directed at\nTunney since the latter won the '\nUtle from Jack Dempsey.\nWills was snapanaed for **\u25a0\ndays by the commission for foal-\ninff Sharker ln their match at\nKbbets Field a few day* ago,\nthis discipline being In cob-\nformitr with the boxing boaroTa\nrule*.\nTIME1 MORE\nWrite Trail Regarding Play for\nThe Daily News Intercity Cup\nNUEVO LAREDO, Mex\u201e Oct. 19.\u2014\nThe Mexican government has granted a concession to Tex Rlckard and\nassociates, including the Madison\nSquare Garden association of New\nYork, for the establishment of a racing and general sporting resort on\nthe outskirts of Nuevo Laredo, It\nwas stated here yesterday. It Is\nplanned to start construction work\nabout November 1, and to have the\nrace track ready for opening early In\nJanuary.\nSix teams have entered In the Nelson Rowling association tournament,\nand the final date of entry has heen\nset back to next Tuesday to allow\nmore organizations to get In the tourney. Those already entered as C.P.R.,\nGyros, Merchants, Elks, Travelers and\nCanadian Legion,\nAt a meeting of the executive of\nthe association last night Leo McKinnon, secretary, waa instructed to\ncommunicate with Trail to arrange\na meeting of the executives of the\nNelson association and the Trail Memorial Hall Bowling' club to make arrangements for play for The Daily\nNews district cup.\nAll bowlers not at present on teams\nand who wish to get Into the fray\nare asked to give their names either\nto J. B. Gray or to E. L. Buchanan,\nIn order that they may be assigned\nto teams for the tournament.\nSPORTSMEN FUR\nEOR BOXING SPORT\nAttempt    to    Improve    Laws\nMight Lead to Repeal\nby Legislature\nDETROIT, Oct. 19.\u2014Any attempt\nto tamper with or Improve the lawn\ngoverning boxing In the several\nstates might result in the repeal of\nsome of the laws that now permit\nthis sport, the National Boxing association was told by commissioners attending the convention which closed\ntoday.\nCommissioners generally expressed\nthemselves as opposed to seeking\namendments of the boxing regulations. Should a boxing commission\ngo before the legislatures urging\nsome new law it would serve only to\nbring boxing to the legislative forefront arousing strong opposition, they\nasserted. Allen W. Baehr, Cincinnati, was elected president, succeeding L. A. Trobe Cogswell of Baltimore, who was elected secretary.\nVANCOUVER WELCOMES\nAUSSIE CRICKETERS\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19.\u2014Vancouver\ncitizens, headed by Mayor L. '\u00a3>,\nTaylor and members of the city\ncouncil turned out ln force at the\nCanadian Pacific depot this morning\nand heartily cheered the famous\nAustralian cricketers as they arrived\nhere on the last lap of their journey\nhome.\nEDMONTON, Oct. 19,\u2014Edmonton\nhockey stare who will play with National Hockey league teams this winter, are beginning to flit to the east.\nJohnny MacKinnon, who played with\nthe champion Minneapolis team ln the.\nCentral league last year, left last\nnight for Pittsburgh where ho will\nplay  this winter.\nEddte Shore of Edmonton Eskimos, leaves this week for Boston-\nwhere he will perform with Ros*'\naggregation. L. Goldsworthy <fr\nlast year's Eskimos has aligned to\nplay with the New York Rangers.\nGerman Runner Turn*\nDoom Fifty Thousand\nOffer to Turn Pro\n\u25a0inxur oot. is. \u2014 Dr. <H*o\nPtltser, ersok German middle\ndiitano* imnir, has tamed down\noffers totaling \u00bb50,000 sa American toor, in prtfrreaoe to remaining an amateur sad going to work\nst a salary of ITS a month ss\ntract itr cf e \u2022onomlcs sad \u25a0!\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nina instmetor la tha pubUo\nschools of Wlckersaorf, ThnrlngUb\nEijN the haunts of the lordly bull-moose\nsi or in the comfort of a fireside chair,\n\u25a0\u25a0 the delicate flavour and great age of\ni'BLACK & WHITE\" impart that \"tone\"\nand quiet recuperative effect so necessary\nafter an exhausting day.\n\"BLACK ft WHITE\" is bottled in our own\nwarehouses in Scotland, and its unsurpassed quality\nis uniform the world over.\n\"Quality Tells\"\n'Jamcs Buchanan  & Co.. Ltd.   Glasgow & London\n\"BLACK & WHITE\"\nSCOTCH WHISKY\n\u00ab\nCTUf UmtiMmrat i, \u00abot puMisM or esmssje. br th. IMeer Cootrol Itaari \u00abt br tht Qeyereesms. ot sseHist OhmMfc*\nHaf\nI\n Page Eight\nTHB NELSON DAILY NEWS,   WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1926\nMINES CHAMBER\nComplainamtfi End   by Voting\nLaudatory .Resolution\non Its Work\n.SEVERAL HAD NOT\nPERUSED PETITION\nLangley Probe at Big Meeting\nProduces  Many\nLaughs\nStarting with all the gravity of a\ncourt of law, the audience of 40 to 45\nprospectors, mining men and business\nmen being Jurors the public Inquiry\nlaat night Into the conduct of the\nChamber of MWies of Eastern British\nColwabia acquired a light tone aa It\nproceeded, and as one and another of\nAha signers of the petition foi* an inquiry | admitted they had nothing\nagainst the chamber or Secretary J.\nW. Mulholland, hilarity fairly ruled.\n: In the end a resolution that amount*\ned to a ringing testimonial to tha\nworth of the chamber, waa adopted,\neven the framer of the resolution,\nWilliam Moore, voting for It, juat one\nciitlc, P. J. Sheran, standing to hla\ngtftii to the bitter and. Of the four\npetition signers present oat of 18,\nthree admitted to A. G. Langley, deputed by Hon. William Sloail to hold\nthe Investigation, that they had not\nread the petition. W. J. Richards,\nusually known as \"Bosun,\" caused a\nshout of laughter when he said he\nthought he was signing a petition for\na beer plebiscite.\nAlex. Lelth occupied the chair explaining the procedure to be followed,\nand asking frank comment from anyone with a complaint to make against\ntha conduct  of the  chamber.\nMr. Langley stated he waa making\nthe investigation at the request of the\nminister, ln oonseqaence of tho petition, for while the government assumed no responsibility for the conduct\nof the chamber, which was entirely\nupon the people of Nelson and the district the government had made a financial contribution which made it\ninterested ln seeing that the affairs\nof the institution were in competent\nhands.\nWlddow\u00bbon Beporta for Sxaonttr*\nE.   W.   Widdowson,   on   behalf   of   a\ncommittee   of   the   chamber   named   to\nassist  Mr.  Langley by a detailed  prl-\n\u25a0 vate investigation, reported going Into every aspect of Its business, including the balance sheet, all the letters aent out, snd tbe entire files,\nwithout finding anything to Justify\nthe vague charges in tbe petition. The\ncharge of a clique felng tn control.\nhe answered by reading the names of\nthe executive, about 40 of the best\nnames in Nelson and the Kootenay.\nFailure to have a permanent secretary\nwaa due to lack of funds. Thia alao,\nexplained the third criticism of the\npetition, which related to George Horstead having his office ln the chamber's room. This was to enable the\noffice to be kept open during the winter Mr, Horstead paying for Janitor,\nlight and telephone. J. W. Mulholland, acting secretary^ received no salary, but In June and July, when he\nworked particularly hard and to splendid effect, he was given two honorariums or gifts of $125 each \u2014 lesa\nthan 825 per month for the year. The\nallegation that Mr. MulhoHand sidetracked inquiries for specific properties and led visitors toward properties he or bis friends were Interested\nin, Mr. Widdowson said he would leave\nto  Mr. Mulholland  to deal with.\nMr. Langley, expressing the wish\nthat the petitioners, before proceeding\nto that length, had called a meeting\nto discuss  their complaints,  called for\n.each of the 12 in turn, to state his\ngrounds.\nPetition Reiner Maard\nThe prime mover, and the framer of\nthe document, Mr. Moore, stated he\nhad got the petition up on' the request\nof other prospectors after their complaints   to  President' C.  D.   Blackwood\nI had been ignored. The statements of\nthree prospectors who had been present twice in the chamber when only\nCultus creek was mentioned to inquirers   led   him   to   \"rubberneck\"   around,\n| with   the   result   that 'he   followed   a\n* stranger in, to have the same thing\noccur,   the   visitor,   a   Mr.   Wolfle   of\n* Spokane, and Mr. Mulholland being in\ndeep    conversation   on    the    Iva    Fern.\n, Mr.   Mulholland's  Cultus creek  proper-\n* ty,   Mr.   Mulholland   saying   he   wanted\nI $30,000.\n\" Mr.  Moore  said  he  had both  Nelson\nand Slocan properties listed that should\n.have    been    mentioned.      He    said    80\nprospectors   had   sent   in   their   names\n, to be attached to the petition, but only*\nthe first 18 were ln time.    Major R   K.\n. Waite     Jim    Reed    and    Mr.    Murphy\n. could   all   testify   that   all   they   could\nhear   about   fhe   chamber  .was   Cultus\ncreek and  the Lardeau.\nIn answer to thia criticism   Mr. Mu)-'\n* holland told Mr. Langley that the Spokane    man    had    been    trying    for    18\n\u25a0 .months   to  deal  with  him  on   the  Iva\n\u25a0 Fern, and came to Nelson for no other\npurpose than to get lt. He did not\ngat It, however as his terms were\nnot satisfactory.' As to Major Waite\nand   the   others    mentioned,    he    could\n. not   recall   any   of   them   ever   having\n' been In the chamber.\n\u00abb*ran and Ottawa Mays\nMr. Sheran when called on by Mr.\n.Langley told of being in a room at\nthe Hume with Neal Bertrandais and\n' T, E. Sanderson of Portland when Mr.\nMulholland present.\/! himself and\nI showed maps of the Ottawa mine. He\n.wanted to know what Mr. Mulholland*\nduty waa in this matter aa regarded\nrthe chamber of mines,\n>\u2022 Mr. Mulholland's answer wit that\njthree years ago he spent 12700 in\n^Cold cash to send a man to England.\nincidental to which he collected de-\n; tailed data on nine properties one of\n. which was the Ottawa. When Mr.\n-. Bertrandais visited the chamber he\nr looked over many ore samples ' and\niwas attracted by some very high-grade\n; ones from the Ottawa. He told the\n-Portland man that the Ottawa was un-\nfdar bond, but that an adjoining property, the Anna, was very promising,\n-and was on the market. He agreed to\n.go with Mr. Bertrandais to tha owner\n\"and help him effect a deal, telling Jilm\n-no commission would be charged him\n-It it went through. He turned over to\n\"iblm all hla own personal information\nfree. One month ago the deal was\n\u25a0made   and a cash payment made.