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T. Shields, pas-\nthe excluded church, unanimous-\nWed that they will be known :is\nunion of regular Baptist churchcti\nLtarto and Quenec.\" A tentative\ntutlon Is being drawn up.\nindments suggested by members\nconsidered    by  the    executive\nIittee, who will formulate a con'\non for presentation to the eon-\nn to be held within a year.\nShield! Chosen\ndst scenes of enthusiasm, l>\ns was unanimously elected proof the new body, with Thomas\nart of Toronto, and Rev. c J.\ny appointed first and second vice-\nsnts. respectively. It was an-\ned that 715 delegates had regis-\nI tha registration representing 82\nlies.\n1 design end object of the new or*\n^itlon are:\n\u25a0bromote the preaching of tbe go*-\nTthe proaecution of iftissidnarv.\nJellstlc and educational work, ami\n(operate with all regular Baptists.\nfilnatlon of the principles and doc-\nheld by regular Baptists, which\nPrinciples are set out in the trmt\nI of the churches.\nVancouver  Wires\nting the discussion. Dr. Shield\na telegram from Vancouver, ex-\nng appreciation ,\"of your noble\nIn the recent convention,\" and\nftsed the hope that the Jarvis\nI convention would be a great buc-\nhope lt will be called the con-\nn of regular Baptists of Ontario\nuebec,\" stated the telegram, which\nreeted with applause.\ner tbe proposed constitution the\na will consist of a president, two\nresidents, a secretary-treasurer\n6 other members will form the\n;lve. Regular Baptist churche\n.ccept the declaration of faith\nbe entitled to send two delegate;\ni annual meeting for the first 100\nere or portion of 100, and one for\nadditional 100 members or portion\ni over 50.\nregular Baptist churches located\nIe of Ontario and Quebec may.\nacceptances and official signing\nconstitution, become members of\nlion, and be entitled to send dele\nto the convention. i\nJeff Fitchie Dies of Serious Injuries;   Alan S.  Grant\nDangerously Wounded\nFIRST SERIOUS CRASH\nIN ONTARIO HISTORY\nPlane Drops 500 Feet to Pas\nture; Pilot Fails in Attempt\nto Right It\nIN, EIGHT DIE\nInjured  in   Mexico;   Mail\n| and Baggage Cars Are\nLooted\nREDO, Texas, Oct. 18.\u2014Eight per-\nwere killed and 10 injured when a\nof about 100 rebels attacked and\n_ a southbound Mexican passengc-\n80 miles south of San Luis Potoal\nrday  morning,   passengers  arriving\nfrom Mexico City reported.\n'O dynamite bombs were placed on\n.racks. Ode exploded as the second\ncoach was passing.    Another tore\nhe tracks and the train came to a\n1 Passengers on the pullman of the\nclass were  not molested  by  the\na.. The express ana mail cars were\n_. It la believed that the rebels\nbetween  10,000 and :100,000 pesos,\nmgers said.\nter the attack the rebels fled Into\nmountains.\nuouver Grain\nFirm Is to Build\nElevator, Kamloops\nNCOUVER, Oot. 19. \u2014 Announce-\nls made that tho Vancouver MiU-\ne Grain company has purchased the\nlouse business of J. R. Colley,\n.\u201e *at Kamloops. and will build a\ngrain elevator at that point In the\nfuture. Mr, Colley will act as\nger for the interior. Further ex-\nma of the spillers* interests repre-\n1 In British Columbia by the Van-\nir Milling * Oraln company to\nInterior centers Is expected.\nJarvis Street Baptist church in Toronto where the \"regular\" Baptists are\nin convention following their expulsion\nfrom the Baptist convention of last\nweek. Supporters of Dr. T. T. ShleldB\ndecided that they will be known as\n\"The union of regular Baptist churches\nof Ontario and Quebec.\" A constitution  is  being drawn  up.    In  a  regis\ntration  representing 82  churches  there j to the left of the spire ia, top, J. B.\nUrtJ15\u00abdeI*?!te8' .   ~ .   .   [Kennedy,  a  delegate  from  the  church\nThe   Baptist   convention   of   Ontario |\nand Quebec recently took action to ex- i oml  f\u00b0\u00abnerly  secretary of the  Baptist\npel Jdrvts Street church, Toronto, seen  Home Mission board for 31 years; bot-\nln  the  center,  and  its  delegates from, torn.   Rev.   James   McOlnlay   of   Alton\nthe convention. Beside the spire to the IB    u t    churcn member    of    the\nright   is  Rev.   Dr,   T.   T.   Shields,   the i\nfighting   pastor   of   the   church,   while j shieIds bloc*\nAlmost Every Section Has Few\nCases; Rigid Quarantine Is\nEnforced\nTrail Patients\nRefused to Aid\nParalysis Convalescents\nRefused Give Blood\n,   N   as Preventive\nPORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 19.\u2014infantile\nparalysis has swept into practically\nevery section of Oregon, It was said tonight by state health officers.' Complete Isolation of cases and rigid quarantine is being enforced in cni.li district in which the disease has been reported. While federal reports from the\ncountry at large Indicate a decline In\nthe epidemic, the state of Oregon reports a gain of 20 cases in the  week.\nFour Members of\nFamily Killed on\nLevel Crossing\nCHICAGO, Oct. 19.\u2014Four members\nof one family were killed and another\nseriously injured late today when their\nautomobile was struck by a Chicago\n& Northwestern express train on a\ncrossing at Desplains, about 80 miles\nnorthwest of  here.\nThe dead are Mrs. Franz Scholz, and\nher two children, Marie, aged 8; and\nFranz Jr., aged 2; and her mother,\nMrs. Anna Knack. Robert Scholz was\nseriously injured, but Is expected to\nrecover. Their home is at Oak Park,\n111.\nJudge Must Produce His\nNotes Says Appeal Court\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19.\u2014That a Judge\nWhen called upon must be ready to\n.produce notes he took during the hearing of a case, was laid down by the\nappeal court today In the action of J.\nMcOibbon versus the Imperial Bank\nof Canada. The order applies tp Judge\nBuggies  of tbe local  court.\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19.\u2014That Trail\nconvalescents from infantile paralysis\nhad refused to supply the provincial\nbacteriologists with ttood serum for use\nin preventing outbreaks of the disease\nwas a statement made today at th?\nweekly luncheon of the health bureau\nof the board of trade by Dr. H. E.\nYoung, secretary of the provincial\nhealth board. The blood serum desired\nwas the only known curative, he\nclaimed.    \u25a0\nHe urged medical men to help the\nprovincial authorities to educate Hn\npublic as to combatting  the disease.\nCanadian Woman Is\nConvicted in Paris\nfor Speeding in Auto\nBOULOGNE. France, Oct. 19.\u2014The\ncorrectional court has convicted Mrs.\nAnson, a Canadian, for exceeding the\nspeed limit and neglecting the rules\nof the road, when she injured a boy\nthrough alleged carelessness last April.\nShe was fined a total of 211 francs and\nordered to pay the boy's father 25,000\nfrancs.\nSAIXT   sTE.   MARIE,   Ont.,   Oct.\n19\u2014Jeff Fitchie, aged  30, pilot In\nthe Ontario air force, Is dead, while\nAlan 8. Grant, agec 23, and son of\nRev. Andrew 8. Grant of Toronto,\nsecretary  of  the  general  board  of\nmissions     of     the     Presbyterian\nChurch In Canada, lies In the War\nMemorial hospital at the Michigan\nsaiilt, suffering from    serious    injuries, as the result of an accident\nat the Michigan Saull today when\ntheir airplane crashed  500 feet to\nearth in a pasture field.\nFitchie was badly mangled, one of hla\nfeet being wrenched off at the ankle,\nboth   legs   and   skull   fractured,   with\nother injuries sufficient to cause death\nGrant   was   badly   crushed   about   the\nchest,  and physicians state his condl\ntlon to be grave.    T:ie machine was a\ncomplete wreck.\nTried Right Craft\nTo the onlookers lt appeared as\nthough Fitchie was attempting to make\na landing in the river. As he settled\nabove the field and aaw that a crash\nwas imminent, he circled and Just before the crash righted the craft to a 45-\ndegree angle to avoid a nose dive. The\nnose of the machine plunged into the\nsoft earth and as lt skidded along at a\nterrific speed, struck a plow ridge and\npiled up.\nFitchie was declared to be an expert\npilot, and Grant was an assistant pilot.\nFitchie came from Ireland but a few\nweeks ago to accept a position on the\nstaff. The plane they were driving was\none of the early ones used in Ontario\nforest patrol work. It was similar to\nthat driven by \"Duke\" Schiller of overseas flying fame. _\nThe accident marks the first serious\ncrash In the history of the Ontario division.\nRumanian Royal Palace\nIs Visited by Spinal\nMeningitis Plague\nBERLIN, Oct. lit\u2014 Reportx from\nBucharest say that a case of cerebrospinal meningitis has broken out\nat the royal palace at Slnala, Rumania. As a precautionary measure\nyoung King Michael has been removed to a castle In the Carpathians.\nMOVIE   ACTRESS   DIES\nNEW YORK, Oct. 19.\u2014Helen McClos-\nkey, movie actress, who donned her\nbridal veil and leaped from a window,\nIs   dead.\nEarle Nelson, Alleged\nStrangler, Up for\nTried in November\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 19. \u2014 Earle Nelson,\nalleged strangler, now :n Jail here charged with the murder of two Winnipeg\nwomen, will be tried before Mr. Justice\nDysart at the assize court opening November 1.\nR. B. Graham, K.c, crown prosecutor,\nwill represent the crown, while J. H\nStltt will act on the behalf of the prisoner.\nBachelor Dies\nWhen His Shack\nBums, Saskatchewan\nMILLY. Sask.,, Oct. 19.\u2014Sylvester\nBongard, bachelor homesteader, met\ndeath when his shack near here fell\nthe prey of flames. Though neighbors succeeded in reaching him while\nhe was still alive, he was badly burned\nand   died | in  a  short  time.\nApparently Bongard had been aroused\nby the flames and had attempted to\nescape when the roof fell in and he\nwas  buried   in   the  debris.\n(Mtlly is a hamlet about 30 miles\nsouth of Meyronne and In the Wood\nMountain country.)\nMOTORISTS   LIABLE\nTORONTO, Oct. 19.\u2014Motorists who\nby reckless driving, cause damage to\nrailway property of equipment, face\nthe prospect of being sued in court,\naccording to legal officers of the\nCNR.\nFour Centenarians and Near Centenarians\nWill Gather at Vancouver for Dad' Quick's\nBirthday on Saturday Next\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19.\u2014October 22 will see a\nunique gathering here of four centenarians and near\nccentenarians. \"Dad\" Quick, Vancouver, still active in\nhis trade as a saddler at 107 years of age, will celebrate\nhis birthday on that date, and for the event Kamloops,\nB.C., is sending a representative even older than he,\nJames Mcintosh, who is 108. The other two present\nwill be A. Higgins, Point Grey, aged 98, and Solomon\nMutch, Burnaby, who will be 99 in December. The\ncombined ages of,the four is 412 years. They will be\nguests of the Cornwall, Devon and Somerset society\nat dinner in their honor.\nMr. Mcintosh was born in Lobo township, Upper\nCanada, near where London is now situated. His ancestors emigrated to Canada from the Scottish highlands. He remembers meeting Sir John A. MacDonald\nwho was a friend of his father's. He heard Abraham\nLincoln make an election speech, and shook hands with\nGeneral U. S. Grant after the civil war. He was a\nprospector in the Cariboo and Kootenay for many years,\nand helped clear the site of Vancouver.\nOTTAWA, Oct. 19.\u2014if anr fresh\noutbreak of smallpox occurs In\nthe capital It U the Intention of\nDr. r. A. Lomer, medical officer\nof health, to call a special meeting or the board of health, to discuss the situation, which officials\n\u25a0ay, Is as serious as It has been\nfor   many   years.\nToday four more cases were discovered In one home, from which\none member of the home had al-\n. ready been sent to the Isolation\nhome. Two patients were discharged from the hospital as cured\ntoday, the next Increase since yesterday Is two cases, bringing the\ntotal number now up to 34.\nSIX CASES, TORONTO\nTORONTO,  Oct.  ID. \u2014  Six students\nfrom  Victoria  college  residence  hare\nbeen removed to the hospital suffering\nfrom mild cases of smallpox.\nBEACHEDAFTER\nCRUSH IN FOG\nTwo More Vessels Collide Off\nFather  Point in  St.\nLawrence Fog\nMONTREAL, Oct. 19^-Dur-\ning a dense fog in the St. Lawrence river the Canadian\ngovernment merchant marine\nsteamer Canadian Runner was\nin a collision with the British\nfreighter Newton Pine last\nnight off Father Point, the Canadian ship being beached near\nRimouski. according to information from the signal service\nin Montreal early today.\nOwing to the heavy seas running, the steamship Newton\nPine was standing by waiting\nuntil such time as a pilot could\nventure forth to take her back\nto Quebec for repairs.\nNo loss of life is reported\nand no estimate of the damage\nsustained by either ship can\nis yet be obtained.\nReeve Reid of Surrey Is Reelected President of R C.\nOrganization\nLOVE OF GRAND FORKS\nSECOND VICE-PRESIDENT\nDelta  Move   Against   Oriental\nControl of Land Is Backed\nby Delegates\nROSSLAND LAD\nDick Trewhella, Aged 13, Latest Victim; Close Three of\nSchool Grades\nROSSLAND, B.C.. Oct. 19.\u2014After\nalmost three weeks' immunity, another case of infantile paralysis developed in Rossland today In the\nperson of Dick Trewhella, 13-year*\nold son of Mm. N. Trewhella.\nDr. Bissett, city medical health\nofficer, Immediately closed for 10\ndftys the three school grades attended by young Trewhella and his\nbrother and sister. Tne quarantine\nextends also to the brothers and\nsisters of all pupils In these three\ngrades. The latest victim attended\nGrade VI.\nHundred Thousand\nDollar Fire Visits\nVillage in Quebec\nCAMPBELLTOWN, N.B., Oct. *>.\u2014\nDamage estimated at $100,000 waa\ncaused by a fire at Maria, Quebec, in\nBonaventure county Saturday night,\naccording to word received here early\ntoday. The flames destroyed a Urge\nstore house and seven other buildings, the property of J. P. White, Ind.\nThe loss was partly covered by Insurance. No loss of life or injury waa\nreported.\nFISHERMAN DROWNS\nON LAKE WINNIPEG\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 19.\u2014Etnar O. Btnar-\nson, fisherman of Rapid Point, on Lake\nWinnipeg, was drowned today when a\nline from a small boat got foul of the\npropeller of a passing steamer and upset his craft.\nGETS   TWO   YEARS   AND JL\nLASHES   FOR   OFFENCE\nORANGEVILLE, Ont., Oct. 19.\u2014For a\nserious offence  against  an   18-year-old\n(girl, Percy Bradley, aged 10, received\na    sentence   of    two    years    with    15\n|lashes.\nNANAIMO, B.C., Oct. 19.\u2014The union\nof British Columbia municipalities\nconcluded its convention here this\nafternoon with the choice of Trail for\nits meeting next year and tbe reelection of Reeve T. Reid of Surrey, as\npresident.\nTrail was selected after Invitations\nhad been received from South Vancouver,   Kamloops   and   Harrison.\nOther officers elected were: First\nvice-president, Alderman Brldgeman.\nNorth Vancouver; aecond vice-president.\nMayor Love of Grand Porta; secretary-\ntreasurer, Mayor Gray, M.LI., of New\nWestminster; solicitor, George Martin,\nNew Westminster; executive. Comptroller PUklngton, Vancouver; Aldermab\nClerlhue, Victoria; Mayor Busby, Na-\nnolmo; Mayor Clark, Trail; Reeve Cornea, South Vancouver; City Clerk Was-\naon, Nelson; Alderman Lockley, Isqul-\nimalt; Reeve Pappay, Langley.\n| The convention decided that tbe annual convention be not bald later than\nthe third week In September.\nThe Union indorsed a proposal that\n1 per cent of all incomes should be\n.collected by the province for school financing as a meant of relieving land\nof heavy charges.\nOriental    Question\nEfforts of Delta farmers to prevent\noriental control of lands and crops woe\nalso supported by the convention. Delta\nmunicipality pointed out that farmers\nbad signed a five-years agreement with\nheavy penalties provided, not to sell or\nlease their lands to orientals.\nThe convention decided to ask the\nprovincial government to approach Ottawa with a proposal that the census\nbe taken every five years. The reason\ngiven was that many grants to municipalities were based on population, and\nmany rapidly growing communities were\nnot receiving an equitable share of distributions.\nThe principle of compulsory automobile insurance was indorsed, and tbe\nmatter referred back to the municipalities for discussion, views to be filed bj\nthe councils before the legislature aits\nin order that the executive may take\nsteps to obtain action. It was pointed\nout, among other things, that all hospitals suffered losses through automobile accident cases.\nNo action will be token this year to\nInterest the government In compulsory\nhealth Insurance, the convention deciding to refer proposals to the executive for examination during the coming\nyear.\nBallet Dancer Falls\nTwelve Stories to\nDeath, New York\nNEW YORK, Oct. 19. \u2014 Jane Johnson, 18 years old, clod In green silk\npyjamas, plunged 12 stories to her death\nfrom a window of tbe Hotel Clarldge in\nTimes Square today. The body fell on\na shed In the rear of the hotel.\nMiss Johnson has been living at tbe\nhotel with ber mother for sins months.\nShe was employed as a ballet dancer at\na salary of 9300 a week, detectives said\nTbe mother was certain that her\ndaughter entertained no secret worry,\nand was firm in the belief that the fail\nwas accidental.\nThe Weather\nIYom the Dominion Meteorological\nOffice, Victoria\nNELSON    __ 47\nVictoria     4\u00a7\nVancouter   44\nKamloops    _   46\nBarkervllle    _ ....\nPrince Rupert   M\nEstevan    _.... 40\nDawson     ]e\nCalgary    _ 41\nWinnipeg    _ 44\nPortland    _ |4\nSan Francisco  m M\nSeattle \u201e 52\nSpokane \u201e 44\nPenticton   _ _ 44\nVernon  44\narand Pork*    44\nKaslo   _] 4*\nCranbrook    M 41\nEdmonton      *\nPrince  Albert   2f\nSwift Current     ,,, .\nQu'Appelle   \t\nForecast:    Nelson ami Tto,\nerallr fair and a llttl* colder.\nMai.\n69\n53\nM\nse\n43\nse\nM\n40\n64\nW\nT3\n84\nM\nTl\n\u00ab\n72\nH\n \u25a0\n'\u25a0 '\t\n9 Sll\n> THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,    THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1927\nSouth African Paper Mentions\n\"Meagreness of the Empire's\nAir Showing\"\nCAPS TOWN, South Africa, Oct. 19.\n\u2014With reference to the departure of\nthe four huge super-marine flying\nboats of the royal air force from Ply-\n. mouth, England, last Monday on an\nEmpire cruise of 25,000 miles which\nwill   include  India  and  Australia,   the\nCape Times discussed the Empire's air\nposition. The Times mentions the\n\"meagreneas of tlje Empire's air showing,\" and states that the present\ntrouble Is not due to a shortage In\nactual air armaments, but le due to\nthe lack of a co-ordinated air policy\nthroughout  the  Empire.\nThe Times refers to the different\nlines of airship development in Canada and Australia and calls upon the\nvarious governments in the Empire to\nreview the whole matter from an Imperial angle with a view to formulating a general policy that will serve the\nneeds of the whole Empire aa well as\nthe various parts thereof.\nThe Times urges the importance of\ni government subsidies for private flying which lt regards as essential to aviation.\nWJSfK\nBEST BUY IN THE WEST\nYOUNG  LADY   KILLED\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 19\u2014Gertrude Russell, aged 20, struck by a \"hit and\nrun\" cyclist died in hospital here last\nnight. Police are seeking the rider\nof the cycle.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Bf Obtained\nGeorge BenweU, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN ROOMS $1.00 UP\nwith Running Water, Private Bath* and *n Salt*.\nHeadquarter*   far   all   Travelling   Men, .Mining   Men,   Lumbar   Men\nand Tourlata.\n\u2022PDCIAL  SDNDAT  DINNER  11.00 Rotarlan   Headquarter*\nTh* Moat Comfortable Rotunda In the City\nHUME \u2014 H. 8. Carter, P. Hentlg, J.\nBtott, Vancouver; P. Barber, Vernon; J.\nF. Coatee, Spokane; J. W. Garrett, Winnipeg; J. F. Johnston, B. Downes, Trail;\nW.  N.  Leavltt,  O.  Nls,  Chicago;   F. P.\nPerry. Fernle; A. P. Perry, Kimberley;\nW. Cochrane. Calgary; T. Dowllng, St.\nPaul; H. W. King. Oolden; P. O. Brown.\nW. J. McKay, Athalmer; P. Ewert, Oolden; E. Sandelands, Wllmer, B.C.; A. H.\nDe Wolf. Cranbrook.\nSAVOY\nKELSON S FINEST HOTEL ABSOLUTELY\nSr,;.:i, Heat, Hot and Cold Running Water in All Koi\nMam Rodins with Private Batli? or Showers,\nA.  KERR.  Prep\nNELSON. B. C\nSAVOY \u2014 W. White, Passmore: O. ! Passmore; Mr. and Mrs. E. Gllli, Ymir;\nGordon. Ban Francisco; J. Tier, Rose- ' D Sutherland, W. Croft, H. Fraser, O. A.\nberry; Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Ewlng. Slocan ; Crysdale, J. W. Bate, W. G. McNyman,\nCity; C. V. Riesterer, Penticton; G. ' C. Whilbert, G. M. Orth, Vancouver; It.\nHornberger. Toronto; P. C. Gleason,j J. Clegg, Rossland. Mrs. Vallance, Mar-\nMrs.  G. F. Gordon, Ottawa;  R. Horrie, I guerite Vallance, New Denver.\nQueen's Hotel\nTHK  CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\n\u25a0ot and oold water In every room.\nSteam Heated\nM. E. BARNETT, Prop.\nQUEENS \u2014 R. Rowe, Ainsworth;   C.\nBwan, Zlncton.\nNew Grand Hotel\nA Modern Brick BuUdlng,\nll\u00ab   Vernon   Street,   N.I.on,   B.   0.\nHot and Cold Water and Telephone*\nla All Rooms.   Steam Heated\nThroughout\nJ. Blombartj, Prep.   European Flan\nNEW ORAND\u2014W. Fluke, Ymlr; H.\nKellberg, Aberdeen, Waah.; J. Rawe-\nthorne, R. Rose. Vancouver; R. Gild-\nrelch, Penticton.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\nt\\'%    Blocks    East   of   Post    Office\nftt*am heated.  Hot and oold water.\nRooms   by   day   or   week.\nAIM Furnished Suites.\nP. H. BU8H, Prop.\nMadden Hotel\nT. MADDEN, Prop,\nlt**m-Heated   Room* by th*  Day\nWeek or Month.\nEvary   con,(deration   chown   t*\nBuest*.\nCor. Baker and Ward Sts- Nelson\nMADDEN \u2014 H. L. Pyfe. Slocan City\nD. J. McDonald, city; H. Christie, Cres.\nton;  T. Martin, rjlade.\t\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nUNDER   THE   MANAGEMENT   OF\nWM. JONES\nGOOD,   CLEAN   ROOMS,   REASONABLE RATES\nPHONE 75 616 VERNON  ST\nNELSON'S BEST CAFES\nYOUR   C'AFf.\nTHE GOLDEN GATE\nOPEN  DAY  ANP  NIGHT\nMeals    SOc    and     up.      Fresh\noysters axe our specialty.    Frigl-\ndalre and soda fountain connection. *\nPHONE   681\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFinest Equipped Restaurant tn the\nCity. OPEN DAT AND NIGHT.\n8PECIAL\u2014Ico Cream, Soda Water\nand Hot Drinks. Nice, clean, furnished rooma, hot and cold water.\nWe Cater to Private Parties.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320   Baker   Street,    Nelson,   B.   0.\nOPEN   DAV   AND   NIGHT\n11:30 to  2:30,  Special   Lunch, SSo\n5:30   to   6:00   p.m.,   Supper,   35c\nPHONE   184\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic Restaurant\nRefinement    and     Delicacy    Prevail,\nOPEN   DAY  AND  NIGHT.\nLuncheon,   11:30  to 2 SSc\nSpecial Dinners 6:20 to 8 35c\nWe   specialize    in    Chop   Susy   and\nNoodles\nPHONE   182 \u2022\nBritish Subject\nHeld for Ransom\nby Mexican Bandits\nWASHINGTON, Oct 19.\u2014Capture by\nMexican bandits of W. E. Mitchell,\ngeneral manager of the Amajac Mining\ncorporation, In, the Ixtlan district, Nay-\narit, wae reported to the state department today by the consult at Mazatlan\nMitchell Is a British subject and ts being held for 0000 pesos ransom within\nfive days under threat that he will be\nshot.\nThe British minister in Mexico City\nhas made representations to the foreign\noffice.\nESTATE IS fMMMH*\nTORONTO, Oct. 19 \u2014The late Sir\nJohn Williamson left an estate of \u00bb50,-\n000.\nPSORIASIS .\n\u2022nd all  Skin  or  Blood   Disease*\nrak* on ureal etemeaie*\nBook . on Skin Disease*. \u00ab*w\nTreatise oa Chronic Disease* 07\nHerbal Remedies. ramphlat on\nLos* of Manhood and Diseases of\nmen. Booklet on Female Ilia; and\nad vie*, free by mall; SO year**\nexperience. Without criticising or\ndisparaging your local doctor*,\nwrite ua before losing hop*.\nTreatment by mall our specialty.\nnsuii hibbal uurriJT.\n\u25a0AST   LTD.\n1>S* Dart.. YaaoonTm, >\u00ab.\nTh* Oldest Herbal  Institution\nTrail Hotels\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA   P.   LEVESQUE,   Prop.\nCompletely Renovated and Refurnished\n(Hot   and   Cold   Running   Water European  Plan\nSteam     Heated Centrally     Located*\nRotary\nHeadquarters\nSample   Rooms   in\nConnection\nSteam Hearted\nThroughout\nHot and Cold\nWater\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\nE.   L.   AND   A.   GROUTAGE,   Prop*.\nBex 300        Phon* 283        Trail,  B.C.\nTh* Old  Reliabl.\nCROWN   POINT   HOTEL\na. McDermott\nEvery Courtesy Extended to Tourlata\nand Other* Visiting Trail\nTravelers Should ff*******^\u2014'\nCarry Cuticura ^^K^f\nDaily uae of the Soap and Ointment re-   ^^-^    \"(^^Sh    1\nmoves the dust and grime of travel, allays                                \\          f*\nirritation, redness and roughness of the                                \\        \\\nface and hands, and keeps the skin soft ^^                    \\    _.^_V\nand clear under all conditions of exposure. fjjESh                       \/'**CS\nCuticura Talcum is fragrant, cooling and kWfll                         tttiaTl :\nrefreshing, an ideal toilet powder.               __f_^______                                Ell\nlUapU beb Tit bj Mill.   Addrm Ctnulian  I)#pot- ffi\u00a3_____                       .'\"'\u25a0    BP^Pf\n\"ItMhMM, LU., ftntrwl.\"   Prfn, Soap tte.  oTnt-   fSlTTll                          '\u25a0   _^*lln\nmeat 26 and SOc. Tulcum 2St.                                              ^Qj__fr\u2014^-^\/         _^ _________ 1\nW*-W~ Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c.                                      ^****-^>^l |W\n-\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA. C. TOWNER,  Proprietor\nTh* Home of Plenty,\nFifty  rooma  of  solid   comfort.\nHeadquarter. for Logger* and  Miner*\nTRY A CLASSIFIED AD.\nA TRUE BILL\nNow the Fall\nGive us a\nown\nyour\nthis\na new\nand prices\nall our\nrepeat orders bear\nand our rent\nASSIZES\nTRIAL\nJUDGMENT\nVERDICT\nCASE\nSUIT\nAPPEAL\nCLIENTS\nWITNESS\nCOSTS\nare on\nuse your\nand\nin\nwill  be\nour quality\nto and give\nsatisfaction\nto this\nless\nWEAR\ni ommt TMt HIGH RENT !\nThis advertisement was submitted\nto us, by a gentleman who says\nhe reads our advertisements with\nInterest. It also ha* the advantage\nof  Truthfulness.\nHIGHER TARIFF\nCommission  Takes Application\nUnder Advisement; Makers\nAsk Investigation\nOTTAWA, Oct. 19. \u2014 Late today the\napplication of Canadian door manufacturers for addltfonal tariff protection\nwas taken under advisement by the tariff advisory board. Tbe afternoon sitting was largely consumed with the petition of the case of those opposing the\nrequest, and final argument.\n\"We protest against the attempt to\nhave the duty Increased from 26 per\ncent, either by change of the rate or\nby fictitious valuation of such doors its\nmay be Imported from the United\nStates,\" declared L. K. Ockley, representing Kent Ockley, Toronto, and other\nOntario retailers.\n\"We contend,\" he said, \"that there Is\nno object In dumping, nor any attempt\nto dump doors In Canada by the Amer\nlean manufacturers.\" He objected to\nany interference with the tariff.\nR. J. Deachman, Consumers' League\nof Canada, said that the granting of the\napplication might mean an additional\n86 cents per door to the Canadian consumer. Tbe application was \"a purely\nselfish one.\" A. E. Darby, for the Canadian Council of Agriculture, also opposed the request. He styled as \"a\nvicious principle\" the suggestion to\n\"send a cost accountant\" to the American nWufactfurer to ascertain the actual cost.\nAsk Investigation\n\"We are not asking for a higher tariff,\" declared Oliver Phillips, Vancouver, In presenting his argument for the\nBritish Columbia door manufacturers.\n\"As far as British Columbia manufacturers are concerned, we only desire\nthe true Btory. For that reason we Ue-\nBlre that an investigation be made of\nAmerican door plants uy a competent\ncost accountant so that a fixed and fair\nprice for the selling purposes of American doors In Canada my be submitted\nto the board.\"\nAmerican manufacturers were now\nselling their doors in Canada at such\nlow prices as could only demoralize the\nCanadian industry. These prices could\nprevail only temporarily. There should\nbe some basis of equalizing the cost of\nAmerican doors, here, with the cost of\nproducing a similar in Canada.\nA. L. Bennett. Gait, contended on behalf of eastern Canada door manufacturers, that the present Bltuatlon was\nunfair to producers in this country. He\nasked that the case be decided \"on it':\nmerits\" and that the suggestion to send\na cost accountant into American plants\nbe put into effect. Tne request was\n\"absolutely fair and reasonable to ail\nparties.\"\nTaking of Evidence\nin Murder Case\nTahes Afternoon\nWINDSOR. Ont., Oct, 19.\u2014A record\nof brevity in murder trials was made\nhere today when all evidence in the\ncase of Carmelo Figiiomeno, charged\nwith thp murder of Oaetano Provenzano\nwas heard within one afternoon. The\nsumming up for the Jury will be made\ntomorrow morning. Figiiomeno, police\ncharge, stabbed his countryman fatally\nin a quarrel after a card game.\nMcMaster Students\nAsk That McGinley\nBe Taken From School\nInstitute of Mining\nMeets in Vancouver\nLate in November\nVANCODVBR, Oct. IB. \u2014 November\naa, 24 and 25 are announced aa tbe\ndate* of the annual general meeting of\nthe Britufb Columbia civlslon, Canadian\nInstitute of Mining and Metallurgy.\nENGIHEN DIF\nEngine.   Baggage   Car   Plunge\ndown  Embankment;  Passengers Escape\nHALLE8TEAD, Pa, Oct. 19.\u2014Crashing\nInto a deep washout near here tonight,\nthe engine and baggage car of Lackawanna passenger train No. 28, a local\nfrom Blnghampton to New York City,\nplunged down an embankment, killing\nthe engineer and fireman and giving\nthe passengers a severe shaking up.\nThe mail car left the tracks, but did\nnot go over the bank.\nNone of the passenger cars left the\ntrack and none of the passengers were\nInjured.\nThe accident occurred at 6:10 p.m.,\nabout one and a half miles east of\nHallestead. Railroad mem said the\ndense fog, which followed a heavy rain\nduring the day, had made lt Impossible\nfor the engineer to see the washout\nuntil lt was too late to check the spe\/jd\nof his train.\nTraffic was held up for about half\nan hour. Later arrangements were\nmade to detour all tr&lns over the slow\nfreight  lines.\nThe baggage car, mall car and two\nexpress cars plunged down a 20-foot\nembankment and piled on top of the\nengine. The passenger cars all remained on the tracks, but the passengers were badly shaken up.\n< A wrecking crew was summoned from\nScranton.\nFRENCH FLIERS\nLand Within 400 Miles Buenos\nAyres Account Unfavorable\nWeather\nBUENOS AYRES, Oct. 19. \u2014 Eager to\ncomplete their great flight from Pans\nto Buenos Ayres, the French aviator*.,\nDleudonne Costes and Lieutenant Joseph Lebrix, took off from Rio Janeiro\nat 5:27 this morning for the Argentine\ncapital. But they were halted on the\nway by unfavorable weather. A message received by the French ambassy\nfrom the consul at Rio Qrande Do Sul\nreported t,hat the Frenchmen were forced to land at Pelotas, Brazil. They had\nflown a distance over 800 miles from\nRio and had about 400 miles to go.\nIS   A   I'KEKIDKNT\nTRNTO, Oct. 19.\u2014Rev. Thomas Battle of Schomberg, Ont., has been appointed president of the Catholic Truth\nsociety of Canada.\nSWORD DANCER\nTORONTO, Oct. 19.\u2014A resolution has\nbeen drawn up by the student body M\nMcMaster university recommending to\ntheir student council that James McGinley be expelled from the university\nfor having \"openly slandered the faculty and students of McMaster and for\nrepeatedly identifying himself with an\norganization decidedly antagonistic to\nMcMaster.\"\nCouldn't Eat Fruit,\nStomach So Bad\n\"I was badly constipated and troubled\nwith gas after eating. Could not'eat\nfruit and many other things. Adlerika\nhas done me good\u2014can now eat any\nthing.\"\u2014W. H. Fletcher.\nAdlerika relieves stomach gas and\nsourness In TEN minutes. Acting on\nBOTH upper and lower ..bowel, lt removes old waste matter you never\nthought was Jn your system. Let Adlerika give your stomach and bowels\na REAL cleansing and see how much\nbetter you feel.    Poole Drug Company,\nE\nWould Give Teachers More A\nthority in Promotions;\nAsk Share Taxes\nHARRISON HOT SPRINGS, B.C.,\n19\u2014Entrance examination and proi\ntlon methods were discussed at leu\nby the British Columbia school trust\nconvention at today's session, tl\nresolutions being passed, as follows:\nThat pupils In assisted schools be l\nmltted to write the examinations\ntheir schools; that entrance class tea\ners in one to three-roomed sch<\nnow prohibited from doing so, be ft\nthe privilege of recommending pu\nfor promotion to high schools,\nthat pupils showing high averages d\ning the year, but falling in examl:\ntions through nervousness, be glvei\ncredit of 6 per cent of the total mai\nReplying   to  an   objection   that\nrecommendation   privilege     in     n\nschools   would   be. abused,   Mrs.   O.\nBeckett,    Saanich,    declared    that\nteachers  should  be  of  high  standi\ncapable  of  recommending.\nAid  Ittinil  School*\nA share In government taxes deri\nfrom licences, gas, and liquor,\nsought by rural districts and a resc\ntlon to that, effect  was  indorsed.\nVancouver carried a resolution urg\na more equitable distribution of sch\ntaxes, the government to devise\nmeans after it was pointed out 1\nlt was Intended to make orientals i\nnon-land owners contribute to scl\nmaintenance.\nLegislation   providing   for   the   ct\ntlon  of  parental  boarding  schools\ntruant, and delinquent children, rat\nthan placing them tn detention hon\nwas strongly recommended.\nOther recommendations passed w\nthat the government have unlfo\nprices placed on text books and t\nall instructions Issued by the depa\nment to teachers be sent also to sch\nboards.\nLAWYER WITH\nCourt Gasps but It Turns O\nto Be Demonstration\nOnly\nPARIS, Oct. 19.\u2014An unexpected dei\nonstratlon of a phase of the assa\ntlon of Gen. S. Petlura brought gai\nof surprise from spectators at the mi\nder trial of Samuel Schwartzbard toi\nin the court of assizes.\nHenri Torres, chief counsel for\nblonde Russian watchmaker phanf\nwith the murder of the former head\nthe Ukrainian state army, suddei\ndrew an automatic revolver from\nneath the folds of his black lawye\nrobe. Leaping past colleagues, Ton\nfaced Dr. Paul, experienced prosecutl\nwitness, who was explaining to\ncourt how Schwartzbard fired two bv\nlets into General Petlura's body aft\nthe latter had tumbled into the roa\nway at the corner of r*.e Rue Racl\nand the Boulevard St. Michael, win\nhe was slain May 25, 1926.\nSpectators gasped, not knowing w\nTorres was brandishing the revoiv\nAiming at a chair, Torres snapped t\ntrigger of the revolver. There\nmore gasps, but no explosion.\nThe question of whether 9cJ_wari\nbard fired bullets in General Fetlur\nbody as he lay in the roadway Is o\nof the points of the trial for there h\nbeen no question of who did the kl\ning. Schwartzbard yesterday related\nvivid detail how he trailed the genei\nand shot him down to avenge tho\nBands of Jewish deaths in Okralnla.\nThe   extra   forces   of   guards   In\ncourt room were again on hand tod\nto prevent demonstration of racial fe\nlngs.\nReginald Smith, an English teach\nwho is a reputed eyewitness of the i\nsUssination, acted out what he saw a\nresorted to Shakespeare to describe t\nexpression on Schwartzbard \"a face\nGeneral Petlura fell.\n\"He wore an expression of 'exaltatl\nmixed with anguish,'\" Smith related.\nU   R.   WILSON\n\"Winner In the sword dance contest\nat the recent Highland gathering at\nBanff,   Alta.\nTHE  GUMPS \u2014WHAT'S   THE  MATTER?   WHAT'S   THE  MATTER?\nNorthern Construction\nCompany Gets Contract\ntor Elevator Foundatic\nCALGARY, Oct. 19.\u2014It was\nnounced Wednesday by the Alber\nwheat pool In Calgary that contra*?\nfor the foundations of the pool's ne\nterminal elevator at Vancouver hai\nbeen let to the Northern Constructs\ncompany and J. w. Stewart.\n\/j   A  CABLEGRAM\nFROM    MELBOURNE,\nAUSTRALIA-\nAUSTRALIA   SPELLS\nUNCLE   BIM \u2014\nAMD   UNCLE    B.AA\nSPEUS   MKPPINES5\nDEAR  ANDY- >\nWILL YOUR BUSINESS AFFAIRS\nPERMIT   YOU   TO   S>H0P  EVERYTHING\nAND   ACCEPT A  POSITION  OF   TEUST\nAND   RESPONSIBILITY\" AS I FEEL YOO\n.ARE   THE  IDEAL.   MAN   TO   PROMOYf\nAN   IDEA THAT I    NAVE  LOCKED\nWlYFllN   MY OWN   HEART- IF YOU\nWILL CAIL ON   MR. EDWIN L.RE^D\nPRESIDENT  OF   THE TENTH\nNATIONAL SANK  HE\/\n,WILL GIVE YOU  ALL.\nDETAILS- WARMEST\n.J.0VE  TO   YOURSELF\nAND\nCUESTEfc-\nBIM-\nfo^^T\nINTHE-W\nTHINGS\neaieasilysold\n_\n......Hi>.>,-i.>M\n________________\n \u2014\n\u2014\u2014\n*HI NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER' % 1027\nPage Three\n\/c?sy\nE\nOF SPBLASS\nWill Aid  British Company  to\nMarket Stock on\nExchange\nHUNDREDS OP SAMPLES;\nSOWS OP NEW STRIKE\nHi*  Lardeau Property to Be\nDeveloped After Tied Up\nfor Lifetime\n..r1\u2122 !\"Mr to mr\u00bb \u00ab\u2122<\u00bblvable form\n*\u00bbfl variety was to be seen In Nelson\n\u00bb few day, ago. when R. a. McUod,\n\u00bbho for 34 year, has held the Spy\nGlass group on Poplar creek. In the\n\u25a0^Kleau, passed \u00ab_.\u201e\u201e,\u201e the Mf ,_\nBeattie with pwhaps a couple of hun-\n\u00abw samples from th.t property Mr\nMcLeo* *oo_ over a hundred out of\nuielr paper swathlngs, and they mad*\n\u00bb Wlttming show In his room at the\n\u2022Hume. Vetoing the quart* samples In\n\u00abvery direction, sometimes protruding\nfrom the \u00aburface a* almost leaves of\nsilver and somMlmcs with the mossy\neffect, ihe wire silver made a unique\nshow. Nat a sample in the lot but had\nmre or native sliver, that being the\no\u00bbsl\u00ab on which they were selected.\nNew Strike filch\nMost of these samples are from showings on the main vein of the Spy-Qlau\nwhose underground development Is\nPractically all In ore. .Thla vein Is\nfrom 3_ to s feet in width, with a\nPay streak of 6 to 14 Inches. But\nsome of the samples are from a new\nvein of fine gold quartz, lust struck,\nwhich la 10 to 12 feet wide. These,\nlike all the others, show the native\nsilver. Some of the samples have to\nhe handled very tenderly, as their\nvein* and nuggets of silver In the\nQuartz make them very fragile.\nBehind this wholesale taking of\nsamples from the Spy-aiass Is a reason.\nThe whole lot will go to London, to\nbe made use of by a strong British syndicate that has taken an option on the\nProperty, when lt shall have launched\nthe company It proposes and listed Its\nshares on the London stock exchange.\nMr. McLeod will take his payment for\nthe property In a large block of the\nshares, the Britishers, however, having\nthe major Interest. He consented to\nthis plan for the sake of getting for\nthe property the thorough and large\nscale development that the syndicate\nIs committed to giving lt.\nKomantle   story\nThe story of the old Spy-Olass, ad\ntnlttedly one of the richest properties\nIn the Kootenay on its showings to\ndate, Is one of romance. In the days\nof the \"Poplar rush,\" or \"Poplar excitement,\" Its name was one to conjure with, along With the Lucky Jim,\nand others. Poplar creek ts a tributary of the Lardeau river, and Poplar\nla a station on the Lardeau branch\nof the Canadian Pacific railway. The\nSpy-Glass Is located about 12 miles up\nthe creek. Some of the properties had\nextremely rich gold showings, others\nsilver, and the particular claim of the\nSpy-Glass to fame Is Its rich silver\npay streaks. Selected samples have\nessayed as high as 3*40 ounces of silver\nand 1120 In gold to the ton. Actual\nsmelter returns on a shipment of three\ntons went \u00bb325 a ton for the sorted\nore and $125 for the remainder.\nThe Spy-Glass was located by John\nWlndqulst In 1801, and was brought In\n1892 for (36,000 by Mr. McLeod, who\nbeat a number of competitors to lt by\ngiving a check for (1000 as cash payment before  he  had laid eyes on the\nNELSON MOTOR COACHES\naiL\u00aboiT-ax.ocA> ont \"vatuoia*\nLv. Slocan City connections for\nTrail        7:11 a-m\nLv. Peebles Motors,  Nelson 4:15 p.m\nHELSOW-TBAII.   \"MABJOBIB\"\nLv. Nelson,      connection*     for\nRossland     8:10 a.m\nLv. Trail,   connections  for  Slocan Olty  .I:*S u.ns\nNEUOK-THIB-SLAUIO   \"EO-tO\"\nLv. Salmo\u20148:00 am.\nLv. Nelaon\u20148:80 p.m.\n\u00bbf__JH>Tf -T*gns-l*.li**0 TtBJW\nLv. Nelson  (Madden Hotel)    10 a.m\nLv. Salmo     1 D.ra\nproperty, UM (Uil eausirig a _\nas several companies w\u00abre seeking option! On lt. on vmtint it. and seeing\nthe vein showing up in bold relief on\nth* surface for 2000 feet, with good oie\nexposed, he mad* th* n*ooesary pay\nment for a oo-day option, and wlthll,\nthat tune, using three shifts, _r6v* a\n260-foot tunnal. and from thl* made an\nuprals* that practically reached the upper Prospect tunnel. Both tunnel and\nraise being In ore all tn* way. he completed the deal and became owner of\nthe property.\nMr. McLeod. who previously had been\noperating In the Oambaurne camp on\ntha Arrow lake side ot the Lardeau, se-\nOUMd U associates Bruce White, the big\nSlocan operator, James A. Magee, lumberman, and Dt. O. 8. Armstrong of\nSpokane, and formed the \u25a0py-Olas*\nMining Sz Development eonUHtaj, tHth\na capitalisation a* \u2022BfJe.Wd, Id develop\nand equip the property. Development\nwork proved satisfactory, but presently\nwas halted, while sale of stock to equip\nthe property with a proper plant became the program.\nMcLeod Gets It Again\nHowever, this program was not executed, the death of Mr. MoLeod's three\nassociates tying up things for a lengthy\nperiod of years,\nReoently he again secured complete\ntitle to the Spy-Glass, put on a small\ncrew to clean up and do some development, and was successful In Interesting\nthis British syndicate, through its Vancouver representative. The esmpany'j\nPlant are to Secure all needed capital\nIn tha old oountt\u00bb, and n* stock la be\nIng offered here.\nNEW BOWLERS TO\nSTART IN flUUL\nFour New Bowling Teams Will\nGet in Play Today and\nTomorrow\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 19.\u2014Pour new\nteams lined up In the City Bowling\nleague will go Into action tomorrow\nand Friday in the league handicap\ntournament on which play commenced\non  Monday.\nTomorrow's matches are: Churchmen\nvs. Transportation, at 7 o'clock, and\nRoyal Purple vs. Memorial Hall No. 2,\nat   9.\nNative Sons vs. Refinery, and ElkB\nvs. Memorial Hall No. 1 are Friday's\nmatches.\nThe perBodnel of the new teams is:\nChurchmen\u2014H. Severns, Rev. N. D.\nB. Larmonth, P. J. Sammons, P. R.\nMcDonald and  T. Spencer.\nTransportation\u2014W, Freeman, T. Mero,\nJ. Hanson, D. Stewart, C. Bradbury.\nRoyal Purple\u2014C. Miles, J. R. Mc-\nBride. A. O. Mann, R. w. Melkle and\nW.  J.  Owen.\nMemorial Hall No. 2\u2014O. Cummings,\nJ. Stewart, O. Parry, W. D. Owen and\ni.  Graham.\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 19.\u2014Mr. and Mrs,\nFrank Moran and daughter. Frances,\nhave recently returned from an extended  visit to the  eastern cities.\n\u2022 *    *\nRoland Miller of Tadanac has recently returned from two weeks' vacation\nat the coast.\n\u2022 \u00bb   *\nCharles Scanlan, who for the last\nfew years has been employed In the\nBank of Commerce at Portland, has\nbeen transferred to that bank in Trail,\nwhere  he  will  be  accountant.\nMiss Helen Campbell of Seattle arrived in Trail last night to spend a\nweek as the guest of her mother, Mrs.\nFrank Campbell,  of  this city.\nA. D. MacLean of Vancouver was a\ncity  visitor  on  Tuesday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nD. A. McKlnnon of Orand Forks was\nIn the city on Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. L. Trone of Spokane\narrived this afternoon to spend the\nweek-end with Rev. and Mrs. N. D. B.\nLarmonth.\n\u2022 *    *\nFrank Pennoyer of Grand Forks Is\nspending a few days in the city.\n\u2022 *    t\nEarl Peddycoart of Rossland was a\nTrail visitor today.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss Violet and Leslie Bell of East\nTrail returned yesterday from spending\nthe  week-end  with  friends  in  Nelson.\nRestful Lidht\nReading or working becomes doubly pleasurable when done by the well-diffused light of\nthe new Edison Mazda Lamps. Frosted on the\ninside they prevent glare and give a toft,\neven glow. l.m\nEDISON MAZDA\nli;niKilBm\nLAMPS\nA CANADIAN  GENEDAL  ELECTQIC   PDODUCT\nISTfllGT\nIS NOW GUT IN\nKiimloops-Okanagan    Improved\nConnections Now Being\nBrought  In\nConnection betwted Klmlodpa and\nvefnbh wis td be cut tn yesterday bit\nthe new line of the British Columbia\nTelephone company. A. B. Godfrey.\nmanaging director of the Okanagan\nTelephone company, stated here last\nnight.\nThe Dominion government's line between those point* was out of date and\nIn bad shape and In the Interest of a\nbetter Interdlitrlct connection, the government stood aside to permit the big\ncommercial company to build the line.\nIt Is expected the hew line, by glvitit\na better connection between the Okanagan and Ksmlotips. wilt hasten the day\ndf a complete Interior system of connecting lines, and wm be a link In\nthrough telephone service to the coast.\nMf. Godfrey formerly lived in Kelson\nLL GETS\nUNDERJflY. TRAIL\nSeniors  Practice  With  Pickup\nTeams; Pirates Beat Bulls\n20-12\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 10.\u2014Basketball got\nunder way here tonight with three\nstrenuous practice matches. Involving\nfour regular teams, two in the senior\nand two in the intermediate divisions\nThe Arrow Boat club and the Sheiks,\nseniors, both got good workouts from\nfine pickup teams. The regulars showed\na lot of promise and put out a brand\nof play that augers well for the season's sport.\nThe Pirates beat thP Bulls 20-12 in\nthe intermediate game, having a slight\nedge in combination and shooting\nBoth teams gave promise of interesting\nmatches as soon as they are limbered\nup and Into a regular series that Is\nsoon to start.\nTheir teams were:\nPirates \u2014 McLeary and Murdock,\nguards; w. Evans, center; Cummings\nand Bradbury, forwards; Shaw and\nMiles,  reserves.\nBulls\u2014Crowe and Sims, guards; Cook,\ncenter; Rothery, McDonald and Taylor,\nforwards.\nA. Balllie refereed this match and\nthe first senior game. \\ C Bradbury\nrefereed  the  other   practice  game.\nBT BONO ISSUE\nConsolidated Buys Bonds Issued\nby Trail Rink Company\nfor Ice Plant\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 19.\u2014Trail's new\nartificial ice rink Is being financed\nby an Issue of bonds by the Trail Rink\ncompany, not by the Consolidated Mining <te Smelting company, although this\ncompany has bought up the bonds as\nan   Investment.\nThe building of the rink building\nwas financed by a bond issue which\nwas paid up about a year ago. The\nConsolidated held a large block of\nthese bonds.\nOfficials of the Trail Rink company\nare confident that their bonds will be\nretired before very many years have\npassed, believing that the extension\nof the skating and hockey season will\nresult  in  greater  profits.\nLegion Orchestra\nof Trail Makes Hit\nat Capitol Shows\nThe orchestra of the Trail branch\nof the Canadian Legion came to Nelson last evening to show its ability,\nplaying for 20 minuteB before each of\nthe shows at the Capitol theater. It\nmade a conquest with the 972 patrons\nof the two shows.\nEd Hall, the well known Trail musician, was conductor, 20 fellow musicians being under his leadership. The\norchestra motored over.