\nAsked by I. G. Nelson if he bad aver\nrendered any assistance to any of the\n: eompfainsnts Mr. Holland declared\n*\u00bbd     done     everything     In     bis\npower to assist any of them who came\nto the chamber for help.\nIn this connection he said Mr. Moore\nhimself had came In, and they went\nthrough th* files of inquiries together,\nand then he spent five Hours typing\niettters for Mr. Moore to a big man\nin San Francisco.\nGeorge  Horsted  confirmed   this.\nIra Wam Deal Wat lfan\u00bb|1aanVg\nMr. Moore produced a clipping from\nTbe Dally New* of a deal ** the Iva\nFern, which he handed to Mr. Lang-\nlay to show how Mr. Mulholland lookad\nafter  himself.\nBefore Mr. Langley could aak Mr.\nMulholland to answer Roy Hunter\njumped up to state that Percy Hough-\nton brought hi the investor la question, and put through ,the deal himself.\nTo this Mr. Widdowson added lhat\nMr. Houghton brought Mr. Place In\nspecifically to deal on the Aspen property. They bad a conference in hla\nassay office, and among properties\nmentioned were the Iva Fern and some\nadjoining properties. He himself\nlooked up the government reports for\nthem, and subsequently a deal was\nmade with  Mr. Houghton.\n\"Mr. Plate got options on quite a\naumner of properties, some through\nthe chamber of mines, some through\nMr Houghton and some through myself,\" said Mr. Widdowson, who said\nthe district should be congratulated on\nauch nn outfit coming ln.\nMr Mulholland added that payments\nwere made to fh* Royal bank, to turn\naver to Mr. Houghton.\nThe third complainant present, Mr.\nRichards asked by Mr. Langley what\nhis complaint waa, said he had nothing\nagainst either the chamber or Mr.\nMulholland, but signed the petition\nunder the impression It waa for a\nbeer plebiscite.\n\"I had beer in sight, and waa after\nit,\" he explained, to the merriment of\nthe crowd, waa long since had been\nbroadly smiling.\n*3osun\" added that In Mr. Mulholland's place he would sell his own\nproperties first, \"damn- quick,\" and\ntherefore he favored having a secretary who was not personally interested  in  properties.\nMgnsd   fc>  Kelp  Tvism&m\nMr. McDaniel, the last signer available   declared he had \"no great hick.\"\n\"I signed it because one man wanted\nto get out and the other wanted to get\nhim ont,\" he explained stating that\nMr. Mulholland had asked hlra if he\ncanld suggest eemeone to take the Job\nover. Directly afterward he ran into\nMr. Moore with the petition, and signed\nit, thus as he supposed, doing a good\nturn for both men. (Roars of laughter.)\nMr. Moore rose and charged Mr McDaniel with hiding something, reminding him of his ore that he had complained about.\nThe veteran prospector explained\nthat was a very minor matter. He and\nMr. Dill had gone up to the Mountain\nChief and brought down 43 pounds\nof ore for the mining exhibit. Later\nthey went to the chamber to get a\nsample of it, but could not find it,\nthough Mr. Horstead helped them\nsearch the place, Including the cellar.\nMr. Mulholland, on nis return found\nit for them.\nHe admitted he had not read the\npetition.\nLaiudey Sees Notlring Serious\nMr. Langley at this Btage summed\nup his impressions to date, stating\nthat so far, after hearing both sides,\nhe could not see that any evidence\nhad been submitted, of a serious\nnature. He could not see anything\nwrong In taking maps out of the\noffice to show a man, and if a man\ngave his time free to the chamber,\nhe could not see that he ought to\nbe penalized and not allowed to\ndeal with his own property, provided\nalways that he did not sidetrack\nothers, of which latter no proof\nhad been given.\nAt    this    stage,    Chairman    Lelth\nthrew the meeting open for remarks.\nThe Clique Charge\nRoy Hunter det-iared that the use\nof the word \"clique\" in the petition\nwas an unjustified reflection and attack on the integrity of the chamber's executive. He waa not satisfied with the explanations of the\ncomplainants, and demanded that\nthey Justify  that allegation.\n\"I for one  didn't know there was\nany association connected with fc*he\nchamber,\" declared Mr. Sheran. \"I\nthoufht It waa under Uie govern-1\nment.\"\nHoUp Pressed by Mr. Hunter to\nthen statt what he meant by signing it, Mr. Sheran as hotly retorted that he hadn't read it- and that\nhe  did   not   Imply   any   clique.\nMr. Hunter said he had spent\nmuch time and hundreds of dollars\nof his own money in connection\nWith th\u00a9 chamber, and he was entitled to an eanswer. He pointedly\nasked Mr. Moore if he had any evidence   of   a   clique.\nH. G. Joy\u2014Those who do the\nwork in any organization always find\nthemselvea  called  a clique. .\nThe charges having fallen down,\nMr. WWdowaion drew attention to\nsome of the chamber's jtonitlve accomplish meats. Instancing the late\nmining convention, the grpeatert ot\nits kind ever held in the Kootenay,\nwhich brought mining men and visitors from all directions, particularly\nfrom over the line, with the direct\nconsequence of mining deicls.\nMr. Sheran observed ttiat no one\nman had dune more than he had\ntoward  the  mining convention.\n,Mr. Nelson .pointed out that everything regarding tha convention was\nbandied openly, and that the financial statement, had been given publicity. Nothing respecting the chamber's operations had -ever been held\nback.\nChairman Lelth urged the meeting\nto {ake some positive action to express  its  views.\n.  Resolution OoHivtoatlH\nBrief \u2022 laudatory speeches were\nmade by C. C. Starr a.nd Dr. E. C.\nArthur, and they were deputed tu\ndraft a resolution, whic h was adopted as follows:\n\"Having listened to all the discussion that has taken place this evening, both for and against the Chamber of Mines of Eastern British Columbia, we believe thai the affair*\nof this institution are deserving of\npublic commendation for having kept\nthe intltutlon open under very adverse circumstances. We also think\nthat the affairs of the Institution\nhave been administered as well as i.s\npossible without greatly increased\nfinancial   support.\"\nWhile waiting for the motion t*>\n\u25a0be drafted, \"Bosun\" Richards delivered a pointed lecture on \"the muz-\nzlers,\" also calling those present\n\"chechaquos,\" who had never cut s\ntrail or \"done\"  10 feet of ground.\nHowever, when he saw Mr. Moore\nand everyone else apparently voting\nfor the motion, he joined the majority, George Matthews, ;i prospector, after ascertaining the voting\nwas not confined to meml>ers of tht\nchamber of mines, also associated\nhimself  with   fhe favorable  vote.\nMr. Sheran alone voted in the negative, explaining that he was not opposed to the ehamber of mines, but\nto the \"way it was run.\"\nLos Angeles Center\nfor National Open\nTennis Play Is Rumor\nclala of the recently constructed\nPalomar Tennis club of Cheviot\nHills admitted Utat Pyle had bean\ndickering for thja use of the club\ncourts,\nAt present Pyle i\u00bb seeking the\nsanction of the United State* Lawn\nTennis association, and if successful,\nplans this huge event for February.\nMary Browne, Suianne Lenglen, Harvey Snodrrass, Cincent Richards and\nHoward Kinsey, all members of the\ntraveling professional troupe of Pyle's\nare among the few pros expected* to\ntake part  _\nmenu is hurt\nCHICAGO,' Oct 1 H-Mrs. Irene\ni'astle Mclaughlin, former dancer, Injured white rtSlAg, when her horse\nfell and rolled, on her.\t\nDiplomat   Dead\nTOKYO   Oct tf.~-F.-kl Hiokl, member of the house of peers and former\ndiplomat died today.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nTend^m will be received by the undersigned until the ] 0th day \"\/November 1\u00ab\u00ab for the purchase of Lots\n4 and ' E Block T, Subdivision 6S-A,\nCity of Nelson, and the buildings situ-\n\" Tenders will also be received by the\nundersigned until \u00ab.\u00ab 10th day of November 1926 for the purchase of Lot\n6 Block 47, Subdivision 9S. City of\nNelson and the house situate thereon.\nFurther particulars as to this property can be got from the undersigned.\nThe highest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\nDATKD at Trait   B.C.. this 18th day\nof  October,  A.D.  1926.       MM.__\nD.   MacDONALD,\nSolicitor for the Estate of Leonard Gobey,  deceased (5383)\nLOS ANGELES,  Oct.   IP,\u2014Los  An- !\ngeles will be the scene of a $50.- |\n000 national open tennis tuiirnament, j\nthe first ever attempted In which\nboth amateurs and professionals will\ncompete, if Plana under way by C,\nC. Pyle, sport promoter, are successfully completed. This became known\nlate  yesterday   afternoon   when   nt'fi-\nPURBUANT to the Order of His\nHonour Judge J R. Brown made the\n16th day of September. A.D. 1926. In\nthe supreme Court of British Columbia\nIn divorce and Matrimonial causes No.\n79-B. 25-11-1925, between W, P. C.\nBaddeley, Petitioner, and D. M. Badde-\nley Respondent and H. L. Belcher, Co-\nItcspontient I will offer for sale at\nmy office in the Court House in the\nCity of Nelson, at the hour of twelve\no'clock noon on Thursday, the 21st day\nof October, the following property: All\nand singular that certain parcel or\ntract of land lying, situate and being\nIn Group One Kootenay District. Pro\\-\nfnce of British Columbia and more\nparticularly known and described as\nLot One (1) of Lot Pour Thousand\nThree Hundred and Eleven (4311),\nMap Seven Hundred and Forty-two\n(742). and Parcel One (1) Of Lot Six\nThousand Three Hundred and Two\n(6302), save and except that part\nthereof which hag been assigned the\nletter  \"A.\"\nTHE ONLY CHARGES appearing on\nthii Register against the said Lands\nare Judgments, entered In the above\nmentioned action for the sum of\n$5,000.00 and the' sum of $443.80 and\nregistered in the Land Registry Office\non the 26th day of May AD. 1926,\nand the 12th day of June, A.D. 1926,\nand numbered respectively 3706 and\n3712.\nTERMS of sale. Cash; Deed at purchaser's expense\nDATED at Nelson. British Columbia,\nthis 27th day of September   A.D.  1826.\nJ.   H.   DOYLE,\n(52C9) Sheriff of South Kootenay.