\nWilson Regains Men's\nGolf Title in Match\nWith Townshend, Champ\nBy a score of one up In 18 holes,\nT. R. Wilson, several times men's golf\nchampion of the Nelson Oolf and Country club, yesterday won the title again,\ntaking lt away from B. Townshend, last\nyear's holder, the other finalist. With\nthe title goes the custody of the Ap-\npleyard-Lowe   cup.\nMrs. Thompson, Cornozzi\nWhist Winners, Trail\nTRAIL. B.C., Oct! 19.\u2014Catholic Ladles'\nProgressive club entertained about 60\nguests tonight with a whist drive and\ndanoe In St. Francis Xavier church\nparish hall. The prise winners were:\nMrs. Thompson, ladles' first; Mrs. J.\nGibson, consolation; J. Cornozzi, men's\nfirst;   L.   McLaughlin,   consolation.\nThe committee in charge was composed of Mesdames 8. Hepworth, J.\nFitzgerald, L. McLaughlin, S. Stewart,\nN. Ruelle, and the Misses F. Kavlc\nand M. Bruno. Herb Jackson was\nmaster of ceremonies.\nWilliam Oreen was unanimously reelected to the presidency of tht American federation of labor.\nFARMER OWNS BELOVED VIOLIN\n\"H                         m        MM        H\/fl\n1*1                   \\W        ^****l     *******V __W\nlff't*ti    \u25a0fl                   1\nHqkHH\nH\nJohn Pumfrey, farmer, of Camden\ntownship, near Chatham, Ont., po*.\nses**s a violin ' which experts have\npronounced a genuine Stradivarlua,\nand on which, he places a value of\nIU.000, ,Mr. Pumfrey Is shown\nwith ;th\u00ab instrument, tor which, he\nsays, he recently declined an offer\nof 110,000. It 1* In an excellent state\nof preservation. The coloring of the\nwood which forms the back of the\nInstrument Is Wondurful. Inscribed\non the Inside  are the words:   \"An-\ntonlus Stradivarlua Cremonensls Fa-\nclebaf Ann6 1718.\" The violin has\nbeen a family relic for many dacades.\nIt was brought to Canada by his\nfather, when, as a youth of 18, he\nemigrated. Mr. Pumfrey, who Is 78\nyears' of age, stated that he had\nheard his father say that lt had\nbeen handed down , from father\nto son. \"My father treasured this\ninstrument so much that he would\nnever let any of ua play It,\" the\nov?ner stated.\nInjunction Prohibits\nLoan Company Making\nTransfers in West\nAnnual Meetings Will Replace\nThem in Future Anglicans Decide\nTORONTO, Oct. IB.\u2014It was decided\nat today's session of the Dominion\nboard of the Women's Auxiliary of the\nAnglican church that triennial meetings\nwould be discontinued in the future and\nwill be replaced by annual conferences.\nThe conferring of a Dominion life\nmembership on Mrs. Prances 8. Bruce,\npresident of Chester branch for the past\n10 years, was a feature of tbe session.\nAn Interesting speaker at the session\nwaa Miss Noran Bowman of Japan, who\nrevealed Intimate glimpses of woirf n\nand children In the orient. She told\nthe gathering that smoking, a favorite\nIndulgence, was renounced by many\nwomen. In order that they might devote the money thus saved to the missions. It was not the flar\/ers, however, that made this sacrifice, but the\nmothers of families, said Miss Bowman.\nBuys Damaged Crop\nThreshes It and\nClears Thousands\nLEADER. Sask.. Oct. 19\u2014P. Lelpert\nLeader blacksmith, bought a 200-acrc\ncrop which had been damaged by wind\nand hall, at 95 per acre. After paying\nfor having the crop harvested and\nthreshed, and for other expenses, he\nstill realized a clear profit of \u00bb5200.\nARTHUR CANNON IS\nNOW APPEAL JUDGE\nOTTAWA, Oct. 19.\u2014Arthur Cannon,\nK.C., nephew of Hon, Luclen Cannon,\nhas been appointed a judge of the Quebec appeals court.\nCalgary Man Receives\nFractured Thigh When\nThrown From Auto\nCALGARY, Oct. 19.\u2014Thrown to the\nground when an automobile, on the\nrunning board of which h{ was standing, started suddenly, R. S. Hamer.\nOttawa, chairman of the beef grading\ncommission, suffered a fractured thigh.\nThe extent of the Injury was revealed\ntoday when an  X-ray was taken.\nAged Woman Gets\nTangled in Barbed\nWire and Dies\nTRENTON, Ont., Oct. 19.\u2014After hanging all night head downward from a\nwire fence, in which one foot had become entangled, when she fell while\nattempting to climb over, Mrs. John\nStlckney, aged 73, died today. A\nstepson, coming this morning found\nMrs. Stlckney In an unconscious condition, but she  died within an  hour.\nCOMEDIAN   DIES\nNEW YORK, Oct. 19.\u2014Tom Lewis,\nveteran stage comedian, died In hospital\nhere today. He was born In St. John.\nN.B., 04 years ago.\nPOLICE    OFFICER    DIES\nTORONTO, Oct. 19.\u2014Robert McLel-\nland, former chief inspector on the\npolice force; is dead. He was a police\nofficer for 47 years.\nScottish Artist\nModels Plaque in\nHonor of Nurses\nEDINBURGH. Scotland. Oct. 19. \u2014\nWriting of the Scottish war memorial,\na woman says:\n\"It has been left to Scotland to\ncommemorate adequately the women In\nstained glass and bronze; and the\nanimals have not been forgotten either,\neven the tunnelers' little friends, the\nmice and canaries, having a stone\ncarving all to themselves. It was a\nwoman,. Alice Meredith Williams, who\nmodeled the bronae for the plaques \"In\nhonor of all Scotsmen who amid the\nstress of war sought by their labors,\nsympathy and prayers to obtain for\ntheir country the blessings of peace.\"\nIt was she, too, who modeled the\nplaque in memory of the nursing\nservices.\nWINNIPEO, Oct. 19.\u2014An injunction\norder granted the National Trust company, provisional liquidators of the\nOreat West Permanent Loan company,\nwhich restrains the Winnipeg district\nregistrar from approving any transfers\nfrom the properties of the loan Company was enlarged today by Mr. Justice Curran In King's Bench court.\nAn order made today by Mr. Justice\nCurran restrains district registrars In\nSaskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia, so that now throughout western Canada there can be no transfer\nmade by the Oreat West company of\nits lands, mortgages or other documents\nof title until the court gives permission.\nThe National Trust company has been\nblocked In Its attempt to assume Its\nreceivership duties by trustees for Che\nbondholders who have been in control\nof the loan company's offices, the past\nsix days. A legal battle Is anticipated\nto determine the rights of the provisional liquidator as against the trustees.\nWays of Attacking: Projects of\nPhilanthropy Told Trail\nRotarians\nTRAIL. B.O,, Oct. 19.\u2014Trail Rotarlani\ngot many valuable tips on how to tackle\ntheir projects of phttantbophy at\ntheir weekly luncheon at tha Arlington\nyesterday afternoon. Attendance was\n100  per cent.\nW. Mainwairl ng, chairman of the\nfellowship committee of the Vancouver\nelub, In a breezy address, gave them\nconcrete examples from the activities of\nhis club, first in the matter of raising\nfinances for such work and, second, la\nthe conduct of the chosen line of Caul-\ntable work. He also gave* pointers \u00aba\\\nsuccessful \"stunts\" for maintaining 100\nper 'cent attendance at the luncheoa*\nand other club gatherings-\nHe dealt at some length with er*\nganlzation and staffing of a carntvsl.\nwhich. In view of the Trail club's pro*\nJected ice carnival, was considered bet*\ntimely and full of ripe suggestions, and\ntold of the satisfying success the Vaav\n! couver club has achieved in Its \"chil-\nj dren's work,\" particularly dealing wit*\nthe club's maintenance of a net cottage' at Point Grey for the ear* of\ntubercular  children.\nMcintosh Crates\nto East Are Open\nAn open market on Mcintosh apples\nIn crates shipped to Port William- *r\npoints further east, Is declared by the\ninterior tree fruit and vegetable committee of direction.\n-i\"\nTHE\nLABEL\nIS\nRED\nAND WHITE\n              ,\nIt looks Crommf\nIt tastes Cr*mmsf\nIt is Creamy\nSupreme Court Must\nDecide on Eligibility\not Women as Senators\nOTTAWA, Oct. 19.\u2014The government\nhas decided to submit to the supreme\ncourt the question of whether women\nare eligible to sit In the senate.\nThe government has also decided to\napply to the privy council for leave io\nappeal on the question of Alberta's natural resources for a final reading.\nWITH Carnation on the pantry shelf there i\nnever a shortage of double-rich, absolutely\npure milk for every milk use. For Carnation can\nbe bought a month's supply at a time\u2014it keeps\nindefinitely. It even keeps several days after the\ntin is opened, so that there is no waste.\nBecause Carnation is just pure, fresh milk evaporated to double richness and kept safe by sterilization, it meets every need for milk or cream.\nUndiluted, it takes the place of cream at one-third\ncream cost. Diluted it gives superior results in all\ncooking. It is the most completely useful milk\nyou can buy. Order several tins or a case of 4ft\ntins from your grocer.\nSend for a free copy of Mary Blake's Cook Book.\nAddress Carnation Milk Products Company,\n.Limited, Aylner, Ont.\nCarnation\n\"From\nContented\nCows\"\nMilk\nProduced\nin     '\nCanada\nTWO   SIZES  \u2014TALL   AND   SMALL\nCanada will provide a guard of honor\nfrom the militia for the unveiling of a\nmemorial In Washington, D.C.\nPlain Mr* York makes a hole in one!\n\\\nAlso in larger size*\ni\u00bbX\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\"~\"~~\u2014\u2014\nPage Poof 1\nI1 , ss\n\u25a0HE   DAILY   NEWS\nPublished evlry morning except Sun-\nly by Th* News Publishing company,\ntotted.  Nelson, B.C \u25a0\nBoslneas letters should be addressed\nH   checks   snd   money   orders   mads\narable  to  Tils   News  Publishing com-\nmy.  limited, and In do cas* to lndl-\ndual members \u00bbf the staff.\nAd vert tiling   rata   cards   snd   A.B.C.\nstementg   of   clrculstlos   mailed   oa\nquest, or mar be seen st the office\nany  advertising   agency   recognised\ntbe Canadian  Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES\nLr mall  (country), per month...I    .60\nrsr year       \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\n\\f mull fatty), per year  1I.O0\nKtslde Canada, per month 75\nPer  year       T.50\n\u2022Silvered, per wsek IS\nPer  year   11.00\nPayable In Advance\nInbtf Amdlt avrsftm cf Circulate*\nTHE NELSON DAILY. NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1927\nTHURSDAY,   OCTOBER   20,   1927\nAsk for Dominion Road\nGrant\nIs Canada's national road building\niompleted?\nIt certainly Is not.\nDoes the Dominion government make\nmy use of the roads of the country?\nIt certainly does.\nUnder these circumstances, should not\nthe Dominion be asked to contribute\ntoward tbe extension of the national\n\u25a0ystem of highways, a system that Is\ntbe aggregate of the provincial systems?\nIt certainly seems reasonable.\nSo far the only contribution the Dominion has made to the building of\nlbs national highway system was made\nby the late Conservative government,\nWhich granted 120,000,000 to the provinces, proportionately to population,\nbad for roads toward which the prov\nluces contributed 00 per cent of the\ncost.\nThat the King government may be\nInduced to duplicate this grant if sufficient pressure is brought, although\nSt has so far refused, Is the opinion\nof Hon. S. P. Tolmie, Conservative leader in the province, expressed to Nelson\ntn the byelection,\nCoincidently with this, the Dominion\nConservative convention has declared\nIts adherence to this principle.\nHere is a business proposition for\nthe boards of trade of the entire Dominion to take up, and particularly of\nthis province, that is so in need of\ntrunk roads.\nTo urge this matter on the King\ngovernment is not a political action.\nSince the King government can easily\ntake the matter out of politics, if lt\n.Is at all In lt, by making a grant, and\nadmitting the obligation of the Dominion to contribute something toward\nthe national system of trunk roads,\nof which its government makes constant use.\nThe\nLighter Side\nReaders of Ths Dally News\ncontribute many of tha best Items\nto this column. Just sign your\nname or Initials, or nom-de-plums,\nsnd send In your brightest Ideas,\n\u2014Editor,  Lighter  Bids.\nAUNTHET\n\"I'm glad Pa don't bow when\nhe meets strangers at a party,\nI sewed that rip In hts pants\nJust temporary an' Z was scared\nlt   would   bust.\"\nDon't waste all your sympathy on the\nfellow who Is down. The whals deserved as much tymimthy as Jonah.\nBoxing isn't \"degrading\" any more.\nImagine applying that adjective to anything that brings In a million dollars!\nPOISE IS THE QUALITY THAT ENABLES A WOMAN TO ACT AS\nTHOUGH YOU COULDN'T SEE ANYTHING  YOU COULDN'T SEE.\nArmament Is much like a personal\nbank account. A little would be enough\nIf nobody had more.\nPeople never again will buy cast Iron\ndeer for the lawn\u2014never, that Is, unless they are offered on the installment\nplan.\nNow for Good Civic\n\u00ab      Registrations\nLess than two weeks remain of the\nperiod for registration of householders\nnnd licencees on the municipal voters'\nlists in Kootenay cities. In fact, there\nnre Just 10 week days left on which this\nmatter may be attended to.\nHouseholders are required to pay\ncertain   minimum  taxes,   and   to  take\ns declaration covering that point and\ncitizenship and residence qualification\nLicencees must take the declaration.\nIt is three months to the municipal\nelections throughout the Kootenay,\nsnd without the Incentive of candidates\nIn the field a good madV householders\nlet their registration go by default.\nWhen the campaigns warm up they are\nmen and women without votes, and\nnegligible.\nA large registration of householders\n\\ Is a healthy sign; it means a large\nnumber of citizens beside those who\nown property, watching civic Affairs,\nsnd prepared to render verdicts on\nadministration, and to select representatives.\nThe owners of property are auto\nmatically registered, being on the tax\nrolls.\nIn the old days a man could\nqualify as a good provider without\nbringing home a new dance record\nevery night.\nIf all the cozy apartments were laid\nend to end and the partitions knocked\nout, you would have a decent llvl-\"\nroom.\nIf demand really governs supply, it\nIk probable that Barnum's estimate of\nthe birth rate was a .little low.\nCanadlanlsm: Telling the children\nnot to bother us; wondering later how\nthey got out of hand.\nA acientiit is a man who knows\nhow many million years the sua\nwill last and wonders whether it\nwill shins this afternoon.\nNature isn't so grand. Else why\ndidn't she build a Jaywalker's head low\nenough to sma\u00a3h a radiator.\nMost of the booka designed to develop \"personality\" are sold to men\nwho think you can correct a traffic Jam\nby tooting your horn.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy   LAURA   A.   KIRKMAN\nBALANCING   OUR   DIET\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\nOranges\nBoiled Eggs Toast\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nPeanut   Butter   Soup\nOraham  Bread\nApricot Sauce Cookies\nTea\nDinner\nCelery\nLamb Chops\nPotatoes String Beans\nCole   Slaw\nCottage Pudding\nCoffee\nEvery housekeeper should understand\nthe difference between foods which are\n\"fat,\" \"protein\" or \"carbohydrates\" (the\nlatter, starches and sugars), so that she\ncan learn to build a balanced menu of\nher own. This list will help her. To\nform a balanced diet, each meal should\ncontain some fat, some protein and\nsome carbohydrates. For every 100\ngrams:\nLean beef, 20 per cent P, 15 per cent\nF and no carbhydrates. Smoked bacon,\n10 P, 66 P, no C. One hen's large egg,\n6 P. fl P, no C. Pish. 20 P. 7 F, no C.\nButter, 1 P, 86 F, no C. American\ncheese, 20 P, 36 F, no C. Cream, 3 P,\n20 F, 3 C. Milk 3 P, 4 F, 5 C. Oatmeal, 16 P, 7 F, 66C. Bread, white, 9\nP, 1 F, 63 C. Uuts, 20 P, 50 F, 16 C.\nOlive oil, no P, 100 F, mi C.\nUnder the head of vegetables, we\nfind\u2014One per cent protetin, no fats\nand 8 per cent carbohydrates for\nall of the following groups\u2014Canned\nartichokes, asparagus, cooked string\nbeans, canned brussels sprouts, cauliflower, celery, cucumber, eggplant,\nkohlrabi, leeks, lettuce, okra; peppers,\npumpkins, rhubarb, sauerkraut, spinach,\ntomatoes.\nWe find 2 per cent protein, no fats,\nand 6 per cent carbohydrates in all the\nvegetables in this group: Cooked beets,\ncabbage, dandelion greens, mushrooms,\nonions, parsnips, canned green peas,\nradishes, rutabagas, squash and turnips.\nIn regard to fruits, these six have 1\nper cent protein, no fat and 5 per\ncent carbohydrates\u2014Cantaloupe, grapefruit, lemons, peaches, Bt\\awberrles and\nwatermelon. The following have 1 per\ncent protein, no fats and 10 per cent\ncarbohydrates: Blackberries cranberries, oranges and pineapple. These 11\nhave one per cent protein, no fats and\n15 per cent carbohydrates: Apples, apricots, cherries, currants, grapes, huckleberries, nectarines, pears, prunes and\nraspberries. The following three have\n1 per cent protein, no fats and 20 per\ncent carbohydrates: Bananas, figs and\nplums. Dried apples, citron, currants.\ndateB figs, pears, raisins and prunes\nall have 2 per cent protein, no fats\nand 70 per cent carbohydrates.\nThe following vegetables are very\nhigh in carbohydrates, fairly low In\nprotein and have absolutely no fat\ncontent: Artichokes, limli or baking\nbeans, green peas, green corn, white\npotatoes, sweet potatoes, butter b\u00ab;ans\nand dried peas, beans and lentils.\nTomorrow\u2014Planning for Halloween.\nAddress Inquiries to Mlsa Rlrkmao,\nand Inclose stamped-addressed envelope\nfor reply.\u2014Editor.\nThat Body\nof Yours\niy  JAMES W. BARTON. M.O.\nHelping Employer and\nEmployee\nThere was a time when the employer\nresented' the efforts of welfare workers amongst his employees.\nSome of the employees themselves\nrather disliked the Idea of having their\npersonal affairs, personal liberties. Interfered with by these \"busy bodies.\"\nHowever, what is known as the industrial fatigue board have been able\nto show the employer and the employee how a little care and thought\nwill produce conditions that will be of\nbenefit to both. They were able to\nshow that if there were pauses for\nrest, one in the morning and two In\nthe afternoon for Just a few moments,\nthat not only waa more work done in a\nday,  but  better  work  also.\nFurther, that these pauses for rest\nlessened the number of accidents. They\nwere able to prove also that If the\nfactory were ventilated by the use of\nopen windows or electric fans to remove\nexhausted air. that more efficient work\nwas dons, and fewer accidents occurred. Alsq that where an employee had\nwork to do that caused prolonged sitting or standing In the one position,\nthat a change of position of the body,\na change of posture, Increased the\nquality and quantity of the work performed That a \"change\" from a sitting to a standing position or even a\nstanding to a sitting, took away the\ntiredness, the monotony, and better\nwork  resulted.\nThen, where there was sickness or\nwhere accidents occurred very frequently with some employees, these research\nworkers Investigated tactfully the home\nlife of the worker from a standpoint of\nfood, sleep and recreation,\nIf an employee Is eating unwisely, not\nenough nourishing food, or food too\nrich for his system, he is going to be\nsluggish at his work. Also one eating\ninsufficient food is going to be \"languid\" at 11 o'clock, and again about 4\no'clock, due to weakness. Lack of sleep\nalso Is a big factor In cutting down\nthe amount of efficient work that can\nbe accomplished. So the manner In\nwhich the nights and week-ends are\nspent is likewise Investigated. The\npractical help given by this fatigue\nresearch board mc\\.ns much to the\nhealth and happiness of the employee,\nand is of great help to the employer\nand the community at large.\nJudge Says t4Stool\nPigeons\" Entitled to\nRespect, not Ridicule\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19. \u2014 Upholding\nstool pigeons in connection with prosecutions for Illegal liquor selling. Judge\nGrant, In the county court, recently declared: \"Stool pigeons are entitled to\nrespect and not to ridicule. They checkmate persons violating the laws of our\ncountry.\"\nIntimate Glimpses of\nWell Dressed\nTeapot Dome Resurrects\n\u2022 Once more Teapot Dome appears in\nthe news on the front page. Jurors\nhave been selected who will have to\npronounce on whether or not Albert\nB. Fall and Harry F. Sinclair criminally\nconspired together to defraud the government in the lease of the Teapot\nBorne oil naval  reserve  In Wyoming.\nYou have got to hand lt to Uncle\nBam. This rumpus over the Teapot\nDome oil leases started away back\nunder President Harding, who died\nstill believing In ex-Secretary Fall. President Coolidge finished out the Harding\nterm. He Is now nearly through the\nthird year of his own term. Still Uncle\nBam hasn't weakened. The trial has\nnow been reached.\nCriminals who defy ordinary laws of\nthe American commonwealth, or any\nof its 48 constituent commonwealths,\nhave a large chance of never facing a\ncourt, provided Uncle Sam himself is\nnot the prosecutor. The criminal, how\never, who robs Uncle Sam's malls, imitates Uncle Sam's currency, or gets\nUncle Sam after him for such a celebrated alleged steal as the Teapot\nDome one. may as well reconcile himself to facing a court some time. It\nmay take a certain Interval of time to\nget past the massed lawyers, a presidential term or two, for instance, but\nIn the snd he reaches the dock.\nThat, of course, doesn't mean conviction\u2014the lawyers, the Judge, and\nthe Jurors have still to be reckoned\nwith\u2014but lt at least is a step In the\nright direction.\nTHE DESIGNERS OF EVENING\nGOWNS 8EEM TO BE TRYING VERY\nHARD TO MAKE ENDS MEET THIS\nSEASON.\nLet's hope the powers don't try lo\npartition Turkey. They haven't yet\nused up their other reasons for hating\none another.\nThe American in Paris may take a\ntaxi because he's drunk, or he may get\ndrunk to generate the nerve to ride in\nthe crazy thing.\nThere are two kinds of novelists:\nGood ones, and those who say \"She was\ntired of It all.\" All readers are tired\nof \"It all.\"\nCorrect this sentence: \"Yes, I gave\n10,000,000 to the Institution,\" said he,\n\"but I don't want it mentioned In thi\npublic prints.\"\nTHE POLIGEMH\nAmusing Incident at Folkestone\nDock. Prince Unrecognized\nat First\nMen\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From The Dally News, Oct. 20, 1907)\nThe first frost this year was recorded\nlast night when the mercury went down\nto 32 degrees.\nD. Dewar has purchased the house\nand lot on Carbonate street belonging\nto John Anderson, for S1050.\nA post office has been established at\nthe Blue Bell mine, and has been named Rlondel, after one of the principal\nowners of the famous mine, to avoid\nconfusion with another post office of\nthe name Blue Bell, In British Columbia.\nW. Reynolds is building a nice home\nfor himself at the corner of Carbonate\nand Park streets.\nLONDON, England, Oct, 18.\u2014The\nPrince of Wales figured in an amusing\nincident at Folkestone harbor one night\nrecently.\nFrom Sandwich, where he had been\nstaying, he came by car with two little\ngirls to meet their mother as she\nlanded. As the boat came alongside\nan official approached the prince, who\nhad his cap pulled well over his forehead, and asked, \"Are you a visitor?\"\n\"Yes,\" said the prince, and the official at once politly asked him to\nstand back behind the barrier used by\nthe home office for examing passports.\nThe prince at once obeyed, and\nwalked to the public part of the quay.\nBut a few minutes later his identity\nwas discovered by another official, who\npromptly invited him to stand at the\nbottom of the gangway down which\npassengers disembarked.\nThe passengers also failed to recognize\nthe Interested onlooker.\n$\u00a3\nWhen John, Jr. begins to show grown-up\ntendencies, i.e.: when he does a great deal\nof groaning over the little matter of\ngetting up in the morning, then much\ntime and anguish can be saved on both\nsides by providing the young man with a\nsmart dressing gown. He will be amazingly quick to jump from bed when he\nhas this manly robe to throw about him.\nIt is made in plajd flannel with a trim\nshawl collar, patch pockets and a tasselled\ncord. And when winter comes John may\nnot be as obstinate as usual about courting sure and sudden pneumonia, for\nthere's no sense in a fellow's running\nabout in pajamas when he owns a very\ngood looting bathrobe. {Copyritkt, tgaj%\nby Bulterick) , ^   -. .\n\\VAJmM99*U\/\/JM' VM!\u00bb,>l.Wn^W.>A\\\\\\\\V^ ^^^\/\/l\/^lTWMb\nIn preparation for harbor work\nwhich Is to be carried on at Port\nChurchill, the bow terminus of the\nHudson Bay Railway, the movement\nof coal and supplies from Eastern\nCanada by water is commencing.\nThe S.3. Canadian Raider of th# Canadian Government Merchant Marine\nfleet, haa been coanmissJoned to\ntransport a cargo of coal from Sydney, C.B., while Hopper Barge No. 2,\none of the government vessels, has\nbeen fitted out tn Montreal under\nthe auiperrieion of C.G.M.M. officers\ntor Port Churchill work. Top pho-\ntograrph shows the S.S. Canadian\nRaider, while below ia Hopper Barge\nNo. 2, coaling at Montreal in preparation for \u2022torttog ber voyage nortV\nTen Years Ago\n(From The Dally News, Oct. 20, 1917)\nM. Irvine, the son of Mrs. Irvine or.\nGranite road, was operated on at Kootenay Lake General hospital yesterday,\nand is improving rapidly.\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022\nThe 7-year-old daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. David Heddle fell yesterday and\nfractured a thigh. She was attended\nby Dr. Hartin and Is doing well.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nDr. W. O. Rose, M.P.P., was able to\nbe at his office for a few hours yesterday, for the first time since the automobile accident several weeks ago, in\nwhich he received severe injuries.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nT. C. Peck has returned from a visit\nto Springfield, 111., and other points In\nthe United States.\nChildren and grandchildren gathered\nat home of Mr. and Mrs. John Reldel,\nSt. Clements for reunion, 62 people\nwere present.\n\"Lot tho CUrk Kitchens help \/\u00ab\u00ab\"\nNOTED HOftSEWOMAN\nIS STILL IN GAME\nThirty pound muskinonge was caught\n*by Thomas Nelson, while trawling\npear Banker's Island,  BrockvlUs.\nCOBOURO, Ont., Oct. IB.\u2014Mrs. L. A.\nLivingstone, noted horsewoman of this\nplace, who sold her entire stable of\nhorses In training this season, is still\nIdentified closely with the thoroughbred\nbreeding Industry, If not with active\nracing. Her attachment for the\nthoroughbred Is a lasting one, and\nhorses from her establishment are\nlikely to carry silks for many years\nto come. Mrs. Livingstone retained\npossession of Kingship and Lovetls and\na band of brood mares.\nFerry    traffic   keept    good   average\nacross St Lawrence at BrockvlUs.\nMOPS\nDon't worry about houae-cleaning when you can make lt a pleasure\nby using our mops and polishes.\nCedar Oiled Mops at  81.25. $1.75 an<1 83.00\nPra-flc at  - - ~  \u2022 81.75\nDry Dusting Mops, Wall Sweeps. Hand Dusters, Bannister Brushes, Deck\nand String Mop* lor washing up, Dish Mops, Hair Floor Brushes, Corn\nBrooms, Johnston's, Rex and Chan Floor Wax, Furnlturo Polish, Furniture\nCream, Stove Pipe Enamel, Stove and Shoe Polish, Silver Polish, SOS\nCleaner, Chamois Skin*.\nI\nSEE OUR WINDOW\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWh\u00abl***l*   *nd   Retail   Quality   Hanlwor*\nNELSON PHONE 21 a a\nTo Grow Strong\nrequires good food.\nClark's Pork and\nBeans contain in a\nmost acceptable\nformthenutritious\nelements required\nand also the precious vitamines.\n\u25a0 Children usually\nprefer them to\nother foods.\nTheir cost, about\n3c a liberal serving,\nmakes them most\neconomical.\nSold Everjrwhoro\nCLARK'S\nPORK tVBEANS\nYORK MINSTER BELL\nRECAST SUCCESSFULLY\nYORK, England, Oct. 18.\u2014The third\nbiggest bell in England, ranking in size\nonly after Big Ben at Westminster and\nthe big bell at St. Paul's cathedral,\n\"Big Peter,\" returned to York Minster\nrecently, after the absence of a year at\nLoughborough, where lt has been recast\nand had new head stock made for it so\nthat it can be rung. It Is now quite\nglossy In appearance, compared with\nthe old rusty bell which had hung\nuseless for 81 years In the northwest\ntower of the Minster.\nThe bell Is larger than lt was, and\nstands eight feet high and measures\neight feet eight inches across ths\nmouth. The head stock weighs two\ntons and the clapper 700 pounds.\nThere was a special,service at which\nthe bell's return was welcomed.\nHave you Music\nin Your Home?\nYou are missing one of life's\ngreatest blessings if you have\nno music in your home.\nWhy disregard that need?\nVisit our Music Salons and\nlet us show you how easily\nyou may possess a Heintzman & Co. Piano. Beautiful\ninstruments In a wide variety\nof styles and prices await\nyoUr inspection.\nA catalogue and prlea litt\nwilt  bet  mailed you upon\nroqutt.\n<X> \u00ab**\n% OldeFirme ^\nHeintzman &Gb.\nMr. Noxon in Charge.\n511 BAKER STREET, PHONE NO. 299\nBuilding\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nMaterial   john burns & son\nKeeps Perfectly in tbe Unopened Tin,\nSt. Charles Milk has two great advantages over the bottled kind. It is doubly\nrich, and so gives better results in ail\nrecipes, and then, it is so convenient!\nBy ordering six or a dozen tins at a time\nyou always have plenty of rich pure milk\nin the house. Order both sizes, Tall and\nFREE\nRecipe BtMfc\nJnet write to The\nBorden Co. Limited, Vaneoar.r,\nand your eopy will\nbe studied ot ono*.\nsmall.\nIBarda^nH\nST. CHARLES\n&m\n71fte#\nwherever\nthe'\nColl\n4Sj\nMILK\n%.mk.*\\m\n*\u25a0*\u25a0\n \/ePSgT\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1927\nCRANBROOK Iff\nIE!\nPage Eire\n5\nNew Ones\nWe .have just received\nfive new styles in Ladies'\nTies and Strap Slippers.\nPriced Prom\n$5.00 to $8.00\nR. Andrew & CY\nLeaders in Footfashicm\nMrs. Frank Park* Was on Way\nby Auto tp Banff\nSprings\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct. 18.\u2014Word\nwas received In the city thla evening\nthat Mra. Prank Parka had died suddenly at Marble Canyon, on the road\nto Banff, on Tuesday evening.\nMr, and Mrs. Frank Parks, accompanied by Mrs. Frank Guimont, left\nCranbrook Tuesday morning by motor\nto spend a few days at the springs.\ni On receipt of the sad news Wednesday\n| morning, Prank Conatantlne and Mr.\nFrank Qulmont left for Banff to be\nwith Mr. Parks.\nprA Brandon Was 87 Years of\nAge; Was Ontario\nNative\nAPPLEDALE,     B.C.,     Oct.     18\u2014Mrs.\nititla Brandon passed away at Apple-\nIs, B.C., on October 18, after a llng-\nng  Illness,   In   her  87th   year.     She\nthe  last   surviving   member   of   a\n,mily of eight children born to James\nAnn' tells,  late  of the  north  of\nland.   She was born May 8, 1841, In\nnlth   township,   near   Peterboro,   Onto.   At an early age she was moved\nthe township of Garafrara,  County\nWellington\/and later moved to town-\n,lp   of   Morris,   Huron   county,   where\nie met wnd married John Brandon.\nIn 1884 they moved with their family\nseven children to Manitoba, settling\nthe district now known as Kenton.\nier the death of her husband In 1813,\nhe made her home with her daughter\nnd   son-in-law.   finally   moving   with\n, ^m to Appledale in 1820.\n| be  Is  survived  by  five  sons,   John\nof   Kenton,   Matthew   of   Hamlota,\n\"anitoba,   William   and   Alexander   of\nlaigary,   Alta.,   Thomas   of   Appledale,\nid   one  daughter,   Mary,   Mrs.   Joseph\nrkpatrlck of Appledale, B.C.   The eld-\nt son, James, having predeceased her\n1815,  and   one  daughter,  Annie,   In\nnfancy.     There  are  also  seven   grand-\nUSdffiL\nMrs. Klrkpatrick accompanied the reins to Kenton, where Interment will\ne  place  In Bradwardine  cemetery.\n\\r\nE\nELECTED DELEGATE\nWill Represent Cfeston at Institute Convention, Kaslo, Tag\nDay Is Success\nCRESTON, B.C., Oct. 18 \u2014Creston and\nDistrict Women's institute October session on Tuesday afternoon attracted\na turnout of 27 members, and was in\ncharge of the president, Mrs. R. Stevens.\nThe tag day held on September 30\nbrought In 152.36. On motion of Mrs.\nC. H. Hare, seconded by Mrs. Oeorge\nCartwrlght, lt was decided to make up\nthe total to $60, In order to send 920\neach to the Queen Alexandra solarium,\nthe crippled children's fund and the\nChildren's Aid home. Mrs. E. Mallandan-\ndalne was chosen delegate to attend\nthe Kootenay-Boundary Women's Institutes' conference at Kaslo on November IS and 16. Owing to the Creston branch of the Canadian Legion\nhaving arranged a dance for Armistice\nday, the Institute Is relieved of this responsibility, but the members expressed\ntheir willingness to undertake the catering for the legion. The tea hostesses\nwere Mrs. E. Mallandalne, Mrs. H. McLaren and Mrs. c B Twtgg. The freewill offering for the crippled children\nfund was 92.10.\nCRANBROOK NOTES\nI! I I I I I 1 I I I I 1 I I I I I I I I I IT 1\nStronger\nThan\nFresh\nMilk\nMore   water   is   removed   in\nevaporation than is put back\nwhen Pacific Milk is diluted\nfor cooking and  baking.\nThis tells why, reduced, Pacific Milk  is  stronger,  measure\nIfor measure, than fresh milk.\nPACIFIC MILK\npMtftHw  at   Ladner  and   Abboteforfl\n\"BUILD   B.  C.\"\nI?\" \"\"ii mi nn nil\"::\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct. 18.\u2014Mlsa\nOracle Curran of Prince Edward Island\nis spending a few days at the home\nof her cousin, J. M- Clarke. Mlas Curran has been on a Bight-seeing trip to\nVancouver and the Pacific coast and\nis now returning to her home in the\neast.\nA. S. McAllister of Tordhto, national\nY.M.CA. secretary, was the guest at a\nluncheon held by the directors of the\nY.M.C.A. on Monday evening. At the\nmeeting which followed the luncheon,\nMr. McAllister spoke on Y.M.O.A. work\ngenerally throughout the Dominion, of\nthe progress made and making the\nplans for future expansion. On Tuesday Mr. McAllister \u25a0 was the guest of\nthe Rotary and spoke to that club. He\nleft on Tuesday's train to continue his\njourney to Vancouver.\nThe Crembo club organized for\nbasketball on Tuesday evening and will\nuse the Recreation club fot practice.\nThe Cranbrook Badminton club haa\nmade arrangements with the trustees\nof the I.O.O.F. to use the audltorlufn\nfor practice three nights during the\nweek.\nCook Unsuccessful\nin Obtaining Visa\nfor Trip to Warsaw\nLONDON, Oct. 18\u2014When A. J. Cook,\nsecretary of the Miners' Federation of\nGreat Britain, called at the Polish consulate this evening for a visa permitting\nhim to proceed to Warsaw for a meeting\nof the Miners' Internationale, he was\nInformed that there haa been no further Instructions from Warsaw since the\nrte had been refused. Earlier in the\nday it was reported the Polish government Instructed the consulate to grant\na visa.\n\u25a0\n\"Here is the Beef,\nMother\"\nWHEN you add Oxo to soups,\nstews, and meat pies, you put in\nConcentrated Beef, thus making them\nmore nourishing and tasty, with the rich\nnutriment and flavour of prime lean beef.\nOxo is the Housewife's Great Economy\nOX\u00a9\nPuts iin the Beef\n\u2022#*'\nm____^_m_mm______\\\nMATTERS TO BE\nEvery   Consideration   Will   Be\nGiven   Port   Hill   Outlet,\nSays Department\nHIGHWAY IMPROVEMENTS\nWELL   LOOKED   AFTER\nCreston Will Not Show Fruit at\nToronto Winter  Fair\nThis Year\nCRESTON, B.C., Oct. 18.\u2014Transportation matters were again to the fore at\nthe October meeting of Creston board\nof trade on Tuesday night, which was\nIn charge of President Mallandalne,\nand a fair turnout of members.\nIn connection with the highways, tTie\nmost important announcement was contained In a reply the secretary hat Just\nreceived from the deputy minister of\npublic works, acknowledging receipt r>!\nthe board's September resolution asking\nthat next year's estimates contain a sum\nto take care of building the north and\nsouth highway from Creston, via the\nK.V. roadbed to PortniH, Idaho Deputy\nMinister Patrick Philip \"ays: \"You must\nrest assured that this matter will be\ngiven the fullest consideration and, In\nthe meantime, I am forwarding a copy\nof your letter to the dliirict engineer\nfor Investigation and  report.\"\nThe executive reported that since the\nSeptember meeting a resolution from\nCranbrook board of trade asking that\nthe 1928 program of road Imprevements\ninclude a generous widening out of the\nnarrow spots in the highway between\nMoyle and Kuskanook had been approved and acknowledgement received\nfrom the minister of special consideration.\nPauline Interviewed\nUnder the head of committee reports,\nC. O. Rodgers, for the transportation\ncommittee, reported that highway Improvements in the Creston area this\nseason, particularly in the matter of\ngraveling, had been well looked after.\nThe president reported having had an\ninterview with F. A. Pauline, British Columbia's agent-general at London, who,\nlate in September, went through to the\ncoast.\nThe president reported for the executive as to the action taken in connection with a Creston display at the\nroyal winter fair at Toronto next month.\nAfter taking into account the very\nlimited display of boxed fruit at the\nCreston fair, and in discussing the\npacking of a 50-box display with local\norchardlsts, the board directors had decided lt was financially impossible to\nassemble a creditable half-hundred box\nexhibit for Toronto and that the Toronto display had been canceled. The\nboard ratified the executive action.\nELLIOTT HEADS\nHoop  Aggregation  Enters  the\nLeague; Exhibition Won by\nConcentrator Squad\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Oct. 19.\u2014At a\nmeeting of the Chapman Camp Basketball club in Oughtred hall on Monday\nevening the following officers were\nelected: Paul Elliott, president; G.\nKnighton, secretary-treasurer; w. An-\nborle, captain and manager.\nThe boys will play their firBt league\ngame of the season on October 25,\nwhen they are scheduled to meet the\nKimberley   team.\nOn Tuesday evening. October 18, the\nConcentrator basketball team motored\nto Sullivan Hill, where they played an\nexhibition game with the Top Mine\nteam in Warren hall. The play was\nclose throughout, the Concentrator\nwinning.    Final score was 26-19.\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Morrison have\ntaken up residence In Kimberley. Mrs.\nMorrison was formerly Miss McClause\nof Calgary, in which city the wedding\ntook place last week.\nRut Used Name of \"Peter Johnson\"; Was to Sail for\nHome Shortly\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 19.\u2014Bernard Ad-\ndlngton Rtvett, who was killed here\nyesterday as the result ot being thrown\nfrom his horse, Is a grandson of the\nlate Lord Addlngton of Shipley-Ball,\nDerby,- England.\nMr. Rivett had completed arrangements to leave for the east today and\nIntended to sail for England in November from Halifax on H.M.S. Warwick,\ncommanded by  his  brother.\nMr. Rivett came to Canada last spring\nand was given a great deal of publicity\nIn eastern Canada. When he left for\nthe west to prospec^ for gold in the\nJackson-Marlon claims, at Woman lake,\nhe adopted the name of Peter Jack-\neon to avoid publicity.\nDuring the war Mr. Rivett was a\nmiddy on a battleship. He served In\nthe battle of Zebrugge and for bravery\nwaa commissioned lieutenant. For a\nshort time during the engagement he\nwaa in command of the ship, all his\nsenior officers having been killed or\nwounded.\nHis father, a prominent military man\nin England, and his mother, daughter\nof the late Lord Addlngton, both died\nsome years ago.\n'.ii\nThis column t\u00bb conducted by Mrs.\nM. J, Vlgneux. AU news of a social\nnatlre, including receptions, private\nentertainments, personal Items,\nmarriages, etc., will appear In this\ncolumn. Telepnone Mrs Vlgneux at\nbar borne on Silica street.\nMrs. W. A. Sewell made a charming\nhostess at a reception yesterday afternoon at her home. 014 Silica street,\nReceiving with Mra. Sewell was Mra.\nWilfred Carrie of Auburn, Ind. Mssnns\nuf chrysanthemums, dahlias and roses\nin tones of rose and cream were effectively arranged throughout the\nrooms. Mrs. Sewell wore an exquislt*\ngown of sky blue georgette with rosebud pockets and ornamented with cream\nlace. Mrs. Carrie's frock was of black\ngeorgette relieved by touches of scarlet\nand black, with accordion-pleated skirt.\nLittle Dorothy May Sewell. in a dainty\nfrock of pale blue georgette trimmed\nwith baby lace, admitted the guests.\nThe tastefully-appointed tea table,\ncentered with golden 'mums, was presided over by Mn. L. E. Borden. The\nices were cut by Mra. Edward Ferguson.\nMrs. R. D. Hall. Mrs. W. B. Steed, Mrs.\nEric Bourby and Miss Dorothy Armstrong assisted in serving. The guests\nIncluded Mrs. L. E. Borden, Mrs. F. R.\nG. Dredge, Mrs Thomas Gibson, Miss\nAgnes Cant. Mra. Gilbert Hartin, Mrs.\nArchie Donaghy. Mra. C. E. Mansfield.\nMra. James Brodie, Mrs. H. D Pater-\nson, Mrs. E. R. Redpath, Mrs. G. B.\nRussell, Mra. T. F. McKechnle, Mrs. J.\nF. Croll. Mrs. C. F. Sedgwick, Mrs. J. H.\nArgyle, Mra. W. O. Rose, Mrs. L. L.\nBoomer, Mrs. Robert Armstrong, Miss\nMildred Irvine, Mn. W. R. Smythe, Mn.\nT. E. Maddock. Mrs. Colin D. Macintosh, Mrs. E. A. Tltsworth, Mrs. Edward Ferguson, Mrs. R, D. Hall, Mrs.\nEric Sourby, Mra. C. Young, Mrs. Alex\nCarrie, Miss Dorothy Armstrong, Mrs.\nWalter Truswell, Mra, H. E. Dill, Mra.\nNelson Murphy, Mrs. W. B. Steed. Mra.\nR. A. Peebles, Mrs. W. A. Thurman. Mrs,\nD, Proudfoot, Mrs. Donald McLeod, Miss\nIda Fleury and Miss Teresa FItzpatrick.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Gwen Scott-Lauder leaves this\nmorning for Craig-End Gardens to attend the wedding today of Miss Nancy\nTrail to Captain H. Hlnck\/ of Howser.\n\u2022 a     *\nW. B. Hunter of Trail and W. G.\nTernan of Rossland are spending a\nfew days tn the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss R. Foord of Toronto spent yesterday in Nelson, the guest of Mra. J.\nC.  Orummett,  704  Silica  street.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nE, H. Hanley left yesterday by motor\nfbr  Trail.\noo*\nMr. and Mrs. A. L. McCulloch left\nyesterday morning for Spokane, where\nthey will meet Mr. and Mra. Walter\nS. Riblett, former Nelson residents, with\nwhom they will motor to Los Angeles.\nMr. and Mrs. McCulloch will spend the\nwinter months in the south.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. C. R. Hamilton Reaves this morning to attend the Hlncks-Trall wedding\nat  Cralg-End,\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nJ. P. Coates Is again in Nelson after\na short holiday at the coast.\n0       0*\nMrs,    J.    C.    Orummett,    704    Silica\nstreet, has as her house guests Mr. and\nMrs. P. Davison of Edmonton, who are\nen route to California.\ns   \u2022   \u2022\nR. I. Bodkin, general claims agent\nfor the Canadian Pacific railway at\nVancouver, ts a Nelson visitor this week\n\u2022 *   *\nMra. Thomas Madden, for many years\na resident of Nelson, who has been a\nvisitor tn the city this week, left last\nevening for her home In Vancouver.\n\u00ab   \u2022   #\nMrs. George Hales of Ktngsgate and\nMrs. W. E. Miller of Eaatport, Ida.,\nare spending a few days in Nelson.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nW. J. Coo, general storekeeper for the\nCanadian Pacific railway at Vancouver,\nand Mra. Coo, who have been in Nelson\nthe last few days, left last evening for\nhome.\nsae\nMrs. C. Carver, who has been visiting at Willow Point, the guest of Capt,\nC. R. Burton, spent yesterday in Nelson, leaving last evening for her home\nin   Nakusp.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nR. A. Grimes. Kimberley mining man,\nis a city visitor this week.\n\u2022 *   *\nDr.   F.   E.   Pettman,   who   waa   with\nthe British Columbia lake and river\nservice at Nelson 25 years ago, and who,\nwith Mrs. Pettman, hrte been visiting\nin Nelson, left last evening for the\nOkanagan, where they will spend some\ntime before leaving for their home in\nMontreal-\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. Edward Glover of Victoria Is the\nguest of her parents, Mr. and Mn, Hugh\nRoss. Silica street, for a few days.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Harold Lakes has returned to\nNelson  after  spending  a  few  days  in\nKaslo.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nR. Hoorle of Passmore spent yesterday\nin the city on business.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nCarl Lindow of Salmo was among\nthe motorists in Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCapt. J. McCarthy has been \u00bb city\nvisitor this week from Fraser's landing.\nMlsa Lottie Annable Is again In Nelson after a visit of some time in Seattle.\n\u25a0   \u2022 . \u2022\nMrs Harry Dunk entertained \u00bbt a\ndelightful bridge yesterday afternoon\nat her home on Baker street, the rooms\nbeing tastefully decorated with pink\nchrysanthemums, Mra. P. J. OtJlngMr\nwaa the winner of the first prtee, while\nthe consolation prize went to Mn. P-\n\u25a0 Poultn. The invited guests were\nytn Thomas Maddsn of Vancouver.\nMrs P E Poulln, Mrs. F. W. Conway,\nK. Lunn. Mrs. J. Burns, Mlsa Dorothy\nGilchrist. Mra. J. Duffy. JM\u00ab. \u25a0H. McLeod, Miss E. Chulnuk. Mrs.JJR&* \u25a0\nMrs A A. Perrler. Mn. C. F. McDongal.\nMrs! Presley. Mra. P. J. Gallagher, Mrs.\nA T Noxon, Mrs. A. G. Gellnaa, Mrs.\nl\" S McKlnnon. Miss S. Muraro, Miss\nM Deferro, Miss Heten Scanlan, Miss\nMargaret Scanlan, Mlas FAnces Scanlan,\nMiss Albertine Choquette. Miss Adelaide\nChoquette, Mra. Barnett, Mn. J. Brown,\nMrs.   IL   Scully.   Milt    Fitepattick.\nlfl Baker Street.  Phone 200.\nNew Gloves for Fall\nIt is the necessaries that make the cost time, and Gloves are a most important\nnecessary indeed. The correct glove adds just the touch of smartness which is\nso necessary to the New Fall costume\u2014they are unusually smart and so practical, many of the newest gloves are fashioned of lovely kidlike washable fabrics.\nThey have various attractive cuffs and stitchery treatment, as well as the popular pull-on. Both fabric and kid in all the new fall shades to match or blend\nwith any costume.\nCHAMOISETTE GLOVES\n$1.00 TQ $1.75 THE PAIR\nSingle or double fabric Gloves in two-button or strap styles.\nAll the new Fall colors, and in sizes 6 to 7>\/4. PER PAIR\nfl.OO, 91.25 TO f 1.75.\nNEW KID GLOVES\n$3.00 TO $3.75 THE PAIR\nSlip-on or button styles in fine Dress Kid, washable Cape or\nSuedes, in the new fall colors, as well as Black. All sizes to V\/%.* PER PAIR,\nf3.00, 93.50 TO 93.75.\nWOMEN'S SILK GOWNS\n$3.50 TO $5.00 EACH\nRayon Gowns in plain tailored or lace trimmed styles.\nMade of excellent quality materials, and in a range of\ncolors.    EACH 93.50, 93.75 TO 95.00.\nNEW FALL SILK HOSIERY\n$1.00 TO $3.75 THE PAIR\n||| Chiffon or service weight Silk Hose in seamless or full\nfashioned styles. All the new. Fall colors, and in all\nsizes from 8\u00bb\/2 to 10. PER PAIR Sl.OO, 91.50, 91.65\nTO 93.75.\nMrs. R. De Olrolamo, Mrs. C. E. Mansfield, Mrs. W. J. Meagher, Miss L. McKlnnon, Miss A. Wall, Miss E. Marquis,\nMn. Nicholson, Mrs. L. H. Choquette,\nMrs, G. Choquette, Mra. A. Choquette,\nMn. J. Eccles and Mrs. E. Cobby of\nWieser, Ida.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nR. O. Graham, chief inspector of\nDominion Income tax; is a city visitor\nfrom Ottawa.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Chanter of Sunshine\nBay were  city visitors yesterday.