\nThe Consolidated Miniflg & Smdtmg    ,\n. Company of Canada, Limited\nOffice  Smatting   and   Refining   Daji.rtmert\nTRAIL,   BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPirchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead-and Zhie Ore*.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC, TRAIL Q                                         a..\nCONDENSED 1ANT ADS ORDER FORM\nUse this blank on which to write your condensed ad., one word in each space.\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, 25c Bach 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 $_\n\u2022\n1\u20141 .\n\\\n.\n'\n1\n,1\nll  daairad,  re\u00bblaee  may  b. \u00abM\nto be mailad, enclose 10c antra to i\nst to  km  mumbeee at Th*  Daily  Heme  Office.    If\n\u2022oat erf postage and  allaw fiv.  word, antra far box  number.\nClassified Advertising Rates Furnished Rooms to Rent\nmm\nVsU Arid*\nClassified\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Frari\nLiTMtock\nMtthkvy\nFurmProdoco\nTimber ami Mints\nWan* and Classified Advertising \u2014\nOne and a half eenta a word per insertion. If paid in advance, 8c per word\npar week, or 22%c pe\u00bb word per month.\nTransient ads accepted only on a cash-\nin-advance basis. Each initial, figure,\ndollar sign, etc., counts as one -word.\nMinimum 25c, If charged 50c.\nLocal Heading Mottoes \u2014 Three cents\nper word each Insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals, 4c per word. Blackface capitals 6c a word. Twenty-five\nper cent discount if run daily without\nohange of copy for one month or more.\nWhere advertisement is set out in short\nlines the charge ia 16c a Una for Roman\ntype, 20c for blackface and 25c for\nblackface capitals. Minimum 860,' If\ncharged,  EOc\n-lets of Wedding Presents, and -floral Trlbates at i unwell\u2014Ten cents per\ncharged 60c.\nVarrlagM, Deaths and In Xamorlun\nCards\u2014Three cents per word, 60c minimum.\nBirth Votloe\u00bb\u2014Free.\nHale Help Wanted\nIF TOU WANT TO LEARN NEWSPAPER WORK, write to H. H. Cur-\nrle, Dally News. Tell him ln 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 applications constdored.           r4883)\nSituations Wanted Male\nSCANDINAVIAN, experienced rancher,\nwants situation, or would be interested ln taking over proposition on\nprofit-sharing basis. Box 5297.\nDally  News. (6297)\nHelp Wanted Male or Female\nWANTED \u2014- Experienced dish washer,\nmale or female.    Apply The Grill.\n.  .(6194)\nSituations Wanted Female\nWORKINO    HOUSEKEEPER    WANTS\nPOSITION\u2014Box   5243,   Dally   News.\n(6243)\nEXPERIENCED   CAMP   COOK\u2014Phone\n405Y.     Mrs.   Bourner.    (5221)\nFemale Help Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Nursemaid.    Apply  Room\n4. Hume Hotel. (6311)\nWANTED\u2014Young lady, part time assistant in Municipal Library. Apply\nFred   L.   Irwin,  (5302)\nSituations Vacant\nMAKE MONEY AT HOME\u2014Men and\nwomen can earn $1 to $2 an hour In\nspare time writing showcards. No\ncanvassing or soliciting. We instruct\nyou, and supply you with work.\nWrite today. The Menhennitt Com--\npany Limited 60 Dominion Building,\nToronto.  (6057)\nFor Rent\nKITCHEN AND DINING-ROOM, Sandon Hotel. Deposit against damages\nor losses.    V. Celant   Sandon, B.C.\n  ' (6309)\nMEMORIAL HALL available for meetings, dnnces and teas, afternoon and\nevenings.     Hugh  W.   Robertson.\n  (5143)\nPOR RENT\u2014Warehouse on track, with\nfrost proof basement.    T. R. Clarke.\n(5149)\nNICELT FURNISHED HOUSE\u2014Very\nreasonahle; all modern conveniences.\nPhone  374L2. _  (6273)\nA TWO-OR THREE-ROOMED FURNISHED HOUSEKEEPINO SUITE,\nto clean, quiet people only. 607\nSilica streot (5189)\nLARGE FURNISHED THlCEE-ROOM\nSUITE In basement of Kerr Apart.\nments.    Rent $35 per month.    (6163)\nSMALL FURNISHED COTTAGE FOR\nRENT\u2014Near Shipyard. Phono George\nClerihew, 475R1. (6162)\nFIVE-ROOMED FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED HOUSE \u2014 Apply 616\nCarbonate  street. (6141)\nFOR RENT\u2014In Annable Block. Single\nfurnished room. Alao two and three\nroom aultes. Hot and cold water,\nsteam heat  and light. (6066)\nTODAf\ntoucan uW brbKj.|\npiopla]pipu\nVlj\u00a9 Vd\u00ab\\t t? ^\nI AMWrVirWUMiVUlfVWUlrVWt [\nINO VANTAD\nCan domore\\\nI .fVWWrVWWVWwVWWWWfc I\nTWO-ROOMED FURNISHED SUITE\u2014\nMrs. Ryan   711 Silica. (5269)\nTWO-ROOM    STEAM-HEATBD    FURNISHED   SUITE\u2014Stirling   Hotel.\n(5264)\nFURNISHED      HOUSEKEEPING\nROOMS\u2014K. W. C. (6246)\nFURNISHED        HOUSEKEEPING\nROOMS\u2014614 Josephine street.  (5180)\nFURNISHED        HOUSEKEEPING\nROOMS\u2014Over  Poole Drug.       (5070)\nFURNISHED        HOUSEKEEPINO\nROOMS\u2014Apply Mack'a Billiard Hall.\n(5067)\nLive stock sells quickly when  lt la\nadvertised ln these columns.\nKerr Apartments\nSUITE\u2014Ashman's  Apartments.    (6069)\nMiscellaneous tor Sale\nHEAVY PLATE MIRROR\u2014Thirty by\nforty; solid walnut frame. Crannage\nBarber  Shop. (5304)\nRANGE   $40 \u2014 Curtains   portlers and\nother  things.    912   Silica  street.\n(62S5)\nFOR SALE  \u2014 One  Burroughs  adding\nmachine.    Apply Appleyard.      (5124)\nBARRELS, KEGS AND EMPTT sacks\u2014\nMacDonald  Jam  Company,  Nelson.\n  (6068)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically.    lJ\/ic a word.\nPIPE AND FITTINGS,\nBARBED WIRE, ETC.\n20,000 feet 114-Inch Pipe, Special, 10c per foot. Full Btock other\nsizes, also Fittings, at low prices.\nNew Galvanized Barbed Wire,\n14.00, Black J3.00, per spool. Roofing Felt. 1-ply $1.60, 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.  O. JUNK CO.\n186 Powell St.         Vancouver, B. C.\n ' (5069)\nPoultry and Eggs\n150  GOOD  CHICKENS    yearlings   and\npullets   cheap.    Box 24, Deer Park.\n(6282)\nLive stock  sells  quickly when  it is\nadvertised ln these columns.\nRoom and Board\nROOM  AND   BOARD  FOR   GENTLE-\nMAN.    507 Carbonate street.    (6041)\nFor Sale or Rent\nFurnished 6-roomed House, Observatory Street, $40.00 per month.\nUnfurnished 6-room House, Victoria Street, $30.00 per month.\nFor Sale\nNew 6-room Bungalow, first-\nclass condition; concrete foundation; with four lots, Kootenay\nStreet. Price $2500.00 with Terms.\nThis Is a gwod buy.\nb. w. DAWSON\nAnnable   Block\nPHONE 197 P.O. BOX 733\n(5265)\nMachinery for Sale\nFOR SALE \u2014 Portable engine end\nboiler; three-saw edger with saws;\nflfty-four-lnch inserted tooth law;\npulley, belting, chain, office safe,\ntypewriter, camp stove, dishes, blaek-\nBmlth outfit.    T. R, Clarke,       (6153)\nAgents Wanted\nTRAVELERS WANTED \u2014 To sell our\nside* line calendars for 1928 outside\nVancouver and the Island. A splendid opportunity to add big money to\nusual income. Samples light. Heady\nearly December, write immediately\nand state ground regularly covered.\nDominion Calendar Co., Truro, Can-\nada^  (5307)\nMAN OR WOMAN to travel and ap\npoint agents. Yearly guarantee\n$1092 (being $21 weekly average)\nand expenses. Experience unnecessary. For particulars write Winston\nCo._Toronto. (5139)\nAGENTS-ANd\"~i5iBTRIBUTOR8~FOR\nFASTEST SELLING SPECIALTY\u2014\nBuild permanent business with profitable repeater. Federal Rubber Limited. Wingham, Ont. (5810)\nCLASSIFIED adfi bring results quickly\nand economically.   \\%c a word.\nlive Stock for Sale\nSIXTY . HEAD OF CATTLE FOR\nSALE\u2014Forty head to freshen from\nNovember to the first of April. All\ngood, quiet stock; the balance yearlings and two-year-olds. R. D Ken-\nnedy.  Lemun  Creek.  B.C. '(5308)\nBoats and Automobiles\nCHEVROLET TOURING\u2014Like new\nbargain cash or terms to rellabl\nparty.    Box  52S8,  Dally  News.\n(5288\nLive stock sells quickly when lt Is ad\nvertlsed in these columns.\nLost and Found\nLOST\u2014Between Dominion Dairy an\nNelson one tire and rim. Please re\nturn Dominion Dairy.    Reward.\n(5274\n10 DOLLARS REWARD for return o\nPennsylvania balloon tire tube an\nrim. 30x4.95, lost between MetaUn\nand Nelson; Johnson Motor C<\ncover. Send C.O.D. R. O. Crockai\n728 Old National Bank, Spokane.,\n(5288\nLOST   \u2014\nglasaec.\nFriday,   pair   durk   rlmme\nPhone  S28L.                    (5289\nDogs   '\nFOR SALE\u2014Pure-bred collies, Mb]\nand white puppies. $7 and $10 eaci\nBrood bitches and stud dog, $2\neaoh. All from prise winning &tod\nKilmagar Kennels, Edgewood B.C.\n'   (528B\nLive stock  sells quickly  when  it 1\nadvertised In these columna.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRE CTORJi\nAccounting\nCXAmLBB r. Kmren\u2014\nAuditor, MaoDoMvia fan Balldlaf\nBo\u00bb 1191, Nelson. B.C.  (6DM\nTransfer\nATXmO* TBAasraa\u2014CoaL  Woo,\nand  baggage.     Phone   174.     (60W\nnTjLLTjjor   nusins\u2014Batnc*\nis  Coal and Wood.   Phone 106.      (6100\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSOW\u2014Below    market.    Carpeqtet,\nand  Joiner.    Hardwood, (6101\nChimney Cleaning\nws\nKWUI,    Official     CM\u00aba\u00bb\u00bb\n\u00ab\u2022\u00bb\u00bb'\u2022  (5101\nInsurance and Real Estatu\nRW.   DAWSOIT\u2014\nBaal  Batata,   Inanranoa,   Baatala\nAnnable Blk. P.O. Box. 783. Phona 11\n  <sioj;\nH   .*-Bn*a vnrmsxtnm, rt\nf.08 Ward Street. (51M\nMonuments\n1AMPBELX.     ft     BITCKIB.      MOM\n*\u25a0>**\u2022* CO.\u2014P O   Box l((. Nal\n-\" _a_C.    Telephone 104. (510*\nChiropractors\nT)*\u00ab \u00bb\u2022 *\u25a0 OBAT\u2014Chiropractor.    OUxa\n*f  blk.   Phones: Offioe, HE.   Res. till\nHours: 10-12 aad I to 6. Evenings\nappointment   Bat.   9:30   to   1]   m.\nFlorists\nrjBIMBLLB'S    SBBBHHOVSB    HBL\n\u00ab aon. Cat flowera and floral design\nW\u00bb \u25a0. Joxmo*\u2014\n\"     Phone J4\u00ab,    cut flowera.    Pottei\nHants and Floral Bmhl..,. \"ijj\nWholesale\nA    **0\u00bb0\u00bbAIa\u00bb  ft CO.\u2014\nH>rrt,I?\u00a31,;al\" Oro\"\"\" \"nd ProTliloi\nMerchants. Importere of Teas CottaJii\nSpices. Dr ed Fruits Stanle .\u00ab*liv*\nGroceries, l^lson HC    \"\"\" ,Dd *\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\nEngineers\n(jieea Bros., Bg,^\nI1MOJ. B.O.\nma  abd  bbh inmnt\nB.C,   Alberta   and   Bomlaloa\n iMand Burrarora (5110)\nH.\ns.   dawboh,    land   anrraroi.\nMining   aad   01*11   Bag-laser.\nKaslo, B.C. (51H\nAssayers\nEW. WDtOVMI, Box Alios  Net\naon, B.C. Standard weatern charge.\n,. (61121\nFuneral Directors\nD. J. ROBERTSON,\njr. \u00bb. s. ft a. *\n\u25a0anltarj rarlora and Beau Motor Beam\nFiona ass Dan Bight un.\nSERVICE\n __, _(GH3)\nStandard Vsnttu*\nCo. \u2014 Undertaker*,\nAuto Hearse. OD-to-\n\u00a9    date  chapel.     Beet\n}   services.    Prion\n-    reaaonable,     (6114)\n THE NELSON'DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER\"20,-1926\nPage\nCOPPER COMBINE\nCopper Producers IJave Almost\nSame Complaints as Farmers; Eliminate Middlemen   '\n%OS ANGELES, Oct. 19. \u2014 Formation of the Coppers Exporters, Inc.,\nbrines another commodity Into the list\not industries controlled by organisations of producers and marketers | for\ntn# purpose of regulating or stabilising market prices. Usually lt takes\ntime bnt invariably they come to this\npjan In some form or other. , When\nSurplus production becomes too large,\nasfl prices fall dangerously near to\nthis cost of production, either a dictator or a t oluntary organisation is\ninoperative.\n., In coffee and rubber tho Brasillan\nand the British governments have assumed the powers of a dictator; ln the\nraisin Industry, the solution has come\nthrough voluntary cooperation. The\nsugar Industry In Cuba Is now.seeking\nrelief through governmental intervention, while the cotton growers ef the\nsouth are disposed to try some kind\nof a voluntary organization. Whlch-\nsysr method is used, the program is\n^virtually  the same.\nAfter Hernial Frier\n-They all work for regulation of production, and sane marketing of the\nsurplus' and current output. Presumably, the objective is a market price\nthat' will yield a satisfactory margin\nOf profit to the producer generally a\nmargin equivalent tn prewar or normal years. Should these organisations\nentertain an idea of profiting abnormally at the expense of the consumer, jj\nthey run squarely Into tho monopolistic field and defeat their own purpose.\nThe rubber industry is the gKrlng\nexample.\nFor tbe purpose set forth in the\n[announcement of Its formation. Copper Exporters, Inc., is engaged on a\nlaudable task. Copper is one of the\nfew commodities selling Below the prewar average. In fact, the copper producers ha\\e almost the same complaints to make that the farmers have.\nThey need at least the prewar level of\nprices to show satisfactory profits after all charges, and they demand some\nregulation over unhealthy speculation\nIn the red metal.\nAnything In the way of price stabilisation accomplished will redound to\nthe benefit of the southwest. Arliona\nIs' the leading state in the production\nof copper and copper is the backbone\nof Arliona. Under a reciprocal agreement between the Arizona Industrial'\ncongress and the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, the copper Industry\nin Arizona looks to Los' Angelas as\nthe market in which to buy Its supplies. The more prosperous the Arl-\naona miners are, the more prosperous\nfLos Angeles Is.\nWith copper at 15c a pound, the\nmajority of mines can report a fair\nprofit. If Anaconda copper should\nwork Its mines at the annual capacity\nof 300,000,000 pounds, the additional\ncent a pound would add 11 a share\nyearly to the earnings on the outstanding stock. The red metal has\nsold higher than 15c in abnormal\n.years, reaching 29.7c fn 1917, but 15c\nis a fair figure.\nThe details of the copper plan were\nBOt revealed ln the announcement,\nhrlth the exception that, as far as\n\u25a0possible, tiie organization will sell di-\nto -foretell- consumers, eliminating\n(the middlemen. This is one step in\ntne program to prevent speculation In\n:b* metal. Another strong feature of\nAs plan is the fact that the important\nSouth American low-cost producers\nIre included. Apparently, however the\nBouth   African   companies    now   enor-\ngomethlng along this line was tried\nbnce before by the copper Industry,\nand failed, p-lssenslon Is understood\nko have been the principal , trouble,\nMusing the dissolution of the organization. This time the scope of the plan\npeeing more ambitious and there is\npvery hope of success.\nISSUES SELL AWRY\n- LOW WALL STREET\nRail Losses One to Six Points;\nIndustrials, 20 ,\nto 70\nNEW YORK, Oct. 1\u00bb, \u2014 The stock\nmarket experienced another sharp reaction today after operators for the\nadvance bad failed is their attempt to\ncontinue the rally begun yesterday.\nNet losses r%n from 1 to * points\nwith a moderate decline ln tbe leading rails.\n. The reaction took place ln the face\nof such ordinarily constructive developments as the decline of nearly $82,-\n000,000 ln broker loans, the lowering\nof the renewal rate on call money\nand the Increase in the American Radiator dividend.. The selling was described in brokerage circles \" as a\nfurther correction of a topheavy speculative position. At today's closing\nprices, many of the popular Industrials\nwere selling 20 to 70 below the year's\nhigh level.\nU. B. Steel common broke from an\nearly high of 139% to 134\"; and then\nrallied to 136% off Z% net. General\nMotors tumbled' from 161*i to 142%.\nbut snapped back to 143%, off 5%.\nSelling pressure* against tbe fails\nwas most effective such Issues as\nChesapeake & oh'io,' New York Central  and  Nickel common.\nTime money and commercial paper\nrates were unchanged.\nBales\u20141,782,100 shares.\ntfew Tork  Quotations\nHigh      Low\nAllied   Chem.   ...    121%      ~\nAmer.    Locq,     ,,.    102%\nAmer.    Tele.    ...    146%\nAnaconda          47%\nAtchison          148%\nBaldwin         117%\nBelt.   &   Ohio \\,    101%\nHK55FELT\nToronto Exchange Has Irregular Day,;  Brazilian\nLeads Trading\nTORONTO, Oot. 1\u00bb. \u2014 Alternate\nstrength and weakness in securities\nwaa  noticeable  on the  Toronto  today.\nBrasillan Traction, the most prominent stock, touched ' 105%, but fell to\n103% Just before the close, a net recession of %. Int. Nickel closed at\n35. Alcohol reached the high point\nof the current movement at 25, and receded to 24 H ln the afternoon.\nCan.    Pacific\nCerro  de  Pasco.\nChile    Copper\nChrysler     \t\nCorn  Products   .\nDodge    \"A\"    .-..\nDupont \t\nden.    Motors\n163\n\u00ab3%\nS2\u00ab\n3514\n*l%\n3S\u00bb\n32\u00ab '\n151%\nOranby           Jjiz\nO.   N.   pfd  \u2122*\nHowe Hound ...\nInsp. Copper . .\nIntl. Nickel .\nKenne. Copper \u25a0\nN. T. Central .\nNor. Pacific \\ ..\nPhillips Pete .\nRadio Corp, ...\nRock Island ...\nShell Union Oil\nSine. Cons. ...\nSou. Pacific ..\nStan. Ol! Cal\nStan. Oil N. J.   .\nStudenaker            51%\nTex.   Oulf   Sulph.      4ljfc\nUnion Oil Cal. \"\u25a0*\ntlnion Pacific\ntl S. Rubber .\nV. 8 Steel . ,\nWillys   OVld    .\n124\n,\u00bb8\\\n145 %\n47\n1461,\nH\u00bbK\n10014\n16214\n62\n32\nII\n46m\n2214\n31214\n142V4\n30%\nClose\n124%\n\u00bb\u00bb%\n1\u00ab%\n11414\n100%\n163\n3214\n3214\n46K,\n7614\n7514\n41\n26   '\n25%\n35%\n\u00bb4%\n6114\n60\n133%\n13014\n77\n7614\n48%\n4714\n55\n51\n6314\n61\n28 %\n2314\n\u25a0ISM\nH\u00ab4\n13014\n7614\n\u00abH4\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK Oct 1\u00bb. \u2014 Sterling ex\nchange steady at $4.80% 60-day bill:\nand  $4.84%  for demand.\nForeign  bar  sliver\u201461 %c,\nCanadian dollars\u20143-32 premium.\nFrancs\u20141.91 %c.\nLire\u20144.23%c.\nNelson approximate rate sterling.\n$4.88%.\nMarks\u2014 28.80%.\nKronen\u201428.72.\nLeaders on   Montreal Market\nAll Lose Ground; Smelters Down Five\nMONTREAL, Oct. 19. \u2014 After a firm\nto strong opening, stock prices on the\nMontreal market today turned Irregularly easier and at ths close losses\nhad bssn recorded by most of ths active leaders. Smelters suffered the\nsharpest decline on the list.\nBrasillan continued the most active\nstock and closed at, 108 for a net loss\nof 1 point Montreal Power closed unchanged at 78. Breweries closed at\n87% for a net decline of %. Ogilvle\nwas the strong feature, closing at 185\nfor a net gain of 3 points. Smelter*\nclosed at 280 for a net decline of \u2022>\npoints.\nTotal   aalef\u201484,479;   bonds\u2014$27,200.\nClosing Frloss\nAsbestos 20%, Abltlbl X\u00bb% Ind. Alcohol 24%, Brasll 103, Breweries 67%,\nMontreal Power 73r Quebec. Power 165,\nsmelter* 230, Shawinigan 243, itsal or\nCanada 107% Atlantic SuRiir 24. Textile 90, Winnipeg Elec. 67%, Brompton\nSS, Cement 107, Laurennde 106%, Spanish com. 104%, Steamers pfd, 9ft,\nStesmer.-* common 27%.\nMontreal Sales\nMONTREAL, Oct. 117\u2014 Sales\u201413,-\n^255 Brasillan 216 Brompton, 2765 Alcohol,: 222 Steamship and 725 pfd. 260\nGlass, 1166 Laurentide , Paper, '3709\nMontreal Power and 230 pfd.' 87S5\nBreweries, 2010 Smelters 220 Spanish\nRiver, 335 Steel of Canada 855 Twin\nCity,   1320   Winnipeg   Electric.\nBusiness Facts\n Pt*$T\nMORT6ACES ASK\nIDEAL IF YOU CAN\nt\\+* AFFORD ttVERAl\nTHOUSAND FOR\nONeNVeSTMBMT\n1912.\n1*37.\nWINNIPBO, Oct. II. \u2014 The Domin\nIon  war Issue  prices:\nWar   loans\u20141931,   |100.50b    $100.70a\n1337,   3103.10\nVictory loans \u2014 1127, 3100.40\n1104.10b 3104.30a; 1140, 1101.10;\n3106.90b.  |107a.\nWar loan renewals \u2014 1127 1100.20;\n1932,  3102.40.\nRefunding loans \u2014 1928 ?100; 1943,\n1101.20b, |101.30a; 1944, J96.051),\n396.25a; 1940, 396.05; 1946. 396.15b.\n396.25a\nMetal Markets\n[\nXailviaaal first mart**** fit well\nInto  many  Investors'  aooonats.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nFor  many years the individual  first\nmortgage    was    regarded    as    the    one\nEooa i e%l estate investment security,\n[owever. the increasing popularity of\nthe first' mortgage bond has somewhat\nleptKened the favor in which Individual\nmortgages  are  held.\nWhile it Ik possible to buy first\nmortgage bonds in both large and\nsmall amounts for the investor whose\nholdings are large enough to justify\nthe placing of several thousand dollars\nii one investment, the individual mortage has a number of advantages. It\nas a wide margin of safety, a tangible unit of property which the Investor and his bank may inspect for\nthemsehes unified control, a comparatively high yield, and often an early\nmaturity.\nFor the Investor with considerable\nmoney, this type of investment pffers\na good chance to secure diversification. The property of course, should\nbe chosen carefully.\nMINFG PRICES\"AfiE\nRain in Saskatchewan and Manitoba; Crop Moving Rapidly Toward Elevators\n104 5,-103%\n61%  \u00ab0\n415  41-%\n501,\n ^M\nMa.   54\n161% 169\n54   52%\nISIli  135\n'\u00bb.* . im\n50%\n42%\n159%\nNEW TOBK, Oct. 19. \u2014 Copper \u2014\nDull; electrolytic spot and futures,\n14>4o to 14&C\nTin\u2014Firm, .pot and nearby, 370.75;\nfuture..   