\nMrs. 8. Hlncks, who has been in Spokane for some time past, arrived in\nNelson yesterday to attend the wedding\nHlncks-Trall wedding, which will take\nplace at Craig-End today.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nDr. G. A. C. Walley and Mrs. Walley,\nAnnable block, have as their guests\nthe latter's mother, Mrs. W. W. Phil-\nbriek of Spokane, and Mra. Phllbrick's\nbrother, E. W. Jackson, and F. Horswlll,\nall   of  Spokane.\nThe Service club of Trinity United\nchurch met at the home of Miss Enid\nEtter, Josephine street, on Tuesday evening to discuss plans for the Chlrstmas\nGift shoppe. Those present were Miss\nEnid Etter, Miss Ina steed, Mrs. Douglas\nNagle, Mrs. A. Clyde Emory, Mra. William C. Mawhlnney, Mra. J. H. Lawrence,\nMra. G. A. C. Walley, Mra. C. W. Tyler\nMiss Ida Fleury, Miss Edith Green, Mlsd\nGrace Wilkinson, Mra. G. C. Arneson,\nMiss F. Stubbert, Miss Gladys Ewlng,\nMiss Maude Elliott, Miss Dorothy Faw-\ncett, Miss Elva Hanna. Mrs. L. S. Bradley, Mra. D. D. Tbwnsend, Mrs. Win\nBlanchard and Mrs. R. Salmon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. C. H. Wilson, mining auditor from\nVictoria, who has been a city visitor the\nlast few days, leaves today for Cranbrook.\nt   \u2022   \u2022\nHerbert Pitts, who has been In Vancouver for the last few months, the\nguest of his brother, Dr. H. H. Pitts, and\nMn. Pitts, Shaughnessey Heights, is\nagain in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    I\nMrs. S. J. Towgood left this morning\nfor Longbeach to attend the Hlnckd-\nTrail wedding.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nA quiet wedding took place yesterday\nmorning at 8:80 at St. Paul's United\nchurch, when Rev, F. R. G. Dredge\nunited in marriage Mrs. B. Goldle am1\nJohn Ward, both of Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. Gerald Dunkerley of Kimberley\nis visiting tn the city, the guest of\nMra.  J. Brennan.\nDoctor Declares\nRheumatic Fever\nto Be Infectious\nKANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 18.\u2014Infantile paralysis \"is as flea bites\" compared\nto rheumatic fever, symptoms of whlcn\nwere called \"growing pains\" 40 years\nago; In the opinion of Dr. John Meak-\nlns.\nDr. Meaklns, professor of medicine nt\nMcGill university, Montreal, told hundreds of physicians and surgeons at the\nInterstate poet-graduate medical association convention here, that the symptoms of rheumatic fever often are de-\nterent In children as young as 0 years\nold. In 50 pet cent of the cases this\ndevelops Into heart disease, he said. He\nfound that rest was the best treatment\nfor the fever.\nHe said he believed rheumatic fever\nla infectious, but that ths germ\nIng lt has not been determined.\n.T.   S.   CBATE\nManaging editor of (he Journal,\ndairy, of Ottawa, nnd one of the\nbest known newspapermen In Canada, who died of a nudden heart\nattack In Toronto while In that city\nto attend a Canadian i'ress conference.\nKASLO NOTES\nKASLO, BC. Oct. 19\u2014D. D. McPhatl.\nJ. GUIis and P. Butler Were Kaslo\nvisitors to Nelson Monday.\nW. North, the Sllverton mining m._\npaid Kaslo a visit Tuesday.\nD. Sutcllffe and Charles Swan motored to town from zmcton Monday\nafternoon.\nOeorge Allen of Sandon was a visitor\nto   town  Tuesday.\nJ. M. Harris of Sandon passed through\ntown Monday on his way to Nelson:\nMr. and Mrs. Oeorge Oormley of Three\nForks arrived  In  the city Tuesday. ~*\nS. J. Towgood of Nelson arrived In\ntown Tuesday on his way to Sandon.'\nSLOCAN CITY NOTES\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C., Oct. 19\u2014Captain\nKlrby returned home on Monday from\nthe Conservative convention at Winnipeg, which he had been attending as\ndelegate. While away captain Kirby\nhas been relieved by Captain Fraser of\nthe Arrow Lake service.\nR. D. Kennedy was a business visitor In town on Tuesday from Lemon\ncreek.\nMiss Ivy Hlrd and E. J. Pinchbeck\nspent  Monday  in  Nelson.\nMrs. w. Mlddleton was a week-end\nvisitor  to  New  Denver.\nLIBERAL   REDUCTION\nIN    PIPE    PRICES\nWe have a large assortment, ranging\nIn price from $1.00 to 11.75. which\nwe are closing out at 75c each.\nBUSH'S\nSee the 1928 Models\nI      McLaughlin-Buick Cars\nBEFORE YOU FINALLY DECIDE ON YOUR BUY\n\"When  Better  Cars  Are  Built McLaughlin-Buick  Will\nBuild Them\"\nNELSON   TRANSFER  CO.,   LTD.\nCor. Vernon \u00a3 Stanley sis.\nNeUon,  B.   O.\nMade lt\u00ab Way by thf Way It't Made\nCURLEW BRICKS\nFor Dessert\nMade of pure, nutritious, appetizing Ice Cream, fruits\nand nuts, in several varying flavors.\nORDER FROM YOUR DEALER\nCURLEW CREAMERY Co., Ltd.\nBUTTER ICE CREAM M1EK\nAU Perfectly Pasteurized Products\nJ\n \t\n-\n\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n^fanr-\nrTHE NELSON DATET NEWS. THTJRSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 26, 1627\nCU.RSE O' LOVE\nBy MIMED BARBOUR\n| Ca^eafniwg tha Action and Characters\nCTNTH1A QREKR, the beautiful,\nspoiled, ultra-modern only daughter\nof a wealthy family, receives, on\nihe eve of her man-late to\nMAJOR BASIL HARCOURT. retired,\nof the British army, a man nearly\ntwice h\u00abr ogre, the anonymous gift\nof a magnificent black opal. At tbe\nsight of the opal, Major Harcourt\nIs greatly agltated.He goes back to\nEngland without explanation. Frantic a\\t being jilted in tbe eleventh\nhou>, Cynthia dashes out in her\near, determined to marry the first\nman she can find, so that it will\nappear that she eloped on tha eve\nof her wedding. She meets a fay\nadventurer.   Hla name Is\nsHNQ CARSON, and she asks him to\ngo through a marriage ceremony\nwith her. Carson, who has spent\nten years in tha oil fields in Mexico, where he baa made a fortune,\nla Keen for adventure, and the sit*\nnation appeals to him. He agrees\nto marry her. They part immediately after the ceremony. During\nthe drive home, Cynthia's cor la\nwrecked In a storm, and her purse,\nwith her marriage certificate and\nthe black opal, la swept away,\nwhile she Is desperately Injured.\nWhen she recovers, her memory of\nalt the events of that night are\n(on*, and her parents are In Ignorance) of what has happened. Meanwhile, Cynthia's hand-bag, containing the opal, has been found by\nNORMA COLLINS, the charming\ndaughter of the nouveau riche\nI. iV COLLINS. His ambition Is to\nss* Norma married to a poor, but\nsocially eligible young  men,\nPHIUP KENDALL, who Is In love\nwith Norma, but Is forced to swat\nlow his pride and oak her father for\na loan to save his business, since\nhis friend. King Carson, upon whom\nbe depended or help, Is delayed in\narriving. Collins offers the money\nto Kendall as his son-in-law only,\nand Kendall, torn between love for\nNorma and dire necessity, proposes\nmarrtoce to her. She Joyfully accepts, ignorant of the financial\ntransaction between Kendall and\nher father. Carson arrives in town\nJust after Kendall and Norma have\nleft on their honeymoon. Following\nhis friend to the Collins summer\nborne, where Kendall and Norma\nare honeymooning, Carson learns\nabout the loan and agrees to ad\nvance Kendall enough money to\npar It off, thus removing the only\ncloud from the bridegroom's hap\npinese. But Norma haa already\nsensed that something is wrong and\nhas began to think her husband\ndoeo not love her. She meets a\nformer suitor,\n\u2022TDNEY STOKES who has never\nforgiven her for rejecting him. He\nmake' a sinister Insinuation concerning Philip Kendall. Norma,\ndeeply troubled, makes an appll-\npolntment to meet him and hear\nbis explanation. He tails her of\nthe deal between her husband and\nher father, hut does not mention\nthe subsequent transaction with\nCarson, and she believes that\nKendall married her for her money.\nShe does not know that, by accident, he has seen her with Stoke*\nand wonders why she was meeting her former suitor. Meanwhile,\nCarson, hoping again to see Cynthia,\nhas gone to the vicinjty of their\nmeeting-place. Although she had\nrefused to unveil her face at their\nmarriage ceremony, he hopes to\nIdentify her car, not knowing that lt\nhas been wrecked. Unable to bear\nthe thought that Kendall married\nher for money, Norma goes to her\nfather's bungalow to think out her\nproblems. Stokes follows her. Kendall finds them there. Norma has\ngiven Stokes the opal for .safekeeping In the bank vault, and, aa\nhe leaves the bungalow that night,\nhe Is shot by an assailant, who\nescapes. Norma, terrified lest Kendall be accused of tbe shooting,\nforces him to summon medical aid\nand leave her alone with Stokes.\nThe ' family doctor takes care of\nStokes, but Kendall, believing\nNorma loves her former suitor,\ndisappears. Meanwhile, the opal la tn\nthe possession of Stokes' assailant,\n\"SLIPPERY SAM,\" who, fearing he\nhas killed his victim, enlists the aid\nof his wife,\nFANNY, to get rid of the Jewel. She\ndecides to sell It to an eccentric\ncollector,\nSANCHEZ. On seeing the stone,\nSanches apparently loses his mind.\nThe outcome of the shooting is that\nKendall leaves Norma, without ex-\nplantation, and Stokes recovers,\nWhen Sanchez dies, his belongings,\ntogether with the black opa, go to\nhis  friends. ,\nPROF.    LIND,   and    his    wife,    Ada,\nL-nd  then  dies  and   his  wife goes\nto a winter resort, where \u00bbh\u00bb meets\nNorma,  who is staying at the same\nhotel.     King   Carson,     learning     of\nPhilip's    de-parture    for    the    orient,\ncornea   back  from  Europe  to   try   to\nadjust   matters,   and   locates   Norma.\nShe   te Is   him   what   happened   at\nthe bungalow, but she cannot bring\nherself  to   tell  him  why   she  went\nthere,    or    that    Stokes    had    said\nPhilip   had   married   her   for   her\nmoney.     He   wants   to   go   to   the\norient  to  find   Philip,  but  feeling\nthat   Norma   is   not   telling   him\neverything,  he decides to  postpone\nthe   trip   until   she   confides   more\ncompletely    In   him.     However,   he\nchanges his mind a little later, on\nseeing    Sydney    Stokt*\u00bb   talking    to\nNorma   in   the   hotel.     He   believes\nthat the meeting means that she is\nstill on friendly terms with Stokes,\nand, in disgust, leaves for the orient\nat once, not even saying gooybye.\nNorma is bitterly disappointed, for\nshe haa almost decided to ask him\nto try to find Philip and bring him\nback to her. In a conversation with\nAda. she learns that the latter has\nthe black opal, and tha shock of that\ndiscovery, together with worry over\nher own affairs, brings on a serious\nIllness from which she recovers slowly.\nCHAPTER  LXVII.\nOn the Trail\nMajor Harcourt left at 7 o'clock the\nnext morning.   From her window, overlooking the courtyard, Cynthia watched\nhim drive away.\nHe lifted his hand in farewell, and\nshe blew him a kiss. She thought to\nherself:\n\"Why Is it that I dont love him?\nWhy is lt that X wouldn't be badly\nhurt if I never were to see him again?\nAnd yet, I'm going to marry him. I've\ngiven my word.\"\nShe went into Norma's room and\nbreakfasted   with  her.\n\"Now   I'll   have   to   rush,\"   she   said\ncalmly, as she finished her coffee. \"I'm\nleaving   on   the   9   o'clock   train   for\nShanghai.\"\nNorma sat up In bed, electrified.\n\"Are  you crazy?\"\nCynthia laughed.\n\"My dear Norma, I'm merely a determined young peron who is tired of\nall this delay in getting what I want\n\u2014my freedom. By this time, you surely know that a little thing like a\nChinese war can't stop me from doing\nwhat I want to do.\"\n\"But you mustn't go alone,\" protested Norma fearfully. \"You can't go\nto Shanghai alone. They say there's\nfighting between here and there. At\nleast, wait until Major Harcourt returns.\"\n\"That's exactly why I'm going now.''\nsaid Cynthia calmly. \"Basil would\nraise all kinds of objections. He doesn't\nunderstand American girls at all.\"\n\"But why the frightful rush?\" ques\ntioned Norma, half tearfully. \"Major\nHarcourt told us that King Carson\nwon't be in Shanghai for several days\nyet.\"\nCynthia averted her face. She was\nafraid Norma might see In her eyes the\nanxiety   she   felt   for   her.     If   Philip\nKendall  were Indeed  dead\t\n\"I'll   be  all   right.   Norma,\"   Cynthia\nsaid.     \"You're   not   to   worry-     And\nTherese will be here to look after you.\nNorma sank back on her pillows.\n\"If only I were strong and could go\nwith  you!\" she murmured.\n\"Thank heaven that you're not;'\nthought Cynthia.\nAt 9 o'clock she boarded the Shanghai train at the Pekln station. It\nwas a gray morning and a slight mist\nwas falling\u2014a cheerless morning for a\nhazardous Journey. Cynthia, trim and\nsmart in a beige tailleur, with a chic\nlittle hat drawn down over her fair\nhair, drew her fox scarf closer around\nher smooth, white throat, and grasped\nher traveling bag.\nThe morning newspapers announced\nthat Feng-Yu-Hslang was concentrating\nhis troops to the east of Pekln, preparing for an attack against the retreating army of the enemy. The Shanghai\nexpress which had left on the previous\nday had been turned back to Pekin,\nbecause the bridge over the canal near\nTlen-Tsin bad been destroyed by Li-\nChing-Un's retreating troops. Efforts\nto replace it were under way.\nNothing daunted, her lovely eyes\nsparkling with the thrill of adventure,\nCynthia found a aeat in a car filled\nwith Britons and Americans. She beard\nthat there were French, Italian and\nJapanese passengers in other coaches.\nThe train slid slowly out of the station, and Cynthia buried herself In a\nbook.\nSometimes she raised her eyes to\nwatch the flat, dun-colored country\nslipping by. She wondered what Harcourt was doing. Would he run a risk\nIn attempting to restore the black opal\nto the temple, or would he be welcomed  as a hero?\nNoon came, and the train proceeded\nAccording to schedule. Cynthia had\na good luncheon in the dining car,\nthinking a trifle disappointedly that\nso far the trip hod been tame enough.\nIn the afternoon she became bored with\nher book and amused herself by studying other passengers. But they seemed\nan uninteresting lot.\nWith a sigb of utter boredom Cynthia\nleaned her head back on the dubious\nupholstery ot her seat and attempted\na nap. She was half-dozing when a\nseries of sharp, staccato sounds made\nher sit upright.\nThe other passengers likewise Were\nelectrified. There were murmurs, then\na woman's suppressed  scream.\n\"Shrapnel I\" some one cried. \"Can't\nyou hear it somewhere ahead of us?\"\nAnxious glances were exchanged by\nthe passengers. Every one looked out\nof his window, but a dust storm was\nrising, and lt was difficult to see f\u00bbr\nahead.\n\"It's about three miles or so off, by\nthe sound,\" one man volunteered. \"No\nneed to be alarmed.\"\nEven as he spoke, there was a crash\nA window was shattered Into fragments.\nFrom up ahead came a heavy boom,\nand the train slowed down and came\nto a halt.\n\"They've disabled the locomotive,'\nsome one shouted in panic. \"They've\ngot us in a trap.    We're done fort\"\nONLY \"THREE-OF-A-EIND\" IN CANADA\nass\nHere   are   the   only   Canadian   trip-  doing fine. They are Margaret Muriel,  of Mr. and Mrs. O. I. Mars of Brant-\nlets, a  little over six months old  and   Norma Mary and Betty Jean, daughters  ford, Ontario.\nIMPORTANT RAGE\nCobalt Northern News-Y.M.C.A.\nArrange Relay Race for\nOctober 22\nLiberals Support\nNations9 League as\nSafeguard of Peace\nLONDON, Oct. 10. \u2014 Resolutions favoring the bringing of the spirit of the\nLeague of Nations Into home and industrial affairs and urging that the influence and the authority of Oreat.\nBritain be exercised to promote peace\nand disarmament were adopted today\nby tbe executive council of the Liberal\nparty, in session here.\nAnother resolution adopted the expressions:\n\"Firm conviction that the League of\nNations is tbe only effective safeguard\nof the world's peace,\" and urges ail\nLiberals to make support of the league\nthe first principle of the political creed\nand the inspiration of their labors tar\ngood government at home and abroad.\nCanadians\ndemanded these\nCustom Built Fours\nDon IE Buothers\n(CANADAI   LlMIT\u00bbn\nCOBALT, Ont., Oct. 19.\u2014Preparations\nare being completed for the running\nof an all-northern relay race, ov.v a\ncourse of 11 miles on Saturday afternoon, October 22. The cream of northern Ontario's runners will participate\nin the event, which is being sponsored\nby the Northern News, Cobalt, in affiliation with the Cobalt Y.M.C.A. The\ncourse lies over the Ferguson highway,\nfrom New Llskeard, through Haileybury\nto Cobalt.\nSix-man teams will compete, the a\/;e\nlimit being 18 years. Entries have been\npromised from Tlmmins high school.\nNew Llskeard high school, Haileybury\nhigh school, Kirkland Lake Continuation school. Englehart Continuation\nschool, Elk Lake boy scouts. Cobalt\nHoly Name society. Cobalt boy scouts,\nSwatika school. In addition, there are\nabout   six   \"possibilities\"   to   be   heard\nfrom,   Including   teams   from   Iroquois medals will be awarded each runner on\nPalls   and   Cochrane.    A   silver   shield, the aecond team tc^flnlsh.\noffered by the Northern News for an- m                ~      \u25a0' t.    ~     '   _      _\n \u201e.*i+i\u201e\u00ab   \u201e,,.,   K-  v,\u00abirt   f\u2122  \u201e Four-year-old    Donald    Smaller    ol\nnual  competition,  will   be  held  for  a Ajiiston,   ^   terribly    scalded    when\nyear   by   the   winning   team.     Silver he backed into a pallfull of hot water.\nMALKIN'S BEST\nTH\nm\nNDS\n\"l&ivTII\nRemember the Package)\nIt's in every grocery store-\neverywhere. The \"Malkin's\nBest\" circle trademark is\nplainly marked upon it\u2014your\nquality guaranteed Be surs\nyou say \"Malkin's Beit\"\nI\nPublic demand for low-priced cars of more than\nusual roominess prompted Dodge Brothers (Canada)\nLimited to produce these handsome Fours.\nSpecial bodies custom wiored in Cantida. Mounted\non 116-inch wheelbase.\nSturdy, dependable, luxurious cars, providing generous room for the entire family, with plenty of space\nfor luggage.\nDodge Brothers famous 124 motor assures ample\npower, speed and acceleration for every requirement\nof roads and traffic.\nSec one. Drive one \u2014 and you will own one!\nCAPITOL MOTORS\nNELSON, B. C.\nP. 0. Box 783 Phone te\nS*r*\u00a3^\u00ab*^r~-^ ^\t\n^Q^tiom of Merest to\n&*m Mm bt$ing MerfCbth\u00ae\nDo yoa want good fabric ? Tip Top Tailors buy from the world's leading mills\u2014fine\nall-wool cloths from England, Scotland and\nIreland.\nOo you want smart style?    Tip Top\nTailors' designers are in constant touch with\nthe leading style centres of the continent, and\ninterpret the latest decrees of Fashion to suit\nthe tastes of Canadians from coast to coast.\nDo you want wide selection? We offer\nyou here now, hundreds of new shades and patterns to choose from in all the latest weaves and\ndesigns for Fall wear\u2014all at one standard price.\nDo you want clothes tailored to your\nindividual measure? Of course you do!\nTailored-to-measure clothes fit better, give\ngreater satisfaction\u2014and Tip Top Tailors' one\nstandard price is even less than you'd pay for\nready-mades.\n \u2014\nMl! NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1927\nPage SBfea^^a\nmypoRT<v\u00abi\nMUSTERS\nBEAT WATSONS\n*ber Cops High Score in the\nTournament; Bell in\nSingle Game\nM's   Busters   last   night   defeated\nion's   Wonders   two   games   out   of\nIn a bowling tournament at the\nphore The  Busters'   total   for\nthree  games  was  1896  as  against\ntotal ot 1830 stacked up by Wats'*   Wonders.\nH. Maber of tbe Wonders attained\nhigh   schore   of   the   tournament,\n5)8 point* In the three games.\n| B*U. skip of the Busters, obtained\nhighest  score  for  a  single   game,\n(ting 300 points In the second game.\n\"he teams and the individual scores\nai\n\u00bbU's Busters\u2014   1st.   3nd.   3rd.   Tt.l\n\\ Bell    180     90S     180\u2014 616\nIB. Oray   189      189     154\u2014 490\n|8. Oouldlng ... 147     188     166*- 470\n\\ Choquette   180     139     181\u2014 420\nTotals    896 681 630\u20141896\n(Vataon's Wonders\u2014\n1st. 2nd. 3rd.   Ttl.\nI 8. Watson   186 181 156\u2014 503\nWebb     113 106 101\u2014 330\nI T. Brake   170 141 159\u2014 470\nR.  Maber    166 193 190\u2014 638\nTotals    638 '   601     606\u20141830\nfanks Good Enough\nfor A.L. All-Star\nZ*\u00b0\n\u00ab<d\nm\nBy al niLMAKKi:\n(Former Pitcher New York Giants)\nCone are the old familiar faces\u2014\n**. Speaker, Collins and Walter\nhnson\u2014from the all-Amerlcan league\n-\u2022tar selection this year. A new\naeration\u2014Cochrane. Gehrig, Simmons,\nKlin\u2014has driven them off the boards.\n(\\   fellow   would   not   go   far   wrong\nhe picked the New York Yankees\n\u25a0alght for his American league team.\n* I have found places for a few\nm from the other clubs. I give Joe\nwell of Cleveland shortstop, and\nuege of the Senators third.   Simmons\nthe \"A's\" and Ooslln of Washington\nlong In the outfield with Ruth, and\nove of the Athletics and Lyons of the\nlite Sox stack un with Hoyt and\nnnock as pitchers. The Yanks'\nTiers, of course, have better records,\ncause of the strength T>f the team\nhind  them,  but  Grove  has  a  world\nstuff, and Lyons Is a great hurler,\nhis record with the weak Sox proves.\nIf any reader thinks he can pick a\ntter team than this,  I  will  be  glad\nhave him state his case.\nochrane Makes\nNew Record in His\nPlay With German\nBCtJTON, Oct 19.\u2014Welker Cochrane,\n.3 billiard' champion, established a\nw record in 18.1 billiards against Eric\nigenlacher here today, by making a\ngh run of 251. The previous high\nn of 241 was hung up by Jake Schae-\nln 1926.\nCochrane won the third block of his\nEhlbltlon match with Hagenlacher by\nie score of 300 to 63. Tonight he won\nIs fourth straight block  by the score)\n\u25a0 i\/mi\nONTO THE TITLE\nOutpoints Chabot Before 12,000\nFans in Montreal Ring;\nGeneralship Wins\nMONTREAL, Oet. 10.\u2014Fighting In\nhis most brilliant form and In a\nstyle that has successfully defended\ntwo championships for him during\nthe put two years, Leo. (Kid)\nRoy retained his lightweight crown\ntonight by outpointing Georges\nChabot before a record crowd of\n12,000. Roy Is also the holder of\nthe Canadian featherweight title.\nIt was Roy's superior ring generalship that earned for him the unanimous, decision of the Judges and the\nreferee. He weighed 127H and\nChabot 134*.\nThe champion wasted few blows,\nwhile, on tbe other hand. Chabot. in\nhis over-anxiety to send \/ver a knockout, gradually wore himself dcLjvn. He\nshowed more marked signs of the grueling that the champion, a'\/hough Roy\nwas bleeding at the mou\/a and nose\nafter  the  eighth  round.\nConceding seven pounds to his opponent. Roy saved himself tn the early\nstages. When the challeny.r threatened\nRoy went Into a clinch or tied bis opponent up so that his swings became\nwild and blows lacked weight behind\nthem.\nThe margin held by Roy was a narrow\none, honors being evenly divided In\nseveral of the roifi**. Chabot having\nthree of them to his credit.\nGoulding and Watson Appoint'\ned to Get Entries; List to\nClose Monday\nNelson bowlers on Monday will organize the Nelson Bowling league for\nthe 1927-28 season. At an Informal\nmeeting at the Semaphore last night\nJ. S. Oouldlng and H. 8. Watson were\nappointed to get players In line for\nthe season's city and intercity bowling\nThey will accept entries up to Monday\nnight.\nThose already entered Include E. Y.\nBrake, J. Bell. A. Choquette. R. H. Maber, J. B. Gray, H. 8. Watson, N. Cas-\nslos, J. Lundie, J. S. Goulding, Frank\n,Bamford, J. Hamson, George^ Dill, a S.\nLanglll and A. Langlll.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLEAGUE STANDING\nUp to and Including Saturday game*,\nOctober  15.\nENGLISH    LEAGUE\nFirst Division\nP. W. L. D.