368,'75.\nIron\u2014Steady;   prices   unchanged.\nLead\u2014Steady; .spot,   33.25.\nZinc\u2014Steady; East St. Louis, spot\nand  futures,  17.35   to  $7.37,\nAntlmony^-Spot.   $14.25.\nAt  London\u2014\n\u2022Standard copper \u2014 Spot, \u00a358 17s 6d;\nfutures, \u00a359 15s. Electrolytic\u2014Spot,\n\u00a366  10s; futures.   \u00a367.\nTin\u2014Spot \u00a3814 12s 6d; futures,\n\u00a3316.\nLead\u2014Spot   \u00a380  17s 6d; futures   \u00a380\nlit en.\nZinc\u2014Spot,   \u00a334   7s   6d;   futures,\nGovernor of Bank of England\nSuggests It to Right\nTrade Wrongs\nCLAIMS RETURN OF\nPROSPERITY RETARDED\nProduction Down, Credit Bad,\nCurrencies   Diminish;\nTrade Is Exchange\nCanadians Seek an\nIncrease on Duty of\nSpuds Entering Canada\nOTTAWA, Oct. 19. \u2014 An Increase in\ntbe duty on potatoes entering Canada\nfrom 35c per cwt,' to 60c, Is asked by\nthe Canadian horticultural council ln\na memorandum submitted to the tariff\nndvisot board recently. * The tariff\non potatoes entering tho United States\nis 50c per cwt.\nCustom Assayers and\nAnalytical Chemists\n|4fl Work Out Same Day as\nReceived\nW\u00ab   Solicit   Your   Patronags\nMM) Baker 8tr.rt   -   P.Q. Drawer 1073\nNELSON, B. C.\nManifesto Raises\nStock Issues on\nthe Bourse, Germany\nBERLIN, Oct. 19. \u2014 Publication of\nthe economic manifesto had an immediate, effect on tho, bourse, causing\nsensational rises In some stocks, as\nmuch as 13  per cent.\nThe manifesto is the subject of\ncomment and discussion by most of\nthe pyrlln newspapers, which generally regard it as an admission by the\nlending bankers and Industrialists of\nthe world that they recognize that the\neconomic clauses of the Versailles\ntreaty are mainly responsible for the\npresent \"sorry state of the world's\ntrade and commerce.\"..\nJ. R. GAVIN & CO.\nBROKERS\nSTOCKS\u2014BONDS\u2014MINING   INVESTMENTS\n401-2   Jamieton   Bldrj.,   Spokane,   Wash.\nReliable and up-to-date information furnished on any\nlisted or unlisted Mining or Oil stock.\nOrders Executed on All Markets\nWRITE  OR  WIRE   FOR QUOTATIONS\n\u00a331\nVancouver Stocks\nB   C.  Sliver\nBid\ni.7\u00bb\n1.04\nAsked\n1.85\n1.05\n.04(4\n40.00\n.06\n.16%\n.17\n2.07\n.03%\n\u2022 08%\n.20\n.12\n.11\n.10\u00ab\nWINNIPEG, Man., Oct. 19.\u2014Weather\nreports throughout Manitoba and Has-\nkatchewan were unfavorable today, and\nthe Indications were that the recent\nrajn and enow storms would hall\nthreshing for the next three or four\ndays. Rain wae reported as general\nover the entire dlntrict of Manitoba\nfrom midnight last night, until thi\nmorning;. Better weather condition!\nprevail in Alberta. Threshing wan\ngeneral this morning in the Medicine\nHat, Lethbridge and Calgary division! _\nand over two-thirds of the, Kdmonton\ndivision, according to the weather and\ncrop report of the Canadian Pncffio\nRailway   company.\nmo\u00bbw   rut\nIn spite of the adverse weather conditions, the crop is moving rapidly toward the elevators at the head of th<L\nlakes and Vancouver. The Can. Vac.\nI. v. marketed a total of 8,003,791\nbushels yesterday and loaded 1763 earn\nwith grain. The Manitoba district\ncontributed 74ft,KM bushels and 5flK\ncars loaded, Saskatchewan 1,099,443\nbushels with 708 ears loaded, and Al-\nherta l.itw.tm b-knhels marketed and\n553  cars loaded.\nGrain, in storage at the head of the\nlakes totaled 28,173,000 bushels and\nat Vancouver 1,1.00,000 bushels.\ntotal of 2878 cars were handled by the\ninspection department on Monday, of\nwhich 1644 WPre credited to the Cana\ndian  Pacific  Railway company.\nNoranda Closes Up 10; Kirk-\nland and Mining Corporation Advance\nTORONTO, Oct. 19. \u2014 PrlceB were\nhigher on tbe Standard mining exchange today, almost all issues showing gains. Mclntyre waa 30 higher,\nwith over 1200 shares being sold, the\nIssue closing at $22.70. Argonaut was\nthe leader ln volume of sales, 55,800\n(hinging hands, and the stock closing\nat 44, up 2Mi; Barry Holly was 2\nhigher, at 72; Klrkland Lake up 6, at\n92; and  Mining Corpn.  up 2, at 207.\nIn view of the pressure exerted\nagainst tbe mining list the strength in\nTeck Hughes and Noranda was noteworthy. The former advanced 1 to\n$\u25a01.71. and the latter 10, to $18.60.'The\nclose  In  Noranda  was  $18.50  to   $18.75.\n\/\u2022WMIMNC, AS A BUM*. SS\nI    I    ANO VOU WILL  UND\n\u2022^ \\      n is not a       y\nSpokane Stocks\n(Reported by C. W. Appleyard)\nCda.   S.S.   common    $ 27\nAmer.   Can, $ 47%\nBraillifln       $104\nWinnipeg         $ 57^\nImp.  Oli    I 84%\nSmelters      $280\nAmer,   Loco       ' t 99 U\ng   P-   \u00ab\u25a0    1132%\nHowe   Sound $ 40 %\nDodge    Bros        $22%\nAbitibi     $ $9\nInter  Nickel    $ 34\nSilversmith     3$c\nLeadsrtlth       7^\nLucky   Jim    '.     15c\nRichmond            j^o\nGoldsmith \u201e,-,, .14J\u00a3C\nCan.    Steam    pfd $ 86\nGranby      $ $09\/\nDupont         , ..$$14\nTodays Dividends\nElec.   Household   Utll.- com  a;...,..50c\nElectric  Investors  37  pfd q ..|1.75\nElectric  Investors  $6  pfd  Q. 31.50\nInterstate  Railways   com   q........50c\nLoew's   Boston   Theaters   q 16c\nnational  Tea l%% pfd  q I1.MM\nOhio Puel Corp.. for 1  mo llfr-tc\nPyrene   Mf\u00ab\\   com   q Zftof\nSouthern  Cal.   Edls    com   q 50c\nStandard Power ec Lt.  pfd q |1.7t>|\ness\nToronto Mines\nDiscriminating\nInvestors\nare not slow to take advantage of recent reactions in the Northwest\nMining Share Market and are accumulating tho more desirable\nNorthwest Mining Issues  while  the opportunity la  favorable.\nWrite ui for full  information.   There it no obligation.\nNorthwest Mines Investment Co.\n706 Spragua Av\u00bb,\nSpokane\n94\u00ab D.xter Horton  Bldg.,\nSeattle\nFRUIT TARIFF WOULD\nMAKE PRICES LOWER\nWINNIPEG Oct. 19. \u2014 \"Should the\ntariff board decide to accept our suggested seasonal' tariff on fruits and\nvegetables, It would mean that this\nproduce would be cheaper, taking the\nseason aa a whole,\" declared Herbert\nEmery, head of a local fruit jobbing\nconcern, on his return today from Ot\ntawa, where he conferred with the\nhorticultural council and the tariff\nboard at* the representative of tht\nWestern Canada Fruit Jobbers' associ\natlon.\nThe conference, he paid, had decided\nto ask for a specific tariff Instead of\nan ad valorem ono on all fruits and\nvegetables.\nThe tariff proposed, he added, is\nthat a seasonable tariff be placed on\nfruit and vegetables, commencing\nshortly after these commodities are\navailable in Canada, and ending shortly after the commodity' is finished in\nCanada. The growers, he said, were\nheartily In favor of the Canadian consumer getting his fruits and vegetables\nfree of duty when not available in\nCanada.\nwxmtoto   aunt   qootatio\u00bb\u00bb\nWheat\u2014\nOpen\nHllth\nLow\nClose\nOct.    ...\n143\nH7\n143\n146%\nNov.   .. .\nMS\n146'\n142%\n146\nDec.    . . .\n139\n141%\n138\n141%\nMay   . ..\n143%\n145\n142%\n144%\nOtts\u2014\nOct.    ...\n58!.\n60%\n68%\n60%\nNov.   ...\nIt*\n58 ft\n57%\n\u25a0',\u00bb=\u00bb\nDec.    .. .\n534.\n64\n' 53%\n64%\nMay   ...\nN\n60%\n56\n66%\nBarley\u2014\nOct.     . . .\n05\n65%\ntfk\n65%\nNov.   . ..\n66 >i\n66%\n65%\n65%\nDec.    . . .\n\u00ab4%\n65%\n64%\n65%\nMay   .   .\nsa\n68%\n\u00ab7\u00ab\n68%\nFlax\u2014\nOct.    ...\n188%\n192'a\n188%\n192?,\nNov.   . . .\n1\u00bb9>4\n193%\n189%\n193\nDec.    .   .\n1>1\n194%\n190%\n193%\nMay   ...\n:oo\n203\n199\n202\nRyt^\u2014\nOct.   . .\n95 \"i\n\u00bb%\n95%\n97%\nNov.\n97V,\n98%\n\u00bb7%\n91\nMay   ...\n104%\n106%\n104\n104%\nBRITISH    COLUMBIA    BOOS\nPresh  extras  5Bc  fresh  firsts  49c  to\n50c,   pullets  42c   to   lie.\nBERLIN, Oct. lt>.\u2014The economic\nmanifesto signed by leading financiers of Europe and the Vnltad States\nand made public in various countries\ntoday, waa conceived In London in\nJuly, German press and banking\ncircles assert by Montague Norman,\ngovernor of the Bank of England.\nMr. Norman presented it to Dr.\nH. Jalam Schadt, president nf the\nReischt bank, Andrew W. Mellon,\nUnited States secretary of the treasury, in the course of their vacation\ntrips ln Prance and Holland and according to the same authority, they\napproved It with slight modifications.\nMr. Mellon, it is said, submitted\na copy to President Coolidge and\ndiscussed the manifesto in London\nwith Winston Churchill, chancellor\nof the exchequer, who approved it.\nIt waB then easy to obtain signatures.\nThe reason that the French signs\nwith reservations is believed to have\nbeen that they realised the franc\nmust be established before trade affairs were discussed.\nThe German commentators assert\nthat England's initiative can be explained because it is virtually a free\ntrade   union.\nThe text of the manifesto In part\nfollows:\n\"We desire, as business men, to\ndraw attention to certain grave and\ndisquieting conditions which in our\nJudgment are retarding the return to\nprosperity.,\nHurts to Trade\n\"It is difficult to view without dismay the extent to which tariff barriers, speeial licences and prohibitions since the' war have been allowed to Interfere with International\ntrade.\n\"Tho breakup of great political\nunits ln Europe dealt a heavy blow\nto international trade.\n\"Old markets disappeared. Racial\nanimosities were permitted to divide\ncommunities whose interests were inseparably connected.\nProduction Down\n\"To mark and defend these new\nfrontiers In Europe, licences, tariffs\nand prohibitions were imposed with\nresults which experience shows already to have been unfortunate for\nall concerned. One state lost Its\nsupplies of cheap food, another Its\nsupplies of cheap manufactures. Industries suffered for want of coal,\nfactories for want of raw materials.\nBehind the customs barriers new\nlocal Industries were started with\nno real economic foundation which\ncould be kept alive in the face of\ncompetition by raising the barriers\npier stUl  higher.\n\"Production as a whole has been\ndiminished. Credit has contracted\nand  currencies   have  depreciated.