\nNewcastle United    10\nBury     10\nWest Ham United     9\nEverton      10\nBlackburn Rovers   11\nArsenal    \u201e 10\nCardiff City   10\nAston Villa   10\nLiverpool      10\nLeicester   City   .... 11\nHuddersfield   T.   ..   9\nMlddlesboro     10\nBirmingham    10\nSheffield   United     10\nManchester  U 11\nDerby County   10   8\nSunderfleld      10   3\nBurnley     10   4\nPortsmouth   10   8\nTottenham Spurs 11 3\nBolton Wanderers 10 1\nThe Wednesday .... 10   1\nF. A. Pt.\n38 17 14\n38 30 14\n34 IS ia\n37 17 13\n17 14 13\n28 30 13\n19 19 13\n36 17 13\n25 18 10\n17 16 10\n33 19   9\n18 22   9\n19 23 9\n13 18 9\n16 23   9\n24 26\n20 24\n30 31\n16 26\n9 14\n17 24\nSecond   Division\nChelsea     10\nManchester City .. 10\nPreston Nor. End\nStoke  City  \t\nOldham  Athletic\nClapton Orient ..\nLeeds United  \t\nWest Brom. Alb.\nSwansea  Town   ..\nBarnsley     ,\nBristol  City    10\nWolv'rh'mptn. W.    10\nHull  City    10\nNott* Forest   10\nFulham     10\nGrimsby Town   10   1\nNotts  County     10   3\nPort  Vale    10   8\nSouthampton   10   1\nheading     10   0\nBlackpool  10 2\nSouth Shields   10 1\n30 8 16\n26 19 15\n24 14 14\n20 11 13\n23 16 13\n30 16 13\n24 13 12\n24 19 12\n30 26 12\n18 17 11\n22 21 11\nII 21 11\n11 11 10\n35 21 9\n16 19\n16 21\n10 18\n13 21\n13 22\n13 24\n14 27\n13 28\n'No Man  Shall Drive Me  to\nTennessee or Rome,\" He\nSays\nAngus Snider From\nWinnipeg to Box\nin Seattle Ring\nSEATTLE, Oct. 19.\u2014Angus Snider, the\ncool-headed young light-heavyweight\nfrom Winnipeg, who gave Young Jack\nDempsey an artistic lacing two weeks\nago, will be featured In a six-round\nbout next Tuesday night here.\nMatchmaker Bishop has several opponents In view for the Canadian and\nwill sign one of them tomorrow. Snider\nknocked out Ted Frayne in Portland\nIn two rounds Tuesday night.\nBert Barry Posts Sam\nfor Return Match With\nGoodsell of Australia\nVANCOUVER. Oct 19\u2014Bert Bally.\nEnglish oarsman, today posted $600\nfor a return match with Major Good-\nsell. Australian champion, who defeated\nhim here in a three-mile race last Labor\nday. Goodsell at present is out of the\ncity. It Is reported he will likely accept.\nWILLIE H0PPE\nHOLDS HIS LEAD\nNEW YORK. Oct. 19\u2014Willie Hoppe\nheld a lead of 360 to 333 over Alfredo\nDe Oro at the end of the sixth block\nof their 720-point handicap three-\ncushion match tonight.\nDe Oro had a high run of eight to\nHoppe's six In the fifth block, and\nHoppe's high run of 10 in the sixth\nblock was the highest of the series.\nUnder the handicap arrangement De\nOro has a handicap of 18 points In each\nblock.\nThird\nCarlton   Athletic\nNorthampton    \t\nMlllwall Athletic\nQueens Pk. Rang.\nPlymouth  Argyle\nNorwich   City   \t\nBrentford   \t\nNewport County ..\nExeter City ..*\u00bb\t\nSouthend United\nMerthyr Town \t\nBrighton and Hove\nAlbion   \t\nWalsall \t\nSwlndown Town\nOlllingham  \t\nCoventry City  \t\nBristol Rovers  \t\nTorquay United  ..\nCrystal Palace \t\nWatford   \t\nBournemouth   and\nBoscombe   \t\nLuton  Town   \t\nThird Division.\nHalifax  Town   \t\nBradford   \t\nLincoln City   \t\nWrexham \t\nRochdale  \t\nDoncaster Rovers\nDarlington   \t\nTranmere Rovers\nAccrlngton Stan.\nNelson\t\nBradford  City  \t\nStockport County\nRotherham U\t\nChesterfield   \t\nNew  Brighton  \t\nDurham City \t\nHartlepool  U\t\nSouthport   \t\nWigan Borough ..\nBarrow \t\nAshlngton \t\nDivision\n10 5 0\n7\n5 15 10 15\n0 26 14 14\n2 29 19 14\n2 21 16 14\n2 22 12 13\n3 24 14 13\n1 27 21 13\n2 22 16 12\n4 18 18 12\n0 21 19 12\n6 17 16 12\n2 IB 7\n1 17 26\n2 22 22\n4 19 23\n3 20 22\n1 19 24\n3 10 25\n3 11 27\n0 16 21\n11 1 6\n10 3 7\nNorthern\n12 8 2\n10 8\nB\n7\n6\n(1\n5\n2\n4\n2\n4\n10 3\n10 3\n10 3\n10 3\n10 2\n10 2\n11 2\n11 0\n4 15 24\n1 20 24\nHectlon\n2 31 17 18\n3 22 12 15\n1 26 18 15\n3 20 15 16\n0 23 11 14\n2 22 8 14\n1 19 10 13\n2 17 9 12\n5 16 12 9\n1 23 22 9\n4 15 13 8\n0 9 12 8\n3 13 17 8\n2 18 18 8\n2 20 21 8\n2 15 19 8\n2 16 21 8\n2 14 21 6\n2 11 19 6\n2 12 34 6\n4 14 36 4\nSCOTTISH   LEAGUE\nx        First   Division\nRangers       9 8 0 1\nMotherwell     10 8 1 1\nCeltic     10 7 1 2\nHearts     10 7 3 0\n8t.  Mlrren     10 6 3 1\nSt.  Johnstone    11 5 3 3\nAberdeen    11 6 6 0\nCowdenbeath     10 5 4 1\nPartlck Thistle .... 10 5 4 1\nKilmarnock   11 4 4 3\nFalkirk    10 4 5 1\nAlrdrleonlans    10   3\nBo'ness  _. 10\nHibernians     10\nClyde     10\nEngland's Foremost\nWomen Golfers Meet\nFirst Time in Years\nrt) to  234.\nayed\nFour blocks remain to be\n(ROSS KAY0ES DAN\nBRIGHT IN SECOND\nPHILADELPHIA, Pa. Oct. 19\u2014Jack 1\nrose of Salem, N.J., knocked out Dan\nright of England In the second round |\nT a scheduled  10-round bout tonight.\nright to the stomach shortly after\nright had risen from the canvas, where\nblow to the head had put him early\ni the round for a count of eight.\nDished the Englishman. Gross weighed\nM, Bright 200.\nWOBPELSDON. Surrey, England, Oct.\n18.\u2014Facing each other in serious competition for the first time In two\nyears, England's foremost women golfers. Miss Joyce Wethered and Cecil\nLeitch clashed today in the fifth round\n| of the annual mixed foursomes tournament. Miss Wethered paired with\nCyril Tolley, emerged victorious by a\nmargin of two and one over Alias Leitch\nand E. Desmond. The match was all\neven at the thirteenth hole.\nRaith   Rovers     10 8 7\nDundee  10 2 6\nQueen's   Park     10 3 8\nHamilton   Acads.     10 1 7\nDumfermline   A.     10 1 8\nSecond Division\nAyr United   10 6 3\nArthurlie      10 7 8\nQueen of South  ..10 8 8\nDundee United; .... 10 4 1\nAlloa    \t\nF1FIELD BATTLES\nMORRIS TO DRAW\nMONTREAL, Oct. 19.\u2014George Plfleld,\n\u25a0oronto, welterweight champion of\nanada, and Johnny Morris, Montreal\negro welterweight, fought eight rounds\n3 a draw here tonight, in the seml-\nLnal to the Roy-chabot bout for the\n\u00a9minion lightweight championship.\nPaulino Will Not\nBe Able to Meet the\nBritisher; Is Hart\nNEW YORK. Oct. 19.\u2014Paulino TJscu-\ndun, Spanish heavyweight, will not be\nable to go through with his scheduled\nmatch with Phil Scott, British champion, here November 1, as a result of\nspraining his back In training, his\n\"board of managers\" announced today.\nPaulino will appear before the state,\nathletic commission's doctor tomorrow i\nfor examination, to determine the ex-!\ntent of the injury.\n V '\nDumbarton \t\nArbroath   \t\nKing's Park \t\nThird  Lanark   ..\nLeith   Athletic\nForfar Athletic\nEast Stirling  ....\nEast   Fife   \t\nBathgate   \t\nSt.   Bernards   ....\nStenhousemulr\nMorton   ,\t\nAlbion   Rovers\nArmadale \t\nClydebank \t\n30 9 17\n28 10 17\n26 4 16\n27 4 14\n21 23 13\n15 21 18\n28 23 12\n16 20 11\n20 24 11\n21 22 11\n19 18 9\n17 17 9\n16 19 9\n19 19 8\n12 21 7\n20 27 6\n10 18 6\n10 20 6\n12 25 4\n12 30 3\n31 Hi 14\n28 22 14\n31 23 13\n19 13 13\n23 17 13\n27 23 12\n23 20 12\n35 24 11\n18 IS 10\n21 21 10\n15 20 10\n27 21 9\n20 19 9\n19 25 9\n20 22 8\n19 25 8\n11 20 8\n20 22 0\n13 34 6\n12 22 5\nMrs. Marshall Wins\nCranbrook Golf in\nClose Finals Contest\nCRANBROOK, B.C.. Oct. 19.\u2014On\nTuesday afternoon Mrs. W. C. Marshall won the finals in the ladles'\ncaptains' tournament, defeating Mrs.\nJoseph Jackson on the nineteenth,\nafter a hard game. On the first\nnine, Mrs. Marshall was four up,\nbut at the end of the rtgHVfiitn\nMrs. Jackson had evened the score.\nSAYS   BOOTLEGOER   HAS\nALMOST    VANISHED\nTORONTO, Oct. 19.\u2014Attorney-General\nHon. W. H. Price, commenting on the\npresent liquor law in Ontario, expressed his complete confidence In 1U\nsuccess. \"The real bootlegger has\nalmost vanished,\"  ho  says.\nLONDON, Oct. 19.\u2014\"No man shall\ndrive me to Tennessee or to Rome.\"\nThis striking declaration, made today\nin a long open letter to the Archbishop\nof Canterbury, primates of all England,\nIs the Bishop of Birmingham's answer\nto the sensational protest made , by\nCannon Bullock-Webster last Sunday\nas to the bishop's presence in the pulpit of historic Bt. Paul's Cathedral,\nknown to the British throughout the\nworld as the \"Parish church house of\nthe  Empire.\"\nCannon Bullock-Webster created a\nscene in St. Paul's Sunday by denouncing the Rt. Rev. E. W. Barnes, bishop\nof Birmingham, \"for pouring contempt\nupon the doctrines and sacrament of\nthe holy Catholic church\" just as the\nbishop was about to deliver a sermon\nin the cathedral. -\nScientist Also\nIn an open letter to the archbishop,\nBishop Barnes, who is recognized aa a\nscientist also, reaffirms his modernist\nconceptions as to the relation of science to religion, with wjhich he has\nstirred much controversy in England\nIn recent years, and he invites the primate to consider steps to \"help those\nof us who are trying to fit the church\nto be the spiritual guide of an educated  nation.\"\nHe \"reaffirms his belief In the apelike ancestry of man, and declares that\nIntelligent men and women are being\nalienated from the Church of England,\nfirstly by its reluctance to heed scientific teaching, and secondly by the\ngrowth of erroneous sacramental doctrines, such as transuinstantiation.\nMan's  Origin\nOn the question of man's origin the\nbishop's letter says: \"Though all competent biologists accept man's evolution\nfrom an ape-like stock, the theological\nconsequences of such belief are still\nseldom stated. I set myself years ago\nto expound these consequences and to\nshow why they did not seem to me\nto  upset   the  main  Christian  position.\nOn the question of .sacraments, which\nwas the immediate cause of Cannon\nBullock-Webster's outburst In St. Paul's,\nBishop Barnes, in his letter, reiterated\nhis statement that the doctrine of\ntransubstantiation   Is   untrue.\n\"No protest must hinder me as a\nbishop, and indeed as a Christian, from\nupholding religious truth. No man\nshall drive me to Tennessee or to\nRome.\"\ned the walkout. The I.W.W. claimed\nthe strike was gaining momentum snd\nthat additional men will Join 4000 who\nleft Jobs yesterday. \u25a0\nOperators reported more men were\nat work than yesterday In southern\nfields.\nThe industrial commission contends\nthe 30-day notice of strikes, required by\nthe state law, was not given by miners\nin the northern fields. A notice was\nfiled In the southern fields, but tbe\ncommission holds its form was Illegal\nbecause lt was filed by the I..W. Instead  of  the  workers.\nCalm prevailed in the strike territory.\nFederal Department \u2014\nof Labor Willing\nto Aid Drumheller\nOTTAWA, Oct. 19.\u2014The assistance of\nthe department of labor was offered today to the parties of the Drumheller\ncoal strike by Hon. Peter Heenan, minister of labor.\n\"As the law now stands,\" said the\nminister In an interview. \"Alberta has\nnot passed legislation to enable the federal department to administer the Industrial Disputes act in that province.\nBut Alberta has passed an Industrial\nDisputes act, and I feel sure that they\nwill look after this particular trouble.\n\"However, If the parties to the dis\npute, or the provincial government, __*\n\u2022slnr any \u25a0wlsrsnoe rrotn  this depart-~\nment, I shall be happy to do ffvarythin*\nin my power to bring about a settlement.\"\nGerman Flight by\nWay of Pacific Is\nFinally Called Off\nBERLIN. Oct. 19\u2014Tn* flight to th*\nUnited State* by way of the orient of\nthe Casper biplane Oermanla end** to-. '\nday with receipt of news at the foreign office that Count Bolma-Laubach,\nbacker of the flight and a pHMt*]<tf\naboard the plane, ha* been injured at\nBender   Abbas,  Persia.\nPEACEFUL STRIKE,\nUll FIELDS\nI.W.W. Claims More Will Walk\nOut;  All Is Calm  in\nStrike Area\nDENVER, Colo., Oct. 19.\u2014Coal miners\nin Colorado today peaceably continued\ntheir strike for higher wages and shorter hours, while the state took steps to\nwarn them against Illegal activities to\nenforce their demands.\nConflicting claims of success came\nfrom both the operators and the Industrial Workers of the World, who foster-\nThe large\n25c. package\ncontains two\n\"Poker Hands\"\nFor a Satisfying\nPipeful\nTHE new generation of pipe-smokers\nhave followed the good example of\nthe old, and are smoking Old Chum.\nYou'll find young fellows, after trying\nthem all, turning to the favourite of three\ngenerations. There's a sheer goodness\nand mellow friendliness about Old Chum\nthat appeals irresistibly to young and old\nalike.\nFor a satisfying pipe-full, fill up with\nOld Chum. And be sure to save the\nvaluable \"Poker Hands\" packed in every\npackage and tin of Old Chum.\nOLD CHUN\nJ7fc TOBACCO of QUALITY\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nVERNON AND STANLEY STREETS\nPHONE 35\n P\u00abg\u00abW\u00abM\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1927\nIY SINGLE IDTE\nMcDonald Gains in Eagle Hall,\nand Borden in Fairview by\nBallot Scrutiny\nMAJORITY NOW\nTWENTY-EIGHT\nTotal Vote Three Higher Than\nFirst Reported;  Rejected\n1 Ballots Number 24\nBEATTY BELIEVES\nAUTOS SHOULD PAY\nShould Bear Share of Taxes as\nDo Railroads Declares C.P.R.\nHead\nCorrected by-election figures, i\nnounoed by Returning Officer Samuel\nFawcett yesterday, after completing the\nofficial count of the ballots in the 10\nballot boxes, reduced the election night\nmajority of Mayor J. A. McDonald,\nLiberal candidate, over Dr. L. E. Borden, Conservative candidate, of 29, to\nas.\nChanges\nIt was discovered that In poll No.\n6, Eagle hall, a McDonald ballot had\nstrayed into the Borden pile, and that\nthe McDonald lead In Ragle hall waa\nrealty 51, Instead of 40.\nOn the other hand. Dr. Borden benefitted by an Increase of three votes\nIn No. 3 poll, Fairview, where his\nvote was returned as 130, but was\nfound on count to have been really\n132, and where a Borden ballot rejected, by the deputy returning officer was allowed. This makes the Borden   majority   In   Fairview,   33.\nThese changes brought up the total\nvote by three, to 3138, and the result\nIn table form Is:\nNew   Table\nMcDonald  Borden\nLib.     Cons.\nEagle   Hall     894        843\nHume   School     184        207\nTotal     1078       1060\nMajority   for   McDonald    28\nAnother thing revealed by the official count was that some of the deputies had listed rejected ballots as\nspoiled ballots, On election night Mr.\nFawcett, on the strength of the returns of deputies, reported 18 rejected\nballots and 18 spoiled ones. After the\nadjustments noted above, the official\nreturn gives 34 rejected and 10 spoiled.\nT\nGAIN DF Sim-FI\nBut Drops  Back; Mclntyre at\nNew High; Noranda\nSoft Issue\nWHITE RIVER, Vt, Oct. 10. \u2014 Addressing the chamber of commerce of\nthe State of Vermont, at a dinner given\nin his honor here tonight, E. W. Beatty\nchairman and president of the Canadian Pacific railway, took occasion to\ncomment upon the effect of motor\ncompetition on railroad operation.\nMr. Beatty had referred to the common understanding that existed between the people of the United States\nand these of Canada and stated that it\nhad been greatly fostered by the fact\nthat there had always been a free Interchange of travel across the border on\nthe part of the citizens of each countiy.\nThere was, however, one feature that\nmilitated against any great extension ot\npassenger train service, and customs\nfigures showed that a quarter of a mil-\nHan Canadians in over 150,000 motor\ncars, had visited the State of Vermon'.\nduring tbe year 1930.\nMore Expensive\n\"They traveled,\" said Mr. Beatty, \"in\nthe motor car, the more expensive vehicle, Instead of the railway passenget\ncoach, the rates on which are by law\nfixed at an exceptional low rate. The\ntraveled on roads built at the expense\nof the general taxes, to which the railroads are heavy contributors, and will\ncontinue to travel so long as human\nnature is what lt Is. Now, I am not\nprotesting against the habit of motor\ntravel, but I think lt is only right to\npoint that the body of travel is not,\ngoverned by the cheapness of the cost,\nand that the railways are being penal\nlsed by arbitrary rates to an extent\nthat discourages any extensive new capital outlay on passenger equipment 3i\nservice.\n\"The handling of freight on auto\ntrucks is also rapidly increasing, and\ncutting freight revenues on short hauls.\nIf It is more convenient to the shipper\nto use such service, nothing preventp\nhim from so doing, but it seems only\nfair that such a service should carry\nits proper Bhare of the burden of road\nmaintenance, Just as the railroads pay\nfor their own maintenance of way, and\nthat the railroads should not be penal \u2022\nized by arbitrary rate structures on the\ntop of taxation which helps to support\nthe competitor.\"\nPays Tribute\nMr. Beatty brlely outlined the place\nof the Canadian Pacific in Canadian\nconfederation, and the history of the\nroad's construction and later development, and paid tribute to the contribution to its success made by Sir William\nVan Home and Lord Shaughnessey, both\nof whom had come from the United\nStates. ,\nMr. Beatty outlined the factors inspiring confidence in the future of Canada. Prominent among these, he said,\nwere a good system of democratic government, a people noted for sanity in\nviewing and grappling with their problems, and a great store of undeveloped\nnatural resounses.\nDefence Will Attempt to Show\nThat Originated With Theodore Roosevelt Jr.\nSTORY OF LEASING\nUNFOLDED IN COURT\nOil Counsel Start Fight in Fraud\nCharges Against Fall\nand Sinclair\nholding that Jo b. Previously It had\nplaced In evidence the leases and contracts alfectlnt Teapot Dome.\nFrom Finnes\\ Owen J, Roberts, for\nthe government, elicited the direct statement that PalJ took out of the hands ot\nhis associates In the interior department, the handling of the Teapot Dome\nreserve, and personally conducted the\nnegotiations arlth Sinclair lor its lease\nI oepesed 8 Hence\nMoreover, flnney said, Fall had Imposed silence upon his associates concerning the lease which lay locked in\nhis desk for days while senators and\nothers vainly sought information as to\nwhether a 1-jfiae had been executed or\nwhether thei:\u00abi was Intention to execute\none.\nIn concluding his two and a half\nhours' address to the Jury, Littleton indicated thai, the defence would show\nthe policy oi' secrecy about Teapot Dome\noriginated v\/lth Theodore Roosevelt Jr.,\nas assistant, secretary ur the navy.\nFAN GETS PAPERS\n. W. Smith Has Existing Certificate Indorsed for Additional  Equipment\nWASHINGTON, DC. Oct. 19. \u2014 With\nbold strokes with which the defence\nfrequently sought to stay, special ot;\ncounsel began unfolding today the story\nof the leasing of the Teapot Dome naval\nreserve on which they ask a Jury In the\nDistrict of Columbia supreme court to\nfind Albert B. Fall and Harry F. Sinclair guilty of conspiracy to defraud the\ngovernment.\nBefore presentation or direct evidence OTTAWA, Oct. 19.\u2014The radio branch\nbegan, Martin Littleton concluded his J of the department of marine and fish-\nprellmlnary statement for the defence. erles todfty announced that several west-\nin which he promised that there woulfl i ern candidates were examined during\nbe no evidence to show that Sinclair the month of September, of which the\never had had any connection with any j following were successful and obtained\n' certificates   of   proficiency   in   radio-\ntelegraphy : \u2022\nFirst class commercial\u2014D. Dyson, Re-\njlna.\nSecond class commercial\u2014A. L, Frost,\nAlbernl, B.C.\nThe   following   have   been   examined\nof the 9200,000 In Liberty bonds which\nreached Fall or his relatives\u2014a transaction which lorms a high point In the\ngovernment case.\nFinney on Stand\nSoon  after  Littleton   had   concluded\nhla, at times, dramatic  address to the\nJury, the government put on the stand [ and had their existing certificates in-\none   of   Its   most   important   witnesses \u25a0 dorsed for additional equipment:\nEdward C. Finney, first assistant secre- j    Amateur\u2014J. W. Smith, New Denver;\ntary of the Interior under Fall, and still [ C. R. Upsdahl, Vancouver.\nMM\nlUdArtkl*\nRmI Estate\nTtktf\nAutuuiobnet\nClassified\nAdvertising\nHelp Wants*\nPwitioni Waited\nLeit and Found\nlimtock\nMarJuMff\nForm Product\nTimber and Hmai\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWant and Classified Advortlsliic \u2014\nOne and a half cents a word per insertion. If paid in advance, 6c per word\nper week, or 22 He per word per month.\nTransient ads accepted only on a cash-\nln-advance basis. Each Initial, figure,\ndollar sign, etc., counts its one word.\nMinimum 25c. if charged 60c.\nLocal Seeding Notices \u2014 Three cents\nper word each insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals, 4c per word.\nBlackface capitals 6c a word. Twenty-\nfive p-Sr cent discount If run dally without chance of copy for one month or\nmore. Where advertisement la set out\nIn short lines the charge is 15c a line\nfor Roman type, 20c for blackface and\n25c for blackface capitals. Minimum\n35c, If charged SOc.\nHelp Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Men, mechanically Inclined\nwho would like to work at the world's\ngreatest paying Industry. Auto mechanics, garage work, electrical eX'\nfierts, welding, battery and vulcanls-\nng. We guarantee to train you to\nqualify for big pay positions. Only a\nshort time required. Write or call\nHemphill's Auto Engineering Brhool,\n10 Hastings St. K., Vancouver, B.C.\n___________ (9905>\nWANTED\u2014An     experienced    waitress.\nApply Hume Hotel. (1065)\nGIRITOk W6MAN FOR itOUfeEtVORK\n\u2014P.O. Box 678.\n(1062)\nTORONTO. Oct. 10.\u2014Heavy liquidation In many issues that have been so\nconspicuous recently In the buoyant\nmarkets on the exchange, featured the\ntrading today on the Standard mining\nexchange.\nNtplsslng was the strongest feature\non the board, advancing 65c. Tough\nOakes regained the leadership as regards activity and after early sales at\n62c closed at 60c, a net gain of 3c.\nFederal Kirkland soared to a peak of\n68c and later eased to 55c, up lie lor\nthe day.\nChaput-Hughes was 2' 4 c higher at\n13%c with a fair amount of activity.\nWright Hargreaves was off 9c to (7.80.\nTeck Hughes off 35c to (10.60: Kirkland Lake off 7c to (2.58, Beaver off\n4c to (1.81. Macassa off 2c to 48c and\nBldgood   off 4c   to  86c.\nMclntyre made a new high for all\ntime at (29.00 and finished at (28.95,\nan advance of 10c, Dome Jumped to\n\u2022 10.50, a gain of 61c. Noranda was\nsoft throughout the session and closed\nSOc lower at (26.60, while Towagamac\ndeclined lie to (7.70, Central Manitoba 4c  lower.\nMontreal Produce\nDominion Live Stock\nCALOARY. Oct. 19.\u2014Receipts: Cattle 682. calves 73, hogs 54, sheep 107.\nSteers\u2014Choice (7, fair to good (6 to\n(6.75.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice (6, fair to\ngood  (5 to (5.75.\nButcher cows\u2014Choice (5 to (5.25,\nfair  to  good  (4  to (4.75.\nBulls\u2014Good (3.50 to (4.\nStocker steers\u2014Choice (4 to (4.40,\nfair   to   good   (6   to   (6.75.\nStocker heifers\u2014Choice (5 to (5.75,\nfair to good (7.75 to (8.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choice (7 to (7.50, fair\nto  good  (4  to (6.\nLambs\u2014Fair to good (11  to (11.50.\nSheep\u2014Fair to good (6 to (10.\nHogs\u2014Select bacon (10, thick smooth\n(9.50,   heavies   (8.50.\nfirm:\nMONTRKAL,   Oct.   10.   \u2014\nbutter and cheese, dull.\nCheese\u2014Finest westerns, 20c.\nButter\u2014No. 1 pasteurized, 37 Vic to\n66c.\nEggs\u2014Storage extras, 44c: storage\nfirsts. 42c; storage seconds, 38c; fresh\nextras, 56c; fresh firsts, 47c.\nBARON   PASSES\nNIAGARA FALLS, N.Y., Oct. 19.\u2014\n(fiaron TJdavoe, aged 75, for 55 years\nproprietor of the Niagara Falls museum, died today.\nI \" i'I' l\u201e^_\nCANADIAN <1, PACIFIC\nLAST SAILINGS\nFrom St Lawrence Ports,\nMontreal-Quebec\nTO LIVERPOOL\nOct. f8*   0     Metagama\nNov.   4*     Montclare\nNov. tl*    Montrose\nNov. 18*    Montcalm\nNov. 15* o  Meiiia\n\u2022Calls at Greenock for Glasgow.\n0 Calls at Belfast.\nTO CKEBBOTimO, SOUTKAXTTOV,\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nThe UNDERWOOD is the fastest typewriter.     '\nThe UNDERWOOD is the most durable typewriter.\nHundreds of users in NELSON will attest to this fact.\nWe carry all makes of typewriters from $10.00 upward. \u00a3\nRebuilt UNDERWOOD typewriters are better value\nthan any new writing machine of any other make.\nEasy terms. Machines on Approval.\nMr. H. R. Kitto will render authorized UNDERWOOD service in Nelson.\nUNITEDTYPEWRITERCo.,Ltd.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nUnited Church Is\nOpposed to Klan\nDeclares Presbytery\nSASKATOON, Sask., Oct. 19.\u2014Alleg\nIng that organizers of the Ku Klux\nKlan are falsely stating that the or'\nionization has the support of the\nUnited Church of Canada and that\nthe Klan Is opposed to the principles\nof Christianity, the presbytery of\nSaskatoon today unanimously Indorsed\na motion stating that the church is\nnot giving its support in any way to\nthe Klan and expressing the view\nthat, as the teachings of the Klan are\nopposed to the teachings of Jesus, lt\ncould not be supported by the church.\nRev. J. A. Donnell, Introduced the\nsubject of the Klan's activities stating\nthat he looked upon that body as essentially vicious, non-Christian, non-\nProtestant and non-British. Others\napproved  his words.\nHALIFAX, Oct. 19.\u2014For the week\nending October 15, 29,279 barrels of\n\u25a0\\pples were shipped to Oreat Britain\n'rom  Halifax.\nApple\nWrappers\nLots of 100 lbs., per lb 12*}\n60-lb. bundles, per lb 15<\nLess than 50 lbs., per lb , JSOf\nTHE DAILY NEWS JOB DEPARTMENT\nPR1NT1NG-RUUNG-B00KBINDING\n*\nPhone 144 (Two Lines)\nWANTED\u2014A cook and a nurse assistant; salaries, $30 per month and\nboard; comfortable quarters. Apply\nby letter or wire to The Secretary,\nSlocan Community Hospital, New\nDenver, B.C. (1109)\nBARBER WANTED \u2014 Apply to Box 406,\nNew Denver, B.C. (1130)\nCOOK GENERAL WANTED for Mrs.\nNoble Binns, Trail. Apply Mrs. R. K.\nBlols, Tadanac. (1138)\nSituations Wanted\nA RELIABLE GIRL wants position as\nclprk in Htore or bakery. Apply Box\n1108, Daily News. (110S)\nSTENOGRAFHKR    REQUIRES    POSITION\u2014Box 492, Nelson, B.C.      (1119)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nFOR SALE\u2014One B.B.C. 4% by 9 pool\ntable. Fully equlQped. Slate and\nwoodwork as good as new. Price\n$160.    K. Schcer, Grand Forks. (9989.\nNew Enamel Bath Tubs 5* 6\",\n128.00; Sinks, 18x30, $5.50; Complete stock new and used pipe\nand fittings; guaranteed good\npaint, red or black, $2.25 per\ngallon; special values In Hoofing\nFelt, Barbed Wire, Corrugated\nIron, Wire Rope, Canvas and\nmaterial of all descriptions. B. C.\nJunk Co., Vancouver, B.C,\nB. C. JUNK CO.\n1S5 Powell St. Vancouver, B.C.\n(9911)\nBARRELS,   KEGS AND EMPTY  sackB\n\u2014McDonald Jam Company, Nelson.\n(9912)\nPIPE\u2014We have a quantity of one-Inch\npipe for sale; in new condition. Nelson  Iron  Works,  Ltd. (9913)\nEXPERT   PIANO   TUNER\u2014L.   Singleton; Phone 261; Mason \u00a3 Risen.\n(9859)\nFOR RALE\u2014One Axminster rug, 9 by\n9, nearly new. Two Congoleum rugs,\n9 by 12. One wood rocker and three\nkitchen chairs.    Phone 580L.      (1103)\nFOn SALE\u2014Furniture and household\ngoods. Ashman Apartments, Room 7.\n*  (1102)\nSAWMILL, consisting of carriage with\nrope feed, saw husk, edger and cutting saw; all in good working order.\nCan be seen running. Price seven\nhundred and fifty dollars. Apply\nBox 1104, Daily News. (1104)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE \u2014 Ford\ntruck for Xilk cow. Box 1110, Daily\nNews. (1110)\nMASON & RISCH PIANO \u2014 Excellent\ncondition,   $300   cash.     Harlcy   Twin\nMotorcycle.    Box 383, New Denver.\n. <1121)\nFOR SALE\u2014Lady's Boudoir Piano, almost new. Used very little. Full-\nsized keyboard. Walnut frame. Suitable for small room. Cost *600. Will\nsell for $350 in New Denver. Apply\nBox 391, New Denver. (1128)\nProperty For Sale\nBUY YOUR OWN HOME\nConditions In Nelson\" are such\nthat It Is almost Impossible to\nfind a desirable Home to rent.\nThere are, however, a few particularly desirable places that you\ncan buy at the old-time low\n(prices.\nCall in and let us talk the\nmatter over.\nCHAS.   F.   McHARDY\nReal   Estate,   Insurance'\nPhone   185 Nelson,   B.   C\ntnfi\nFOR BALE\u2014Six-rnomed house. Bargain for quick sMe. Apply P. E. Pou-\nIln. (9958)\nQUICK SALE\u2014Two houses with 60 by\n120-foot lots. One block from car\nUm-, Chatham street, Fairview. Phon*\n406L3 for particulars. (9975)\nDUPLEX HOUSE JTOB SALE, CHEAP\n\u2014Cement foundation; close in; fully\nfurnished. Apply 819 Vernon street,\nor The Ark. (1046)\nCLASSIFIED afls bring results quickly\nand economically.    IVjC a word.\nProperty Wanted\nWILL PAY CASH FOR SMALL HOUSE\nif price right.    Box 1081, Daily News.\ni (1081)\nPoultry and Effgs\nWANTED TO BUT, 50 ROCK PULLETS\u2014State age and price. Also,\nmedium size chaff cutter in good order.    A. Hout, Crawford Bay. <_106_7)\nFOR SALE\u2014Rocks\u2014Ten\" A\"prll pullets,\n$1.75 each; also six cockerels, unrelated to pullets, $2.50 each; 190-ecf\nstrain. Mrs. M. Binnish, Slocan City,\nB.C.  (1111)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economic-lily.    1\\_c a word.\nNursing\nMRS. FARRELL, certificated nurse,\nopen for maternity engagements.\nBox 748, Nelson, Phone 284R.    (9843)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nWATER   NOTICE\nFor a Licence to Take and Use Water\nNOTICE is hereby given that the\nWest Kootenay Power and Light Company Limited, of Rossland. B.C., will\napply for a licence to take and use 4500\n;econd feet of water out of the Kootenay River which flows in a westerly\ndirection and empties into the Columbia River at Brilliant, B.C.\nThe water will be diverted from the\nstream at a point above the East Boundary of Lot 1394, G.I., and will be returned at the West Boundary of said\nlot and will be used for power purposes,\nfor the distribution of power throughout the territory of West Kootenay District as granted by the Charter of the\napplicant.\nThis notice was posted on the ground\non the eighteenth day of October, 1927.\nA copy of this notice and an applies-1\ntlon pursuant thereto and to the \"Water j\nAct\" will be filed in the office of the\nWater Recorder at Nelson, B.C.\nThe petition for the approval of the\nundertaking as per Section 26 of tho\nAct will be heard In the office of the\nBoard of Investigation at a date to he\nfixed by the Comptroller, and any interested person may file an objection\nthereto in the office of the Comptroller\nof Water Rights, Parliament Buildings,\nVictoria, B.C., or the said Water Recorder, within thirty days after the first\nappearance of this notice in a locaA\nnewspaper. The date of the first publication of this Notice ts October 21st,\n1927.\nWEST   KOOTENAY   POWER   &\nLIGHT COMPANY LIMITED\n(Applicant).\n(1130) C. B. SMITH (Agent).\nFor Rent\nNEW   HOUSE  \u2014  Modern   all   througi\nthree bedrooms.   O. II. Fraser. (9941\nMiscellaneous\nWANTED\u2014Clean   cotton   rags.     Appl\nD.iIly^IewB. (9\u00bb3q\nWANTED\u2014Machine   crosscut   saw\nengine in good condition.    Pay casl\nApply Alex Stacsyn, Box 892, NelsaJ\n(10 if\nAgents Wanted\nPERSONAL GREETING CARDS\u2014Agei\nwanted to take orders for the Iine.|\nline ever shown in Canada.   Regal i\nCo., Manufacturers, 310 Spadtna Ave]\nToronto. ______ (105*1\nFurnished Rooms to Ren\nSUITE\u2014Ashman's   Apartments.     (9911J\nFOR  RENT  IN   ANNABLE~BLOCkT\nOne two-roomed suite, furnished; osj\ntwo-room suite, unfurnished; one sit)\ngle housekeeping room; one single i\n^double bedroom.   Phone 77.       _(998<1\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished suite, K. wT\nBlock. (997,4\nFURNISHED    BEDROOM    \u2014    Prlvajl\nhouse.    712  Stanley street.        (10fl*\nFURNISHED        HOUSEKEEPINtj\nROOMS\u2014Over  Poole Drug. UW.\nSchools\nMOLER BEAUTY COLLEOE\nMOST SUCCESSFUL COLLEOE ON|\nTHE   CONTINENT\nExpert   Instructors   in   all   branches\nBeauty Culture,  including Water Was\ning   and    I'ermanent   Waving.     Term!\nMoler,   10  Hastings   Bt.  E.,  Vancouver,\n(990\u00ab1\nMEN AND WOMEN LEARN BARREli\nING\u2014Expert Instructors in one of th|\nbest paying businesses. Earn whllj\nyou learn and become independent!\nCall or write Moler Barber College]\n10 Hastings St. E., Vancouver, B.C 1\n (990fl|\nJUNIOR MATRICULATION by raalfjJ\ntwo years. Declan Macdonnell dltl\nthis. Joseph Paiframan took JunleVI\nSenior Matriculation in three. Boon\nlets. Canadian Correspondence Call\nlege. 73 King East, Toronto.       <U3jtf\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSOXJ, Box A110S, Nell\neon, B.C. Standard western charge*!\n  (afUl\nAccounting\nCHARLES  P.  BLUNTER\u2014\nAuditor,   MacDonald   Jam   Bnlldlt\nBnx  1191,   Nelson,  B.C. (991t\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'    TRAKSTER   \u2014   Baggage..\nCnnl   and   Wood.    Phone  10B.      (9930J1\nLive Stock for Sale\nJERSEY DURHAM COW, Just freshened. E. Balnnrldge, Glnol Landing,\nBoswell, B.C. (100S)\nFOR SALE\u2014Two mares, weight 32O0\npounds, eight yearB old; also two\nsaddle   horr.es.     Apply  John   Walker,\n_Kettle_Valley,_B1C. (1I2B)\nFOR SALE\u2014Grade Jersey heifer, freshened September 10; dehorned; very\nquiet; a fine family animal; 970.\nGrade Ayrshire, second calf due end\nJanuary; excellent milker; $70. Two\nfine Grade Ayrshire Heifers, 10\nmonths and 10 months. Make an offer for all the above. Wallace, Bos-\nwell. (1120)\nTWO   YOUNG   MILKING   GOATS,   Tog-\ngenberg. $30 for the two.   Thompson.\n_Box 404, Nelson. (1127)\nREGISTERED    JERSEY    BULU    large\",\nsplendid  type,  heavy  milking  stock,\ngentle.   C. Shannon, Willow Point.\n(1130)\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON  \u2014  Baker  St.  Carpenter antl\n'olner.   Screens and Hardwood.   (9921JT\nInsurance and Real Estat\nR.  W.  DAWSOH\u2014\nReal Estate, Insurance, Bwitol*, Annl\nable Blk. P.O. Box 733.  Phone 197.    I\n        (99221\nK.  a.  DILL\u2014 INSHRARCE,\nIAXX AND  CITY PROPERTY\n (508   Ward  Street (9$:\nChiropractors\nDR. ORAY, GILKER BLZ. \u2014 Phones!\nOff.115, Res. 821Y. Hrs.: 10-12 an*\n2-5.   Saturday, 9:30-12.  It\"\nFlorists\nGRESZELLETJ     GREENHOUSES,    Nell\nson.  Cut flowers and floral designs. C\n  (9925J\nTht. B.  JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone   342.      Cut   Flowers.     Potted]\nPlant* j.n.i Flora] Emblem,,    *9\nWholesale\nA.   MACDONALD   ft   CO.\u2014\nWholesale Orocers and Provision!\nMerchants, Importers of Teas, Coffj\nfees, Spices, Dried Fruits, Staple anof\nFancy (irnecries, Nelsnn, B.C.       ttstifi\nEngineers\nA. R.  GREEN  CO.\u2014CONTRACTORS\nFormerly  Green  Bros.,   Burden,   Nelsoo.J\nCivil and Mining Engineers\nB.C., Alberta and Dominion Lead\n      Burveyorw (9928)|\nK. D. DAWSON\u2014I\u00aband Innrevor,\nJCining and Civil Engineer\nKaslo, B.C. (9921)\nHAYWARD   a   RTNGHORN   \u2014   FoiWt\nEngineer, Cranbrook, B.O. \u2014 Timber\nestimates nnd logging maps.   Report*\non tlmhrrhmrt propertlfB. ($980)\nFuneral Directors\nj(l|*i1li*H\u00bb|\u00abi\nStandard Tnrnlturt\nCo. \u2014 Undertakers.\nAuto Hearse, up-to\nlate chapel. Beat\nservices. Prices\nW;   reasonable,     (mi)\nJiov.   %    Montroyal\nNor. If     Montnairn\nFerture  Sailings   From  Winter\nPort. St.  John\nBerth reservation* can now be made\nAsk about the new Tourist Third Cabin.\nFull details with rates from any Agent,\nipr write.\nJ. \u00bb.  CAJITER.\nplMerlct rMMfw Afetttt  Welson,  B.C.\n1,-aH.aBBBBBBBBBBBBa\ni.\n \"\n^\u2014\nld&\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1927\nf Page NImHP\nartafe\nIff HERSEY\nC\nf\n'iee Advance to New Record\nat 88!.; Goodyear Goes\nto New Peak\nTORONTO, Oct. 1\u00bb. \u2014 Page Hersej\nx>mmon was the outatandlng perforra-\nT In todays fairly active market on the\n'orento Stock exchange. The price ad-\n-ncad to a new record at 8\u00ab14.   The\nt sale at 8614   represents a gain of\nj on the day. Goodyear Tire common\nlieached a new peak at 117 and closed\nJit ue to in!..\nNorthern Bakeries' fluctuations we.-s\njetween 41 and 43, closing at 43, a gain\nInternational  Nickel  reached  a peak\nif 88% and finished at \u00ab7i_. a recession\nbf *i. Brazilian Traction reached a low\npf 302.    The last sale was at 303 V,   a\nNcesslon of K.\nA sharp upward movement In Maple\n>af common was noticed. A high was\nlOuchsd at 106, an advance of \u00ab. other\n\u00bblce changes Included Abitlbl. off 6Vi,\nUberta Oraln common, off 1; Maaaey-\nlarrls common, off ft.\ninnipeg Grain\n(\u2022at\u2014          Open   High    Low Close\n004     138       138%    133% 134%\nNov     183       133S4    131 133%\n\"\"     133       129       l\u00abe% 137%\nMay.           133V4    132%    130% 131%\n\u00b0*      81%      83         80% 81%\n\"O\"      88%      86%      66% 88%\nD\u00ab        62%      63%      62 62%\nM\u00aby       66%      66%      64% \u2022   64%\nBarley\u2014\n\u00b00*      78%      78%      77% 78%\nNoT       77         77%      76% 77%\nB\"       73%      73%      73T4 73\nMSV   76\nFlax\u2014\n\u00b0\u00abt        187%    187%    187 187%\n\"0T-   187%\nD\"     188       188%    187% 188%\n_   M\u00bby      188       106%    194% 196%\nBye\u2014\n<**         93%     93%      91% 93%\nNot      93%      93%\nD\"  93%\nMay      \u00bb7        06%\nCash   wheat\u2014No.   1   northern, 147%;\nNo. 3 northern,  139%;  No. 3  northern,\n126%;  No. 4.  114%;  No. 6.  103%;   No,\n8. 2%;  feed, 81%;  track.   138%.\n138%.\nI\nWENT FOR SONG\nProperties   in   Stevens  County\nSold for Less Than $10\nin Taxes\ndPOKAN*., Oct. 19\u2014Tungsten mines,\nin Stevens county, that had been valued\nat $370,000, were sold for taxes amounting to less than 110 dollars, lt became\nknown here today through suits filed\nagainst Stevens county for recovery of\nthe mines.\nTwo suits were filed in the superior\ncourt at Colviiie to recover mining\nproperty of the Roselle Mining company, which Stevens county sold for\ntaxes. The majority stock In the Tungsten property was held by the Schumann & Bene Interests of Hamburg,\nGermany, and during the war the alien\nproperty custodian seized the stock and\nstill holds It.\nThe custodian failed to pay the taxes,\nand the county sold one piece of the\nproperty in 1923 and the other In 1924\nfor the few dollars taxes due.\nToronto Mines\nT\nON MONTREAL LIST\nNickel  and' Brazilian   Decline;\nBrompton Up; Royal Bank\nWeak\nAcon4a    \t\nArgo   \t\nArea   \t\nBeaver   \t\nOastle \t\nCan. Lorraine   \t\nConlagas         4.70\nDome        10.06\nAsked\n\u202234%\n.43\n.67\n180\n.76\n.17%\niDon Houyn\nBOUT    \t\nIndian   \t\nCanada Bonds\nWINNIPEO. Oct. 19\u2014The Dominion\nwar Issue prices:\nWar loans\u20141931. 8101.60;   1937, 8105.\nVictory     loans\u20141937.     6100; 1933,\n6105.28; 1934, 6103.65b, \u00ab103.76a; 1937'\n8109.26.\nWar loan renewals\u20141927, $100; 1932\n8102.80.\nRefunding loans\u20141928. 6100.16; 1943,\n8103.50; 1944. (99.40; 1940, 899.20b.\n889.40a;   1\u00bb46,   899.60b.   699.75a.\nEgg Markets\nToronto\u2014Dealers are quoting shippers, delivered, cases returned: Extras\n46c to 48c, firsts 39c to 42c seconds 33c\nto 35c.\nMontreal\u2014Extras 60c, firsts 42c. seconds 33c to 34^.\nCalgary\u2014Unchanged.\nEdmonton\u2014Extras 40c, firsts 87c,\nseconds 32c.\nChicago\u2014Spot 37c to 43c, Novembers\nS3%c,  Decembers 34c.\nNew York\u2014Fresh firsts 38c to 45C,\nfutures unchanged.\n 26\n     17.60\n 07\nKirkland   Lake         2.60\nKeeley    83\nLake Shore     27.25\nLaval    40%\nMclntyre       28.90\nMining  Corpn 37\nNlplsslng         7.06\n.Newray     49%\nNoranda      26.60\nPioneer     62%\nPremier         2.26\nRouyn     03%\nStadacona    24\nTeck  Hughes        10.70\nTlmlskamlng    06\nWright   Hargreaves   ....     7.80\nWest  Dome   Lake    08\nCent. Man.  Mines        1.85\n.43\n.68\n1.82\n.80\n.18\n4.90\n10.30\n17.70\n.08\n3.51\n.84\n27.40\n.41\n29.00\n.38\n26.56\n2.28\n.24%\n10.75\n7.85\n.08%\n1.90\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Oct. 19.\u2014Sterling exchange firm at $4.82 15-16 for 60-day\nbills,  and  at  $4.86%  for demand.\nForeign bar sliver\u201456%c.\nCanadian dollars\u2014'\/_  premium.\nFrancs\u20143.90 \\_c.\nLire\u20146.40%c.\nNelson approximate rate on sterling,\n$4.88y4.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Oct. 19.\u2014Copper, steady:\nelectrolytic, spot and futures,  i:,i:.\nTin\u2014Firm; spot and nearby, $58.87;\nDecember, 158.37.\nIron\u2014Steady  and   unchanged.\nLead\u2014Dull; spot. New York, $6.25:\nEast St. Louis, $6.02.\nZinc\u2014Steady; East St, Louts, spot anc1\nfutures, $6 to $6.05.\nAntimony\u2014Spot, $11.\nAt London:\nStandard copper \u2014 Spot, \u00a355 12s 6d;\nfutures, \u00a356 12s 6d. Electrolytic copper\u2014Spot, \u00a362 10s; futures, \u00a362 15s.\nTin\u2014Spot, \u00a3266 7s 6d; futures, \u00a3262,\nLead\u2014Spot, \u00a320 15s; futures, \u00a321.\nZinc\u2014Spot, \u00a327 6s; futures, \u00a327.\nWE OFFER-IMMEDIATE DELIVERY\n$3000.00 Dominion Govt. C.N.R.s\n5%, 1954, yield 4.66','\nFor Trust Fund Investment\nR. P. Clark\nHM.SOH   BBAKCR,   PHONE   100\na\u2014asO   AS   VAaJOOUVEB   ABTS    TICTOmiA\nINVESTMENT   BANKER*\nSCO.\nIWNCOUWH)\nLTD.\nKOOTENAY BOND & INVESTMENT CO.. LIMITED\nINVESTMENT   SECURITIES\nGOVERNMENT\nMUNICIPAL  AND\nINDUSTRIAL\nBONDS\nBRITISH  COLUMBIA,\nONTARIO,  MANITOBA\nAND QUEBEC  MINING\n8T0CKS\nHOME OFFICE, TRAIL, B.C.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting ,\u2022\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffice   8m*ltlng   and   Refining   Department\nTRAIL,   BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Oold, Silver, Copper, Lead snd Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pijr Lead and Zine.\n#                           TADANACf TRAIL\nMONTREAL, Oct 10.\u2014The main trend\nof values was In a downward direction\nIn today's trading on the local exchange.\nInternational Nickel closed at 0714,\nwhile the close on the curb the previous day had been 08. Brazilian closed\nat 202 for a decline of 2% points.\nBrompton closed at 48ft for a gain of\nCanadian Cotton preferred recorded\nthe greatest gain, closing at the new\nhigh of 85, for a gain of 10 points.\nAt the close the stock was 66 bid and\n70 asked.\nRoyal Bank, off 10 points to 310,\nwas the weak spot In the list. Othsr\npries changes Included Steel of Canada, off 1, and the preferred off 8;\nCotton, up 2; Smelters, off 1ft; Lake\nof the Woods, off 2; Lake Ontario Brewing, off 5; Laurentlde Power, off 6;\nNational Breweries, off 2; Southern\nCanada Power, off 2, and Winnipeg\nElectric, off 2.\nTotal sales, 33,243 shares; bonds,\n$16,600.\nClosing  Quotations  at  Montreal\nBank of Commence    264 H\nDominion  Bank    270\nImperial Bank  1  347\nBank of Montreal 388\nBank of Nova Scotia  370\nRoyal Bank    820\nAbitibi Power * Paper   132 &\nAbitibi Power  &  Paper  preferred 124\nAsbestos Corporation     37%\nAsbestos Corporation  preferred    04\nAtlantic Sugar    24',*,\nBritish  Columbia  Fishing       14%\nBrazilian T. L. & Power   309\nBrompton Paper     48 u\nBunker Hill    125\nCanada  Cement  346\nCanada Cement  preferred\"   123\nCanadian Car and  Foundry      48\nCanadian Industrial Alcohol     SB%\nCanada  Cottons    127\nCanada Cottons  preferred    103\nConsolidated  Mining  &  Smelting 246'\/.\nDominion  Bridge    267\nDominion   Glass     128\nDom. Steel  Corporation  preferred   32 '\/_\nDominion Textile    129>\/_\nDominion Textile preferred   121%\nHollinger Mines,  - $17.80\nMassey-Harris  _    37^\nMassey-Harris preferr*\u00abd    108^4\nImperial Oil     60y4\nLake of the Woods   162%\nMackay  J  145%\nMackay preferred    70\nMontreal   Power    01\nMontreal   Tramways     187\nNational Breweries     88%\nNational Breweries preferred    114%\nOgllvle Milling  , 370\nOgllvle Milling preferred   127\nOntario Steel Products   115\nOntario  Steel  Products  preferred 112\nPenmans Limited    97%\nPenmans Limited preferred    103\nPrice Bros    68\nShawlnigan     80\nSherwln Williams   175\nSouthern Canada Power   ltd\nSpanish River   123\nSteel Co. of Canada   180\nSteel Co. of Canada preferred   160\nSt. Lawrence Flour Mills, pfd, 80\nTooke  Bros.  ...     72\nTucket Tobacco      89\nWayagamack     92\nWestern   Grocers        18\nWinnipeg Railway   f84\nWinnipeg Railway preferred   107%\nSpokane Stocks\n(Reported by c. W. Appleyard)\nAmerican    Locomotive     1104\nC. P. R $102\nChrysler     $ 54\nDodge     \u00bb 13*\nOreat  Northern    \u2022 98y4\nInt.   Nickel    $ 87Vs\nStudebaker     I 64%\nPhilips Petroleum    \u00bb 38%\nU. S. Steel  \u00bb143'4\nSmelters    \u00bb267t_\nBrazilian     \u00bb202'\/i\nMassey Harris  \u2022 37\nSeagrams * 20?4\nAsbestos   Pfd - \u00bb 06\nWinnipeg   Electric     \u00bb 83V_\nLucky Jim   32c\nSilversmith,  ,  150\nNoranda :. .S26.65\nBethlehem Steel \u00bb 54%\nALL GRAINS SCORE\nRECOVERY, CHICAGO\nCHICAGO, Oct. 19.\u2014All grain, espeel\nally corn, scored a substantial recovery\nfrom a general break this morning to\nthe lowest prices yet this season. Ap>\nparently the entire grain, llBt became\noversold early and left an opening for\nprofit-taking on a big scale by traders\nwho were In a position to collect.\nCorn prices closed firm, % to % to\nv_ cents net higher, with wheat stead*\nat \\ to %c net decline, oats un\nchanged to =>'_c higher, and provisions\nvarying from 2c decline to a rise of\n17c.\nVancouver Stocks\nBid\nB. C. Sliver       1.25\nCork   Province    08%\nDunwell  15\nGlacier \t\nIndependence    04\nIndian Mines  06%\nInternational   Coal 24\nLucky Jim   32\nLeadsmlth  03\nMarmot Metals\t\nPremier    _      2.27\nPorter Idaho         .25\nRuth Hope     28%\nSelklrks 01%\nSilver Crest 04%\nSilversmith  15\nRichmond   13%\nNat. Sll. Q. 3 10\nCoast Copper      15.00\nBrit. Petr 06\nTrojan OH  \t\nB. C. Montana  00 1-16\nSunloch   7*\n1814\n.05\n.07\n.26\n.33\n06\n.10\n2.28\n.27\n.32\n.02\n15.00\n.06%\n.01%\n00%\n.80\nFifty Million Dollar\nCable and Wire Plants\nMerger Being Discussed\nNEW YORK, Oct. 19 \u2014 Plan* for a\n\u202260.000.000 merger of five wire and cable\nmanufacturing companies with ' plants\nthroughout the United States Into the\nGeneral Cable Corporation were announced today. In the consolidation\nare th* Safety Cable Company, Standard Underground Cauls Company, Dud-\nlo Manufacturing Company, and Sheet.\nRod and Win Mill* of the Baltimore\nCopper, smelting and Rolling Company.\nSHINE SPELL\nET\nExtreme   Declines   Are   From\nThree to 10 Points, Wall\nStreet\nVancouver and Head of Lakes\nHumming as  Better\nWeather Sets in\nNEW YORK, Oct. 10\u2014The stock market had another sharp sinking spell today from which lt made only partial\nrecovery. Extreme declines ran from 3\nto 10 points In a number of Issues.\nThe call money rate was reduced from\n4 per cent to 3%. the lowest of the\nmonth.\nMissouri Pacific preferred was heavily\nbought, climbing 4 points, to 112%, the\nhighest price since the reorganization\nof the road In 1916. Wabash common\nclosed 2% higher, at 74%. Other southwestern rails also advanced a point m-\ntwo.\nAllied Chemical. Commercial Solvents\nsnd Dupont showed extreme losses of 5\nto 7 points, only part of which was recovered. Advance Rumely common and\npreferred sank to new 1927 lows.\nUnited States Steel common tanks\nthrough to another new low on the current down-swing, at 148%, and then\nrallied to 143, off 1%. Motors weie\nagain heavily liquidated. General Motors common sinking from 137 to 132 ^i,\nand then moving back to 188%, off 3%;\nand Hudson falling to 66 ?, and then\nrallying to 68%. off 8%.