\n\"There can b\u00a3 no recovery In\nEurope until politicians in all territories, old and new, realise that\ntrade is not war but a process of\nexchange, that in time of peace our\nneighbors arc our customers and\nthat their prosperity Is a condition\nof our own well being. If we check\ntheir dealings their power to pay\n(heir debts diminishes and their\npower to purchase  our goods i\u00ab re\nATTEMPT TO CHBE\nFINANCIAL ILLS\nBankers and Industrialist* Present Manifesto; Will Be\nPublished Today\nLONDON, Oct. 19.\u2014Another at*\ntempt to find a cure for the financial and Industrial difficulties of\nEurope was launched today. In the\nform of a manifesto signed by A\nlong list of bankers and industrialists on International not*.\nEvery country 1 a Euro pe is re-\npresented among tbe signatories as\nwell as *ha United States through\na half dozen well  known  financiers,\nA certain air of mystery surrounds\nthe genesis of the document. No one\nseems to know just where lt originated although common belief Is that\nIt originated ln Berlin. The fact that\nthe manifesto was Issued to the London press through a well known advertising agency is regarded as unusual.\nWhether the creation of a trust\nwill be one of the first efforts of\npassing from words to deeds on the\npart of the great banker signatories\nhas still to be seem, but all attempts to Induce these bankers to\ntalk on the subject have failed.\nPublication of the manifesto has\nbeen   set   for   tomorrow.\nSpeculative Demand\nCarries Wheat to\nHigher Uvel, Chicago\nCHICAGO, Oct. 1\u00bb. \u2014 Lively speculative dpmand carried wheat values\nupward anew here today, helped by an\nunexpected sharp advance of the Liverpool market. Closing quotations on\nwheat were firm, %c to 2c net higher\nwith corn showing ,%c to lc gain, oats\nunchanged to 14c to %c up, and provisions  unchanged  to  30c down.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS. Oct. 19.\u2014Flour unchanged ta 100 >il(h.r, at Si.20; \u2022nlp-\nmentB\u201458.575.\nBran\u2014}12.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 northern, $1.43% to\nI1.16T4; May. 11.50%; December,\n\u2022 1.45%.\nCorn\u2014No. 3 yellow, 73c to 75c.\nOat\u00ab\u2014No.   3  white,'41%c  to  4j%c.\nFlax\u2014No.  1, I2.11U   to 32.2114.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Oct. 19. \u2014 Butler and\neggs firm, cheeee steady.\nCheese\u2014Finest western, 17 He to\nlT%e.\nButter\u2014No l pasteurised, 33 lAc to\nMc.\nStorage eggs, extras ' 42c to 43c;\nfirsts 38c to 39c.\nFresh eggs, extras 52c   firsts 47c.\nDEATH SLOWLY CREEPS\nOVER EUGENE V. DEBS\nCHICAGO, Oct. Iff. \u2014 Death slowly\nbut relentlessly crept upnh Eugene V.\nin lis, aged Socialist leader tonight, as\nhe remained In the coma' into which\nhe dropped  last  Saturduy night.\nThe four-day come was unusual, said\nthe  attending  physicians.\nTiie man who five times was chosen\nby his party for the presidency and\nwas active in labor and social struggles for more than a third of a century, earried en always under Pie\nhandicap of heart disease, the doctors\nrevealed.\nduced. Restricted imports Involve\nrestricted exports and no nation can\nafford to lose Its export trade. Dependent as we all are upon Imports and exports and upon the pro-\neHses of exchange we cannot view\nwithout grave concern a policy which\nmeans the Impoverishment qt Europe.\"\nBid\nPremier        2,00\nHpllinger            18.20\nWest   Dome     21H\nDome            9,00\nKlrkland       .87\nLake  Shore        11.26\nMclntyre           22,25\nNoranda        18,50\nTeck    Hughes        4.71\nVipond    .,   1B7.08\n'\u25a0JEwipy          1.40\nNlpisalng       '  6.05\n.88\n13.50\nOTTAWA Oct. Jfi. \u2014 Toronto extras\n4Sc  to  47S   firsts   40c,   sesepds  10c.\nMontreal' extras 44C to 80c, firsts 88e\nto  41c,  seconds ~28C  to   2Ec.\nWinnipeg extras 38c to tic firsts\n34c to 36c, seconds 28C to 2>c,\nSaskatchewan extras 85c to 38c,\nfirsts I4c to J5c   seconds 27c.\nCalgary extras l&o, firsts 32c, seconds 26c.\nVancouver extras 49c, firsts 45c, pullet extras 30c, small pullets 24c,\nChicago  spot  89He  to  41c.\nNew Tork extra firsts 4|o to 48e;\nDecembers 37a\nWINNIPEG,   Oot.   19.   r\u2014   Receipts\u2014\nCattle, 2202; calves 188; hogs, 817;\nsheep' 892.\nSteers \u2014 Choice, 85.26 to S6.2E>; fair\nto  good,   15.25  to  $5.50.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice 15.25 to\n15.75;  fair to good, $4 to  15.\nButcher cows \u2014 Choice, |4 to $4.25;\nfair  to  good    $.3,50  to   |3.75\nBulla\u2014Good,  $3.50  to  $3.75\nOxen\u2014Good,   $3   to, $4.\nStocker steers \u2014 Choice, $4 to $4.50;\nfair   to   good,   $3.50   to   $1.75.\n(Stocker heifers\u2014Choice, $3.25 to\n$4.26;  fair to  good,  $2.75  to  $3.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choice $4,60 to $5;\nfair  to   good,   $4   to  $4.25.\nCalves\u2014Choice, $8  to $9\nHogs\u2014Select bacon, $12.37 H; thick\nsmooths $11.25; heavies $10.25; lights\nand feeders, $11.25,\nLambs\u2014Fair to good, $10 to $10.50.\nSheep\u2014Fair to  good,'$fl  to  $7.\nCALGARY, Oct, 19. \u2014 Receipts \u2014\nCattle 293; calves, 4; hogs, 29; sheep,\n126.\nSteers\u2014Choice, $5.78; fair to good,\n$5   to  $8.60.\nBatcher heifers \u2014 Choice $4.60 to\n$5; fair to good, $4 to $4.18.\nButcher cowr\u2014Choice 13.60 to $4\nfair to  good,  $3  tn  $3.45.\nBulls\u2014Good    $3   to   $3.25.\nSteoker steerp\u2014Choice, $4.78; fair\nto   good,   $8.60   to   (4.60.\nStocker heifers \u2014 Choice $1.50 to\n$3.78; fair to good   $3  to  $3.25.\nCalves\u2014Choice,   $5.28   to   $6.60;   good\n^aW..\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\m\nLambs   \u2014   Fair   to\n$10.60. ^^.BBBBUBBBl\nSfieep\u2014Fair  to good,. $8   to  $8.\nWednesday, Economy Day\nBlankets! Hose!! Towels!!!\nRegular merchandise at genuinely reduced prices.   You will be well advised\nto participate.\nSCOTCH WOOL BLANKETS\u2014Balmoral, weight 7 lbs. Sizes 70x90. All-white.\nGuaranteed pure virgin wool. Soft, fleecy and warm. White, finished with\npink or blue borders and whipped ends. Only seven pairs left. Blankets at\nthese prices cannot possibly be repeated. Regular $10.50. Soiled Price, per\n^^ $9.55\npair\n\u00bb\u00bb60\nEDMONTON Oct. 1\u00bb. _ Receipt.-\nCattle 1S\u00ab6; OBlve>, W; bore 870\nsheep   61.\nBufoher steers\u2014Oood.  II BA to  14 60\nBeef heifers\u2014Good,  |s\nreader steers\u2014Oood, 14 to 14 60\ncommon, |3 to M.75.\nCalves\u2014Oood,  II  to 17.\nHors\u2014Thick smooths,  ils.60.\nTOWELS\u2014^3ood dryers. Brown with a red stripe. Strong and serviceable. Size\n18x36.    Fringed  ends.    Regular  20c each,    Special, 6 for  *1.QQ\nCHILDREN'S THREE-QUARTER BLACK HOSE\u2014Made by Wolsey & Co. of\nLeicester, from pure wool. Guaranteed unshrinkable. British dyed. We can\nconfidently recommend these all-wool hose to give every satisfaction. AH\nsizes.   Regular 95c pair.   Special, pair 49tp   2 pairs for \u00a95<*\nLadies' Ready-to-Wear\nCHECK TWEED TRAVEL COATS\u2014We are offering a special price for Wednesday only.   Assorted sizes.   Greatly reduced.\nRegular $45.00, for, Special  , $37.50\nRegular $29.50, for, Special  S25,00\nRegular $25.00, for, Special  S19.95\nThese Bargain Prices are for Wednesday Only.\nALL FUR NECKPIECES GREATLY REDUCED\u2014Some lovely Furs, offering\nat very low prices.   From  $9.95 UP TO S22.50\nWEDNESDAY  SPECIAL:  SILK-AND-WOOL BLOOMERS AND VESTS\u2014We\nare offering you these garments at, each  65\u00ab*\nCan you afford to let these slip by!\nSPECIAL SALE OF RAYON SILK NIGHTGOWNS, in eau de nile, flesh, yellow and mauve.   Each $3.95\nCHILDREN'S HIGH-NECK, LONG-SLE EVE VESTS, in natural. Fleece-lined.\nAges from 4 to 14 years.   For 39e>\nBOYS' SCHOOL JERSEYS, in navy and grey. All sizes. Values up to $2.26\neach.   Today, Special, each  -\u2022\u2022MP\n Page Ten\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20,' 1926\nThe Ark\n. SPECI AL \u2022\u2014We are overstocked\nwith Comforters. Until stock I', reduced we will give 25r\/\u00bb discount.\nOur Bargain Table Is .til! well supplied with gooda at 25^ npr yard.\nMen's * Work Shirts, good quality,\nS1.25. Overalls, heavy. 82.25\npair. Men's Winter 1'nderwenr,\nS2.00 Per suit.\nJ. W. H0LMF5\nIM\n\u00abM   Vernon   St.\n0. K. BAKERY\n714   Stanley   St\nPhona  166\nWHOLESALE  ANO  RETAIL\nYou   Mu.t   Have   It\nfete   Perfect   Toaat   in   tho    Morninfl\nWill Not Publish\nReport of Foreign\nSecretary's Report\nLONDON, Oct. lS.^Sir Austen\n< himluTlain, secretary of state for\nforeign affairs, will review foreign\naffairs at tomorrow's meeting of the\nIrup'riiil conference. There will be a\ndeparture from the procedure adopted\nat the last conference. Then portions\nof the foreign secretary's statement\nwere Issued for publication. Tomorrow the veil of secrecy will be complete. No portion of the statement\nwill he issued.\nPublication on the last occasion, it\nIs said, crested difficulties in the\nforeign field which it Is desired to\navoid repeating. Whether th.' subsequent statement of the dominion\nnremiers will be published is not yet\ndecided. ^^^|\nYou'll Be Surprised at\nthe Pep That Will Be\nUncorked When\n'Step Lively'\nIs Produced at\nNelson\nOpera House\nTues., Wed.,  Thurs.,\nNov. 2, 3 and 4\nBy\nThe Nelson\nGYRO CLUB\nand Local .Artistes\nAttractive Scenery\nColoiful Costumes\nSnappy Dances\nClever Plots\nScores of Pretty Girls\n\"Every Tune a  Whistle\"\nTickets:   $1.60, \u00ab1.00 and 75c\nProcurable from any member ot\nNelson   Gyro    Club    anJ    from\nmembers  of   the   out.\nDon't Forget the Night oi\nNights!\nD. O. K. K.\nMaaquaradf,   Dane.   Mondnv,   Nov.   1,\nat    E.ql.   Hall.\nNelio.i's Dispensing Chemists\nCITY DRUG CO.\nFilme, Kodaks, Drugt, Stationary.\nI4a.il Order. Promptly Despatched\nBOX 1083     N.l.on, B.C.     PHONE 84\nPotatoes\nGems\nAs fine as it is possible\nto grow.\nLet us have your winter\norder.\nd>0 OK   PBR\nsftL.isO 100 LBS.\nPut in your basement.\nYour last chance of tha aaa-\naon to have a real feed of\nCauliflower, at a price which\neverybody   can   afford.\n50 Boxes\nHOWELL PAIRS\nJust ready to eat or can.\nWhile they last,\nJbl.UV BOX\n*GR0CERY*\nPhones 10 and 193\nWhat's in\na Name\n$10,000 for a New One\n(Vide the press.)\nFill in your Ballot Papers\nwithout delay.\nSmedley Garage\nCompany\nHOSIER\nSee our window display of a few\nof the Hosiery lines we stock, at\nprices lo BUlt everybody. Hose\nspecially selected by us on their\nreputation, and wft have them ln \u25a0\nall the latest shades.\nKayier,   mre   silk  to   the   top.  per\nPair   .  $2.5$\nMarvel, pure silk, Pointer heel, rib\ntop;   extra   wide   $2.00\nSufJuffilk.   pure   silk,   ribbed    top,\nat    - $1.75\nNiagara Maid, pure silk, two qualities, at  81.75 and $1.40\nAn   Art   Silk   How,  splendid   value,\nat 81.001\nAn   Art   Silk   Hbaa,   splendid\nvalue, at  -\u25a0-50t\u00a3\nLi.le Hot*, outslzes, ai   85C '\nFlannel Dresses\nJust arrived,  for  Misses  and\nWomen.    Stylish  and     very    reasonably\npriced.     From    84.25  to   812.50\nBOYS AND GIRLS\nStronjc   School   Shoe    for   Boys,   at,   pet\npair    .$3.40. 83.75 \u00abtd \u00bb3.\u00bb0\nOirbV  neat  Tan  and    Black   Calf   Shoes.\nat    - - 83.50 and  $3.85\nWe    Stock    the     Fimoui   Kewpie   Kewp\nShoes   for   Kiddies\nBoys   Outfitted\u2014Second   Floor\n\/,\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.\nCASE IDE OUT\nOnly. Grants  Adjournment on\nStringent Terms to\nLawyer\nNELSON BROKER\nABSENT  IN  EAST\n'Sandy,' Camera Man, Tells of\nGetting Money Back\non Deal\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON, B. C.\nRETAIL\n**I haven't much sympathy with\nmen In mining transactions who do\nthe baby act. They ahoulA quit the\ngam*.,\" waa the caustic comment of\nMr. Justice W, A, Macdonald, yesterday afternoon, In making known\nhis decision to allow adjournment of\nthe Y. H, Sanderson-Major R. K.\nWaite cheek case only on very\nstringent conditions, Major Waite\nhaving failed to be present at the\ntrial, hia defence being advanced In\nhla absence by his counsel, William\nBrown.\nHis lordship regarded a prima facie\nmae aB made out in the evidence of\nMr. Sanderson of Portland, otherwise \"Sandy, the camera man,\" and\nheld that the defendant waa really\nnot ^entitled to a further chance to\ngive his defence. He gave Mr, Brown\nthe choice of two alternatives\u2014\neither to accept an off^r of an adjournment to Noveimber 5, provided\nin the meantime the defendant paid\nA. Donaghy, Mr. Sanderson's counsel,\n$303.75 expense money for the extro\nhearing by October 28, or to have an\nimmediate Judgment given for tne\nplaintiff.\nMr. Brown accepted ihe adjournment  on  the  terms  outlined.\nThe plaintiff sued on a check tor\n$2750 given him by Major Waite,\nand marked to indicate It was for\nthe payee's Interest in the Porcupine\nmine, or rather for a balance ot\n$1352.50 still ln issue after Judge\nJ. A. Forln had allowed the main part\nof the claim ln a supreme court\nchambers  hearing.\nBrawn    Atkl    Adjournment\nAt the opening of the case Mr.\nBrown asked for an ailjmirnm.'nt,\nstaling that he had advised Major\nWaite of the date of the trial, hut\nhe was still tn tho States, transacting some business.\nHe said the defence was based on\nhe fact that the Portland men camp\nInto this country to invest in one\nmine, hut they transferred their interest to another. Three of them,\nwith Mijor Waite, were to finance\ntbe mln.-\\ hut the deal fell through.\nMajor Waite paid $1300 of the money\nback through ,;>?tyment into court.\nHe claimed theiv was no mare to be\npaid.\nHis lordship took the attitude that\nMajor Wtaile ignored the action\nbrought \u00abby Mr. Sanderson, though\nknowing of the trial, choosing between his business there and the\naction here.\nMr. Donaghy stated tho claim of\nthe defence was in direct contradiction of what was atated on the check.\nMr.   Brown   asserted   the   l'oitlan'1\nmen came here to invest in the Silver\nReef  nnd   then shifted   their   attention\nthe   Porcupine  mine. .\nCamera   Man   on   Stand\n\"You may as well prove your case.\"\nsaid   his  lordship to  Mr.  Donaghy.\nMr. Sanderson todk the stand and\ntestified to siting Major Waite sign\nthe check. It was considered full\npayment of his own and Barge Leon*\nard'a Interest in the Porcupine mine\nwhich he was buying hack from them\nThe check was dishonored at the\nbank.\nHis lordship asked Mr. Brown if\nhe still pressed for an adjournment.\nOn receiving an affirmative answer,\nhe said he would read what h-1 had\nwritten, and Mt. Brown could then\nelect whether he would take it.\nSays   Prima   Facie   Case\nHis summary stated that the action\nwaa on a check for $2750, given to\nthe plaintiff, as waa shown on. Its\nface. In a chambers application before a Judge, Judgment was given as\nto part of the claim, and leave was\ngiven the plaintiff to sue for the balance,   $1352.50.\nA prima facie case had been made\nout by the plaintiff, and the onus of\nproof was on the defendant, who,\nhowever, though knowing of the trial\nand Its date, believed his interests in\nthe east were more important than\nappearance at the trial. Until the\nassizes optned, the defendant's counsel did not ask for the adjournment.\nHis lordfthlp then outlined the terms\non which Mr. Brown could have th*\nadjournment. In case the expense\nmoney should not b\u00a9 paid to the\nplaintiff's counsel by October 26 as\nfixed, then without further motion\nJudgment would be entered for the\nplaintiff for the balance claimed, with\ncosts.\nMr. Brown's acceptance of the terms\nmade the adjournment operative.\nUnder cross-examination, Mr. Sanderson said there were four men interested in the mine. They were\nBarge Leonard, Neil Bartrandals,\nMajor Waite and himself. Each had\na quarter interest, but it was ofily\nunder a verbal agreement.\nHe (Sanderson) said he came up\nhere to take moving pictures for Mr.\nWaite, who was to pay him either\nin cash or to give him an, interest ln\na mining property. He gave h'm an\nInterest in the Silver Reef mine.\nBought   Into   Porcupine\nThe Portland men picked up the\nPorcupine property themsel.vea. \"Mr.\nWaite phoned you from Portland to\nget a lease and bond on the Porcupine\nat any price.\" the witness told Mr.\nBrown. It was procured In Mr.\nWaltes' name, but there was a verbal\nunderstanding that each of the four\npien was to have a quarter interest\nMr. Sanderson, Mr. Leonard and Mr.\nBartrandals were, to raise fundi to\noperate the mine. Mr. Sanderson\nunderstood a company was to *be\nformed. Under the terms of the lease\nnothing was to be done for either SO\nor 60 days; he was not sure which.\nMajor Wajto made the first payment. Mr. Sanderson said be made\nthe second payment. It was made to\nMajor Waite t>y telegraph. Mr, Donaghy produced the receipt of the\ntelegraph  company  ln  Portland.\nHe received $1400 from Major\nWait*.    Major Waite never paid my\nARE OBTAINED:\nMrs. DeKatz Petition Must Be\nAmended to Secure\nJurisdiction\nFURTHER HEARING\nIS SET FOR COAST\nTod   of   Trail   Gets   Decree\nWife  Has   Joined\nAnother\nThree divorce suits disposed of in\na forenoon session of lows than two\nhours, was the record of the Nelson\nn seizes yesterday. Mr. .1 list ice W.\nA. Macdonald granted absolute divorce*, to Mrs. Henrietta StDenis of\nNelson and Alexander McOechaen\nTod of Trail, but ruled that the suit\nof Mrs. Amy DeKatz must temporarily fail owing to want of jurisdiction.\nThe DeKatz case will come up again\nat Vancouver.\nNone of the three cases was contested,\nRcccn t   Separat ion\nIn the suit of Mra StDenis, it was\nbrought out that she and her husband D. StDenis, executed a separation agreement in August, by which\nshe obtained use of bouse, and a\nsum   of  $1000,\nHer counsel, A. Donaghy, placed\nJohn Grafton, proprietor of the Orwell hotel, Bossland, on the' stand,\nto testify to an Incident there, September 25, last, involving the respondent, and a corespondent, whose\nidentity was not disclosed.\nAfter questioning the petitioner\nclosely as to why she acted at this\nparticular time, his lordship granted\nthe decree.\n'Idling  With   Aiiortirr  Man\nTwo witnesses testified in the Tod\nsuit, which was conducted by H. W.\nMclnnea of Trail, Mr. Tod, who is\na smelterman, testified that shortly\nafter he had brought to the notice\nof his wife, Jeannle. that there were\nstories about her and their roomer,\nHenry Lindblad, who had heen taken\nin when out of work, she left home,\nostensibly for Vancouver, and (Jid\nnot  return.\nProvincial Constable W. H. Laird\nof New Denver, testified to a conversation he had with Mrs. Tod\nwhile she was living with Lindblad\nas his wife at Sandon, ln which she\nvolunteered a statement of her relations. Last week she was still\nliving   at   Lindblad's  cabin.\nIn this case, his lordship accompanied the order for an absolute decree with an order for costs against\nLindblad, and ruled that the two\nchildren should stay, in their father's custody, but that the mother\nshould have the right to be heard\nlater on a claim should she make it.\nMrs. DeKatz, who testified to her\nmarriage to Alphonse DeKatz, pole\nmerchant, at St. Saviour's church,\nNelson. In July, 1322, was the only\nwitness ln her case, her counsel\nbeing  E. G. Matthew.\nIVKa i\/   nnd1   Stienographer\nHer husband was very cold to\nher the last six months he was in\nN'elson, she testified, and did not\nwant her to accompany him down\nttiwn, but when she would slip down\nand keep him in sight she would\nsee him and his stenographer, Miss\nGrace West, together. She disclosed\nthat on various occasions she went\nto his office, to find the door locked,\nand one of these times nhe persisted\nin knocking, and when it was eventually opened MY. DeKatz and the\nstenographer  were   both   there.\nThe circumstance on which she\nrelied for her divorce was a repetition of this incident, with the further fact that, after knocking several times, she looked -through the\nkeyhole, and observed details which\nled her, on her admission to the\nfoom,   to   accuse   the   pair   of   Im\nproper    conduct,    which,   she    said,\nthey made  no  effort to deny.\nOn the first relating of this Incident, Mr., Justice Macdonald was\nnot satisfied with her account aa\nconstituting proof of her claim, and\nargued that there should be no difficulty In getting indisputable proof\nit the defendant and corespondent\nwere actually living outside the law.\nIn telling the story again, however,\nshe gave particulars of the accusation she made to them, in the actual\nlanguage used, which put the Incident  in  a  different  Ught.\nShe testified to -seeing the pair together when she was at the late\nSpokane fair, asserting they \"acted\nvery loving toward each other.\" Her\ncounsel said proof of their relations\nin Spokane would be difficult to\nsecure, as Miss West''was living with\nrelatives, while continuing to act as\nthe   respondent's   stenographer.\nHis lordship held that the statement in the petition that the respondent was domiciled In Spokane\ntook the case out of his jurisdiction,\nbut granted an adjournment to the\nafternoon to hear Mr. .Matthew argue\nfor an order to amend the petition\nin  that  respect.\nGrants Hearing for Vancouver\nIn tne afternoon Mr. Matthew\nplaced Mrs. DeKatz on the stand\nagain, to show that Mr. DeKatz had\ngiven her to understand he first\ncame to British Columbia in 1900,\nwhile after their marriage he became   a   naturalized   Canadian.\nMr. Justice Macdonald held that\nthese facts justified a presumption\nthat he had thoroughly made up his\nmind to be a British subject, in\nwhich case jurisdiction might be arguable.\nHe adjourned the case to November 17, at Vancouver, to hear an\nargument on the application to\namend the petition, the defendant to\nbe served again, and Included ln the\norder permission for Mrs. DeKatz'\ntestimony given here to be used at\nVancouver without the necessity for\nher going there to testify.\nMi\u2122\nNelson Strong for Information\nBureau   in   First\nTwo Days\nIn two d\/iys, J. R. Gardom, field\nsecretary of the Automobile club of\nBritish Columbia, has induced JT\nNelson men lo join the club in its\nirlve for 200 members and a tourist\ninformation ibureau here. This m.ikes\n;he  mtmbership now  72.\n\"Nelson,\" he said last night, \"is\ngoing 100 per cent for the club and\nthe bureau.\nThe   new   members   dre:\nHarry B. Gore, Fred Ewlnj^ John\nBell, Douglas Cummins, T, E. Le-\nvasseur, W. W. Powell, F. F. Payne,\nDr. John Gmsner, Ceorge W. Dllli\nC. W. Appleyard, Capitol Motors\nlimited, E. L. Buchanan, I. R. Poole,\nW. J. Meagher, A. C. Emory, G. A.\nBrowell, H. M. Vincent, L. X. Choquette, G?orge Thurman, J. F. Thompson, K G. Matthew, Miss LoutN\nSinclair, T. W. Ledlngham. J. S.\nCarter, G. S. -Godfrey, Artjiur Lakes,\nand   L.   E.   Puscoe.\nQueen Marie Passes\nUp Contemplated Trip\nto the Golden State\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 13.\u2014California\nhas 'been excluded  from the itinerary\n\u00bbf Queen Maria- of Rumania, as revised tonight, although she desired\nto   visit   that   .state.\nThe rtaaon for passing up of the\ngolden state waa not made known,\nhut il is understood to have resulted\n(rom a disagreement over rates between    the    railroads     and    those    In\n'harge   of   the   trip.\nA revised itinerary will be made\npublic tomorrow, and will include the\ncities of Montreal, Quebec and Ottawa. Victoria, B. C, also will be\nvisited.\nexpenses unless 1 gave him the money\ntirst,\" said Mr. Sanderton.\nA deal to finance the Porcupine\nthrough Mr. Pomeroy of Portland and\nhis associates fell through. The witness and his associates got $11,000\nand brought it here, but they took It\nback again. There were too many\nbills against the Porcupine property,\nhe said.\nMajor Waite put men to work \u00ab her,\nho should not have done so   the witness stated. m\nA   Blind   Horse\nHe, bought a blind horse. \"How\ndid you know it was a blind horse?\"\nasked Mr. Brown.\n\"Well, it had to be led,\" said Mr.\nSanderson. Major Waite had the\nblind horse and two ipsn haul two\nmattresses down a hill. \"I could\nhave packed tht m down on my back,\nstated Sanderson.\nWhen   Mr.   Pomeroy   dropped   out\n\u00abid  Mr.  Sanderson, \"we  arranged  to\nfinance    the    project    through    other\nsources.   But we refused to gJ ahead.\"\nCheck  Given  to   Buy   Him   Out\nI told Major Walt\u00a9 we couid not\ndo business with him,\" said Mr.\nSanderson. \"I told him he was a\ncrook.\" He offered to buy the Major\nout, but the latter wanted $35,000 for\nhis interest. Then Mr. Sanderson offered to sell out to Major Waite,\nsaying he would accept |3000 though\nhe and Mr. Leonard had invested\n$8700 to $4000. Major Waite said ho\nwould give $2750 for Mr. Sanderson's\nshare,  and  the  offer  was  taken ,up.\n\"I did not threaten to start proceedings to queer the deal,\" stated\nMr.  Sanderson\n\"Did I not ask you for a statement at a conference we had in Mr.\nDonaghy's office?\" asked  Mr.  Brown.\n\"At that time I was offered UOOO\nas a settlement of my claims,\" said\nMr. Sanderson, \"but through Mr.\nDonaghy  I  refused  it.\"\nMr. Justice Macdonald said anything that happened subsequent to\nthe ch eck being given was of no\nmoment. If a man could close a deal\none day, and change the terms the\nnext, there would be no finality in\nbusiness transaction*.\nFell for  Sales  Talk\nHis lordship asked Mr. Sanderson\nhow long he had been associated\nwith Mr. Waite before the first deal\nwas put through.\n'About two months,\" Mr. Sanderson\nstated. \"I met him in my store in\nPortland. He gave me a good sales\ntalk and I fell for it.\"\nHOLD   MAN\nARCOLA, Buk., Oot \u00ab,\u2014Following\non the heels of the robbery and recovery of a safe from the of floes of\nthe Western Canada Elevator company at Wauehope, 24 miles cast of\nhere, provincial police have arrested\nCMlbert Bromfitt, address unknown, on\na charge of shopbreaking. He will\nappear before Judge it, Rtmmer on\nWednesday.\nNelson News of the Day\nCourt   Star,   A.O.F.,  meets  tonight at\n7:30. (5313)\nThere will be a meeting' of the\nSchool Board tonight ut 8 o'clock. City\nHall. (5312)\nCome to the tea at the Manse, 315\nSilica street, this afternoon; bake salt-\nand  Mrs.   Shaw's potted  meats.    (5306)\nDaughters, Maids and Sons of England will meet at Memorial Hall Sunday evening at 7:15, and parade to\nSt. Saviour's Church for Divine Service. Aft members nre requested to attend. (5306)\nThanksgiving\nor\nChristmas\nSuggests\nVisits to the home folks or\nthose old friends. But if you\ncan't visit them in person, do\nthe next best thing\u2014send photographs.\nIt'a not so long as you think.\nCount    up   the   woiks\u2014 then\nmake an arppointment before\nths busy season.\nContractors, Note!\nAuction\nWEDNESDAY,   OCT.   20,   2   p.m.\nAT   END   OF   STREET   CAR   LINE,\nFAIRVIEW. Look tor ths red flag.\nActing under Instructions from Jessie Kerr Fraser, executrix and assignee, for the benefit of creditors of\nthe Daniel Cameron Fraser estate, I\nwill offer the following contractor's\noutfit  for sale at public auction:-\nKnives, forks, spoons, enamel ware,\ncooking utensils, suitable for camp;\nmattresses, cylinder force pump, suction pump, fire hOBe, garden hose,\ntools of all descriptions, rope, chain,\n(10-gallon cement mixer with engine,\nents, gum boots, forge*, anvil, two\nsteel wheelbarrows and numerous\nother equipment,\nfloods on view morning of srfle.\nTerms\u2014Cash\nG.  HORSTEAD,\nAuctioneer\nDouble\nBreasted\nSuits\n$35.00\nThere's an unusual distinction about a double-\nbreasted suit that you\ndon't find in any other.\nThat's why it is so popular\nthis season. We are showing a wonderful variety of\nthem, made in plain blues,\nblue stripes and fancy\ncheck blues.\nOthers $30 to ?40\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nSpecializing   In   Correetinq   Defective\nSight   by   Proper   Glasses.\nQuick Repair Service.\nGRIFFIN   BLK.    -    -    PHONE   125\nTHEMAYTAG\nAluminum Washer\nal  .\nWASHES   CLOTHES   WITHOUT\nHAND   RUBBING\nHOWE ELECTRIC CO.\nOd\u00bbra    House    Block\nNothing is too good for the sick I\nSmy the's Pharmacy\nPrescription Specialist\nIn business for your health,    hat at\nfill   your   prescriptions.     Mall   order*'\npromptly executed.    Call and wait fof ,\nyour car.    Phone 1.\nSunday feonxai  1 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.\nSilverware\nA NEW SHIPMENT OF\nVERY BEAUTIFUL PIECES\nTHAT MAKE IDEAL GIFTS\nFOR   FALL  WEDDINGS.\nREASONABLE PRICES.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nJewslar\nPlumbers' Brass Goods, Fixtures\nand Supplies, Tile and Sewer Pipe.\nB. C. PLUMBING &\nHEATING CO.\nNELSON, B. C.\n30C Baker St. Nalaon, B. C\n= V\nNelson Business College\nEVENING CLASSES\nIndividual  Tuition\nIncrease Your Salary\nArtists'\nSupplies\nWinsor & Newton's Oil Paints,\nWatar Colon*;, Brushes, Academy Board, Pastels, Pastel\nPaper, Pen Painting Outfits, etc.\nJ.  H.  ALLEN\nAmateur  Finishing,\nPicture  Framing\nDo not forget tonight at l.O.O.F.\nHall. Juvenile Foresters' Whi^t, BOO\nDrive and Social Evening. Cards at\nH:30 p.m. Admission 35 cents. Refreshments (1)272)\nIf your paper is not delivered by 8:20\no'clock every morning, please telephone\nThe Daily News, You are entitled to\nreceive your paper by this time.   (4106)\nLen Davis and bis Arcadians, management J. T Shack^r will hold dance\nThursday,   October   21st,   Eagle   Hal!.\n(5370)\nMOTICE    TO   SHAREHOLDER*\nAn Extra-Ordinary General Meeting\nof the Nelson Exhibition Pavilion,\nLimited will be held on Tuesday November 2nd, 1926. at 4 o'clock p.m.,\nln the office of J. E. Annable, Ann-\nable   Block    Nelson.   B.C.\nShareholders are' requested' to attend this meeting, as the business to\nbe   discussed   Is   important,\nAL.EX.   CARRIE,\nSecretary.\nNelson,  B.C., October 18. (5298)\nvms omru. is oraw.\n         (6195)\nWomen's     Soles     $1.25,    AT    WATSON'S. (6083)\nAsk   your   dealer   for  Nelson   Brand\nNew  Pack  Strawberry Jam. (6084)\nPHONE\nDr. M. F. Setters\nPhyaician   and   Surgaan\nSulta   603   to   609   Rookary   Bulldlna,\nCornar Rivaraida and Howard,\nOvar  Whilahouaa.\n\u2022POKANE.  WASH.       _\nEntertainment\nTONIGHT AND TOMORROW, 7 and 9\n\u2014      A     PAP-AMOUNT       PICTURE,\u2014:\nMeighen's best picture since \"The\nMiracle Man.\" This statement is\nverified by Mr. Muir, our managing\ndirector, who b here from Vancouver. He informs us \"Tin Gods\"\nis a wonderful picture. This means\nsomething.    Better see it!\nCOMEDY\n'From the Cabby's Seat'\nFables\nMUSIC   PRESENTATION   NIGHT\nBUY .\nSCRIP BOOK\nconvenient and\n\u00a3\u00a3S^SA\\ESY0l rtONLY.Aaty\n\u25a0\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1926_10_20","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0403333","@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":"1926-10-20 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1926-10-20 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\/1.0403333"}