\nDodge Brothers common and preferred sank to new lows at 18% and 56^,\nrespectively. There wore a few outstanding strong spots, notably Phtlade'\nphla Company, which soared 11 point;\nto a new high at 126. Time money was\nslightly firmer, being quoted at 4 to\n4'\/, Instead of 3% to 4.\nPrime commercial paper was unchang.\ned at 334 to 4.\nTotal sales. 2,7ie,200 shares.\nHlrrlt      Low     Close\nAllied   Chem    153%    146\u00bb4    149\nAmer.  Loco         104'\/2    104        104%\nAmer.  Tele     181       178%    179%\nAmer.  Tobacco   ...    140%    149(\/2    140y,\nAnaconda         47        40%     48%\nAtchison         189\u00bb,,    187        188',\nBaldwin        2493,    248%    248%\nBaltl.  &  Ohio        119%    118        118%\nCan.  Pac     192\"i    190%    192\nCerro de Pasco     .     63 63%      62%\nChile   Copper   ..   .     35%     34%     34%\nChrysler          64%     53%      537',\nCom Products 68 57%      67%\nDodge           16        13%      13%\nDupont         332        328%    330\nGen. Motors ..   .   .   137      132%    133%\nGen. Electric 133       128%     130\nOr.  Nor.  Pre       99 98 98%\nHowe Sound  .'     38%      38 38%\nInsplra. Copper . .     20\\      17%      20\nInt.  Nickel         68%     86%      68\nKen.   Copper    ...     73 %     72%     73\nNat. Pow. & Light      24%      23%      24   -\nN. Y. Cen    163      160%    161%\nNor.   Pac       96%      98 95%\nPhillips    Pete       .      39%     38%      39%\nRadio  Corp.     ... 74 71 72%\nRock Island   ... .       105%    104%    105%\nShell Union OH         25\nSin.   Con  15%      15%      15%\nSou. Pac. 122%    121       121%\nStan.  Oil  Cal. 39 38%      38%\nStan. Oil  N. J. 53%      53 53%\nStudebaker 5_5%      531,      63%\nTexas Gulf Sul. 74        71 72%\nUnion  OH  Cal. 43%      43 43%\nUnion   Pac.        191        188        188%\nU.  S.  Rub.       55%      53%       56\nU. S. Steel ..    145%    142%'  143%\nWillys Overland   ..     14%      14%      14%\nExchange: Marks, 23.89; kronen, 26.92%.\nExchange:  Marks.  23.89.\nKronen, 26.92%.\nFRUIT~ANlTvEGEfABLES\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 18.\u2014Grain is pouring merrily into the elevators aftc\nthree days' good weather in the western\nprovinces, Yesterday a total of 3,133.-\n797 bushels were hauled to elevators on\nCanadian Pacific lines. More than\n120,000 bushels over the same day hv.t\nyear, Alberta winning the laurels with\n1,729,461 bushels. Car loadings were\n1386. Vancouver and the head of the\nlakes are humming, 131 cars moving\nwest from Calgary to the former port\nyesterday, which reports 1,341,692 bushels in storage and 104,503 bushels moving out by boat. The Canadian Pacific\nmoved 956 cars east from Winnipeg\nyesterday. Head of lakes storage wtj\n20,485,000 bushels with 580,000' bushelb\nmoving down the lakes. Threshing Is\nnow in full swing and tomorrow will\nsee a rush of grain to the railways.\ntlfui. British Columbia apples. Kings,\ncrates, $1.50; Wealthy, fancy, (2; crates,\n$1.50; Gravensteins, fancy, $2.25; crates,\n$1.50: Mcintosh, fancy, $2.25 to $2.40;\nC, $1.25; crates, $1.75; Jonathan C, *>*!;\nvarious varltles, crates, $1.35; crabapples, box, Hyslop, fancy, $1.75; pears,\nFlemish Beauty, fa-=y. $2.75; Anjou,\nfancy, $3.50; C, $3; Bosc, fancy, $3; C,\nJ2.50; peaches, boxes. No. 1, Elberta,\nCrawford, $1.10 to $1.25; Italian prunes,\nbox, No. 1, 80c; strawberries, 24-pint\ncrate, $3 to $3.30; egg plant, 8c to 10c\npound; peppers, green, 10c pound; field\ncucumbers, SOc to 75c dozen; tomatoe*\nfield, lug, ungraded, $1.25 to $1.35; 4-\nbasket crate, No. 2, 75c; hothouse, 4-\nUiskrt crate, No. 1, $2.25 to $3.25; Golden Bantam corn, 20c dozen; head lettuce, 3-4 dozen crate, 75c to $1; cabbage, green, l%i to lV&c pound; sprouu.\n12c pound; onions, sack, cwt., local yellow, standard, $2; Okanagan yellow,\nstandard, $2.60; potatoes, sack, cwt., B\ngrade, local white, $1; dry belt Gems,\n$1.50 to $1.65; carrots, sack, 80c; beets,\n$1.25; parsnips, $1.75; turnips, $1.35;\ncauliflower, $1.25 to $1.75 dozen; celery,\nlocal, 50c to 75c dozen; Hubbard squash\nand pumpkin, 2c pound; Ontario Concord   grapes,   6s,   80c;   imported   pearj,\n g\"\nBartlett, extra fancy and fancy, $858;\npeaches, box, No. 1, Kberta, Krummel,\n$186; melons, Casabas and Honeydews,\n8c pound; grapes, lug, No. 1, Tokay,\nMalaga. $2.25; Thompson Seedless, $2;\nRlbler, $3.26; cranberries, box, 35-pound,\n$5.25; box, 50-pound, $10; peppers, red,\n18c pound; egg want, 16c to 18c pound;\nlettuce, head, 3-4 dozen crate, $4-26;\nsprouts, 18c pound; onions, Yakima,\nSpanish type, sack, cw.\u201e choice, $3 to\n$3.25; Japanese onions, crate, cwt., standard, $3.25; Spanish onions, 120-pound\ncrate, choice, $7 to $7,25, Car arrival.*,\nOctober 13 to 15, inclusive: British Columbia, 12 potatoes, 3 pears, 7 apples, 2\nmixed fruit and vegetables, 1 pumpkin,\n4 onions, 1 mixed fruit, l mixed vegetables; Ontario, 1 grapes; Imported, 3\nbananas, 2 grapes, 1 oranges, 1 lettuce.\nCALGARY, Alta.\u2014Business fair. Ontario grapes. Niagara, Concord, Wordens,\n8s, 65c to 72c; Alberta potatoes, cwt,, B,\n$155;  British Columbia tomatoes,  hot\nhouse. 4-basket, No. 1, 0378; fisld, Ha.\n3, $158 to $1.75; pears, Bartlett, ffcncy,\n8355 to $3-60; C, $8 to 8858; !\u25a0\u25a0$\u00bb\u25a0 th,\nBoussock,  Duchess,  Comics,  fancy, 89:\nFlemish, C, 82.78; apples, boa. Mcintosh,\nfancy, $356 to 8340;  C, $2.06 to 83.1*5;\ncrates, $158 to $1.80; Jonathan, crates.\n$1.80;   assorted   varieties,   cratas,  $1.60;\ncrabs,   Hyslop,   fancy,   $158;   potatoes,\ncwt.,   B,   $1.90;   quinces,     pound.     15c,\nanions,    cwt.,    standard,   $3.50;   celery,\npound, 5'\/\u00bbc to 8c; imported pears, Bart-\nett, fancy, 83.75; prunes, Italian, No. 3,\n$1.30; potatoes, sweet, pound, 5c; grapefc,\nlug, Tokay, Emperor, $8 to $3 35; onions,\nj Spanish, case, $7.   Car arrivals, 13th to\n' 15th:     Ontario,   1   grapes;   Alberta,   1\n1 squash, l mixed vegetables; British Columbia, 2 potatoes, 3 mixed fruit and\n\\ vegetables, 3 apples, 1 mixed vegetables;\ni imported,    1   oranges.    1    tomatoes,    1\nonions, 1 grapes.\nWaterloo hihI Kitchener held tag *ay\nfor Twin    City Humane society.\ni\n^CANADIAN PACIFIC STEAMSHIPS\nj^tf    \"\u25a0\"'\u25a0\u25a0\"    i-*J__\u00b1'*,f.\\..\\_\\-   ,0.-8.,^?     _.-nL^L.-..t^_ii.\\> XT<_\u00b1_.   Z.f     ^^\nSAILINGS\nFROM MONTREAL AND QUEBEC\nMELITA   NOV. 25\nto Belfast, Greenock and Liverpool\nFROM ST. JOHN\nMUM'CLARE    DEC.   6\nto Belfast, Greenock and Liverpool\nMONTROSE   DEC.   9\nto Belfast, Greenock and Liverpool     '\nMONTNAIRN  DEC. 14\nto Cobb, Cherbourg and Southampton\nMONTCALM    DEC. 15\nto Belfast and Liverpool\nMELITA    DEC. 22\nto Greenock and Liverpool     j\nCABIN\u2014TOURIST III.\u2014THIRD CLASS\nLow Round Trip ItJ.lc.:   Tourist III.   Cabin  and Third  Class.\nBerth   Reservations   can   now l>e made.  Details and' Literature from any Agent or Write\nJ. S. CARTER, DISTRICT PASSENGER AGENT\nNELSON,   B.  C.\n^_^*rSi^Sr5S^lfe3-^^5r5^5^&^*&i*5jS-5a<\nVANCOUVER. B.C. \u2014 Business show,\nslight Improvement. The second eer\nof Ontario Concard grapes has been\ndistributed. First Jonathan apples are\nbeing offered.   Cauliflower Is very plen-\n3\u00bb\u00a5\n^l)u^nn^a(t fionttmntt ,^|f\nINCORPORATED   t\u00ab* MAY l\u00abTO.\nOilier Brancbe* at Winnipeg, Yorltfon, Saikatoon,  Edmonton,  (algorj,   In U.brldge,\nVancouver, Kamloops, Vernon and Victoria\nDry Goods\nVALUES THAT SPEAK IN FAST-T0-C0L0R BEDSPREADS\nImported?   NOl It's both older\nand better\nTEN YEARS OU)\nTfel* aar*rtu*m*at ts sat pnbush\u00abd\nor display** by tar* Llqaor Control\nBeard or by  tit* t>or*ram*at of Brlt-\n.PRINTED BEDSPREADS\u2014On heavy\n68x86.   Fast to color.   Price, each\t\nBEDSPREADS\u2014In lovely blended colori\nEgyptian cottons. Size 68x86. Fast to\nSize 86x100.   Fast to color $3.25\nHEAVY QUALITY CRINKLE BEDSP\nThese will always maintain that crin\nonly).   Size 80x105.   Price, each \t\nRAYON BEDSPREADS\u2014In nice heavy\nHello and Gold with scalloped edges.\nEXTRA HEAVY ENGLISH AND COT\nIn beautiful all-over patterns in colors\npriced below marked values.    Size 70\nVERY HEAVY ENGLISH TAPESTRY\nSize 81x105.   Fast to color.   Price\t\nquality cotton with White grounds.   Size\n  81.05\nnjrs on a background of Oatmeal color\ncolor.   Price          $2.59\nSize 08x86. Fast to color ... $3.75\nREADS that do not require ironing,\nkle appearance.    (Stocked in best quality\n  $3.50\nqualities that come in colors of Rose,\nSize 81x105.   Prices, each $4.50, $5.95\nTON AND ART SILK BEDSPREADS\u2014\nof White, Mauve and Blue.   These are\nx90.   Fast to color.   Price  $5.50\nBEDSPREADS\u2014In   Maize  and   Blue.\n  $4.95\nMain Floor\u2014H.B.C.\nLadies' Ready-to-Wear\nNEW FALL COATS\u2014In Marvella, Needlepoint and Velours, in shades of Navys,\nGreen, Rose, Cardinal, Black, Browns.    Assorted  sizes.    Each  trimmed  with\nfur collars or cuffs and collars in shades contrasting.\nPrices   $25.00, $29.50, $35.00, $39.50\nFUR FABRIC COATS\u2014With deep collar and cuffs in Black or Brown. Sizes\nassorted.   Prices' $65.00, $69.50\nHATS\u2014Velours, in any shade to go with  any coat.    Large  brims, also small\nshapes.    Large, medium and small head sizes.\nPrices $6.95, $7.50, $9.50, $12.50, $18.50\nFELTS\u2014New fall felts in all the new shades. Large and small brims. Prices\nranging,. $2.95, $3.95, $4.95, $6.95\nCHILDREN'S FALL FELTS\u2014Assorted shades. Close fitting or wide brims.\nPrices    $1.25, $1.50, $1.95, $2.25, $2.95, $3.25\nCREAM AND COLORED VESTS\u2014Suitable for cooler days and evenings, in\njall-wocl, silk-and-wool, wool and cotton or all cotton. Short sleeves or opera\nand cumfy cut style.   Sizes assorted.     Prices 69**, 79<*, 89^, $1.00, $1.25\nBLOOMERS TO MATCH ABOVE VESTS\u2014In White or assorted colors and\nsizes.    Prices    75<, 95\u00ab?, $1.25\nMANDLEBERGS, MANCHESTER MADE WATERPROOF COATS\u2014In silk\ncovered rubber, plain colored rubber, cravenette or transparent oilskin, in assorted shades and sizes.    Prices $10.95, $14.95, $17.95, $25.00, $29.50\nSecond Floor\u2014H.B.C.\nMen's Wear\nMEN'S   FLANNEL  WORK  SHIRTS\u2014In a good heavy union flannel, Grey or\nKhaki.   Price  $2.50\nMEN'S ALL-WOOL KHAKI FLANNEL W(5RK SHIRTS $3.25\nMEN'S CHECK FLANNEL WORK SHI RTS\u2014Green, and Brown checks.\nPrices   $2.75 and $3.95\nMEN'S FLANNEL LUMBERJACKS\u2014In smart check patterns.\nPrices   $3.95, $4.95, $5.50\nMEN'S SILVER BAR OVERALLS\u2014The double-wear fabric.\nBib overalls $2.50     Pants  $2.25\nCombination overalls  '.  $4.25\nMain Floor\u2014H.B.C.\nShoe Department\nWe would-like to call special attention to a new line of Men's Honor Built.\nShoes that have just arrived from England. This Oxford is on the new brogue\nstyle and is made from fine willow calf leather. It is full leather lined, good\nweight sole, rubber lift, carries a smar t toe. All of which go to make it a real\nwinner.   Sizes HU, to 11, and in three widths.   Price $7.95\nMain Floor\u2014HJJ.C.\n-ol\n 'Psfs Ten\nr THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1927\nThe Ark\nSPECIALS\nHeating Stoves, coal or wood; Flower\n<OU. Girls' and Boys' Hosiery, Sheet-\nMr. Pillow Tubing. Flannelette and all\ntaple Cottons, Lien's Socks, Shirts and\nfnderwear. Rugs, Linoleum, Furniture.\nIrockery and Cooking Utensils.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nhan* U4 \u00ab\u2022 Vernen M.\n\"Collinson for Quality\"\nDIAMOND RINGS\nWEDDING RINGS\nSILVERWARE\nJEWELLERY\nWATCHES\nE. COLLINSON\nJeweler\nExpert Watchmaker\nC.P.R. and G.N.R. Tim* Inspector -\nlothlng   la  too   (ood   for   the   alck\n>my the's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION BPEC1AIJST\n' la  bum net's   tot   your health     L\u00abl   u\u00bb\nlit   your   prescriptions.       Hall   orden\ntromptly   executed.     Call   and   wait   to\nfour car.    Fhoae 1.\n\u25a0WBdar konrat U4 isl T to \u2022 da\n-\nBetter\nVision\nIs an economic necessity. Better vision ts essential to education and enllgbtment, better vision will add to happiness and\ncontentment of citizenship.\nHealth and sanitary advancement\nthemselves are hardly more important, because defective vision\nmultiplies   those   problems.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nExpert    Optical    Service\nCARS\nREAL\nSNAPS\nBrand New Dodge Panel\n3-4   Ton   Truck,   8\nfoot body and  140-\ninch wheel-\nbase $1350\nOldsmobile  6  Touring,\n1924 model ...$425\nCAPITOL MOTORS\nGEORGE   W.   PEASE,   Manager\nOpp. Post Office Box 783\nPhon*   65 Nelson,   B.C.\nFEATUREDFTHE\nOver  $200,000  Is  Involved  in\nActions;   Sue  C.P.R.  for\n$150,000\nFIVE  CASES UPON\nCRIMINAL DOCKET\nBailey,   Morpeth,   Ritola   Face\nMurder Charges; Perjury,\nAttempted Rape\nGOOD GRAVEL\nSuitable for concrete work can\nbe had for the loading and carting away from our new premises,\nVernon street. Has to be taken\nat once.\nBENNETT'S, LTD.\nTh*   Home  of   Electrical  Good*\nLIVE DOWN TOWN\nAnd save time and street car\nfares.    You get real comfort\nin the\nKERR APARTMENTS\nCITY DRUG CO\nNelson'i   Dispensing   Chemist*\nI minis. Kodaks, Draffs, Stationer*.\n\u25a0all    Order*   Promptly   Despatched\nBOX   10S3  Ni-lKun,  B.O.    THONE 3d\nCome   and   Get   V.xir   Wt-lal.t   Prm.\nIncrease Your Salary\nEvening Classes\nIndividual Tuition\nNelson Business College\nDainty Rayon Lingerie\nFashion demands Lace Trimmed\nunderthm_s. Here you will\nfind a splendid assortment\nof good quality Rayon, Lace\nTrimmed Undies in a variety\nof shades, at our reasonable\n\\f~f^'_Sl prices: i   tgfl\nBloomer - Brassiere Combination   $3.75\nBloomer, Brassiere to match,\nboxed as Gift Sets,     84.50\nBrassiere, Step-in Sets, boxed\nin Sets, the set  84.25\nTeddies    83.25\nShadow Proof Slips        82.50\nNight Gowns 82.95, $4.25\nand $4.50.\nPyjama Sets $4.50 and $5.75\n\"HYLOOM\" TAILORED\nUNDIES\nKnit from the best yarn on the\nmarket and made so to give\nperfect   freedom   of   movement. For those who demand the best. All the beauty\nof Silk with the extra durability that the best Rayon\ngives.\nBloomers,  (Small to extra Large)  $2.00 and $3.25\nVests  - $1.50 and $2.00\nAll-in-One, a Vest, Bloomer, Slip Combination  $5.75\nPyjama Sets  _ $8.75\n1Ramsc-en 3Bim\nMillinery, Ready-to-Wear, Dry Goods, Boys' Wear\nWhen the Nelson fall assizes open\nthis morning at 11 o'clock, with Mi.\nJustice D. A. McDonald presiding, a program of five criminal cases, consisting ol\nthree murder, one perjury and an attempted rape trials, and a number of\ncivil actions, these latter Including at\nleast four damage suits and one accounting of partnership action, the\nsums Involved in these five actions totaling in excess of 1206,750.\nThe grand Jury has been selected anil\nthe petit Jurors have been served. These\nmen must be in the court room in the\ncourt house by 11 o'clock this morning.\nCriminal Docket\nOn the criminal docket, those facing\ntrial are:\nKenneth R. Bailey, charged with the\nmurder of Charles A. jury at Trail on\nJune 24.\nWilliam Morpeth, charged with the\nmurder of Roderick Munro, forest rang'\n\u25a0'.\\ at Golden on August 27.\nJohn Ritola, charged with the murder\nof Leo Kolehmalnen at the Florence\nmine, Princess Creek, on August 22.\nHarve Zurbrugg, charged with attempted rape.\nNick Bayoff, charged with committing\nperjury.\nHlg Suit Against C.P.R.\nThe Canadian Pacific railway is the\ndefendant in a (160,000 damage suit\nbrought by the Midlanes Timber company, P. L. Verlgln and B. A. Postnl-\nkoff, Ontario Slocan Lumber company\nThomas W. AUshouse, William Hunter\nand Nels Alposen, the plaintiffs alleging a fire started by a spark from t\nC.P.R. engine destroyed, in 1928, timber limits held by them near Summit\nlake. James O'Shea, K.C., of O'Shea &\nGarland, will represent the plaintiffs.\nand C. H. Hamilton, K.C.. of Hamilton.\nWragge & Hamilton, will conduct the\ndefence.\nW. F. Falls of Waneta 1b suing J. D.\nNelson, also of Waneta, for >35,000 to\n\u202240,000, which he claims is due him &3\nbis commission for securing the timber\non the Waneta Power & Light com\npany's reserve for Mr. Nelson. Harold\nW. Mclnnls of Trail, for Mr. Falls, will\noppose Archie Donaghy, Mr. Nelson 3\ncounsel, in this action.\nStates People Ask Accounting\nW. E. Cullen of Spokane will ask for\non accounting of partnership from W.\nW. Bacon of New York, and others, E,\nP. Dawson of Brown & Dawson, appearing for Mr. Cullen and C. R. Hamilton.\nK.C., appearing for the defendants, lt\nis understood $20,000 In bonds is involved in this suit.\nRobert Stephen of RosBland is plaintiff in a damage suit against W. F.\nMcNeill, also of Rosslano. for losses sustained in the disastrous fire which destroyed a business block in Rossland\nin February. Mr. Stephen alleges the\nfire was started through a torch_beln.!\nused to thaw frozen pipes in the basement of Mr. McNeill's building. A member of the firm of Lucas At Lucas, Vancouver solicitors, will represent Mr\nStephens, and C. F. R. Pincott of Rossland will conduct the defence,\nsues for Loss or Boom\nFrank Pelle will ask for 11750 damages from Captain Fred Cogle of Procter, claiming he lost this amount\nthrough negligence of Captain Cogle\nwhen the latter lost a boom of logs he\nwas towing on Kootenay Lake for Mv.\nPelle. E. G. Matthew has been retained\nby the plaintiff, and James O'Shea\nK.C, is the defence counsel.\nIt is believed there will be additional\ncivil actions, though these are not yet\non the docket.\nTha Dallj New, invites letter*\nfrom readere upon matters o** pubic Interest. A \u00bbom-d\u00ab-plume may,\nli desired, be employed, but every\nletter must be signed by the writer\nas a guarantee of good faith,\nthough not necessarily for publication. Letters should be brief,\nand must avoid personalities. Ths\nDally News does not hold Itself,\nin   any   way,   responsible   for   the\ntTW. \u00b0 co^eepondents. Letters\nwhich contain advertising matter,\nor propaganda which Is classed as\nadvertising, will not be sccepted\nunder  any circumstances.\nOutside Speakers Not\nNecessary to Instruct\nItalians How to Vote\nTo the Editor of The Dally   News:\nSir\u2014You will kindly allow me to occupy a little apace In your valuable\npaper to disapprdve one particular tactic in the election campaign used by\nsomeone in the past byelection. I do\nnot want anyone to be under the impression that I am against the appeal\nmade to the Italians on behalf of the\nLiberal candidate.\nOn Sunday, while walking on Baker\nstreet. I was invited by several friends\nto attend a meeting. I asked who was\nthe orator; they told me he was a\nlawyer from Vancouver. I asked what\nwas his subject; they told me. an appeal to the Italians on behalf of the\nLiberal candidate. I said \"Thanks, I am\ntoo busy  to attend  this meeting.\"\nNow, the reason thai I disapprove\nIt is because many people of other nationalities think that there is no one\namong the Italians of Nelson who\ncould havp explained the issue. We\nall know for a fact that the majority\nof the Italians are old Canadian citizens, they have cast their votes many\ntimes without anybody from outside\nbeing called to explain. Those that\nare entitled to vote understand Eng\nllsh, and have been present at every\nmeeting addressed by various speakers,\nand  they  certainly  knew how to vote.\nI am not passing anything against the\nspeaker, or against others, but only\ntrying to explain the facts. There may\nbe some Ignorant, as there are In all\nclasses, creeds, colors and nationalities,\nbut also some good, honest, intelligent\npeople. A. BARTOLUCO.\nSouth Slocan, B.C., Oct. 18, 1927.\nA. S. HorswiD & Co.\n2 tins Tomato Soup\n25*\nSalt Herring, per lb.   ...\n20\u00bb*\nCowan's Cocoa, %-lb.\n25*\nLipton Cocoa,  tt-lb.\n25*\nFinnan  Huddle\nKippered  Herring\nAlaskan Cod\nOur Phone No. ii\n121\nIN FIELDS OF\nGood   for\nRun of\nFurther   Threshing\n25 Days;  Season\nTrying One\nPYJAMAS\nIn Flannelette Pyjamas we have just\nreceived three of the nicest lines we\nhave ever shown at the money. They\nare silk trimmed, roomy and well\nmade and a nice, soft quality.\nPriced at $2.25, $2.50 and $3.00\nThen we have the finer lines in British makes, in sizes from 36 to 44.\nPriced from $3.75 to $6.00\n411 mail\norders\nprepaid\nBILLY M'EU\nHIT BY Nil\nTl\nRuns Into Miss Murphy's Car\non Nelson Avenue; Face Cut,\nTeeth Knocked Out\nPOLE CHROMES\nBREAK MAN'S LEG\nJoe Burton Suffers a Compound\nFracture;  Rushed  to\nHospital Here\nDash Ins out into the road, Billy\nMacEwan, 6-year-old soli of Mr, and\nMrs. R. B. MacEwan of Nelaon avenue,\nsuffered a broken thigh and face cuts,\nand had a number of teeth knocked out\nwhen he ran into an auto driven by\nMiss Helen Murphy about 2:20 o'clock\nyesterday afternoon.\nBilly was playing with a number of\nkiddies on a boulevard on Nelson ave\nnue, Just north of the Cottonwood\nstreet Intersection, when he ran out\n.Into the road, trundling a hoop. Miss\nMurphy was driving slowly, and was\nable to stop immediately. She picked\nthe lad up and rushed him to Kootenay Lake General hospital, where Dr.\nL. E. Borden set the broken leg and\nattended to his other injuries. The\nlad is reported to be progressing favorably.\nGREAT WELCOME\nSix dollars a day an board Is the going wage for bundle-teamsters this fall\nin southern Alberta,\" states Oeorge N.\nRandal), in Nelson after a trip through\nthat section.\n\"The number of men required there\nto harvest and thresh the crop was underestimated at the beginning of the\nseason, so that too few men were\nbrought in from the east, and. whor.\nthe shortage of help available for these\npurposes began to make Itself felt, the\nseason was thought already to be too\nlate for men to be brought in from a\ndistance to relieve lt.\n\"Enough stookB are still standing in\nthe fields for an average threshing run\nof 25 days. One of the best c\/ops ever\ngrown in the province will amply reward the ranchers' and the farmers' labor. Oenerally speaking, however, very\nlittle threshing has b-cn done, practically all operations having been halted\nagain and again by rain and snow, At\none time or another, Bince harvest began, a succession of storms have covered practically the whole province.\nErratic Weather\n\"The crop season of 1\u00bb27 has been a\ntrying one for both the farm laborer\nand the grain grower. First a series of\nstormB delayed field operations, so that\nJune was far advanced before many of\nthe growers finished spring's work\nThen late ripening resulted from late\nsowing, the cutting of spring wheat hav\ning been not generally begun until the\nfirst week in September. Those who\ndepended on the combined harvester to\ncut and thresh their spring wheat have\na very high percentage of their acreage still uncut; the snow that has recently fallen over large areas has flattened much of this uncut grain to thf,\nground, fo that to harvest it will be\ndifficult, and In many cases impossible.\"\nViscount Cecil to\nStart Disarmament\nAppeal on Friday\nLONDON, Oct. 19.\u2014Viscount Cecil,\nwho resigned from the Baldwin cabinet in August after a disagreement\nwith his colleagues on disarmament,\nwill launch his personal speaking campaign in the cause of disarmament on\nFriday. He will make the first of six\nor eight addresses to be delivered before Christmas at the British League of\nNation   association.\n\"There is a strong feeling throughout Europe for disarmament,\" said Lord\nCecil In an Interview tonight, \"and it\nwould certainly seem ridiculous if Great\nBritain, which has more to gain than\nany other country by assurances of\npeace, should not give full support to\nthe   disarmament   movement,\"\nComing Monday, October 24, at 8 p.m.\nDR. W. G. ALEXANDER\nAmerica's Premier Character Analyst,   Psychologist,   and   Vocational\nExpert in His Fascinating\nFREE LECTURES\n'HUMAN MIND\nAJtti\nhow to use rr\nor   more   ladles   and   gentlemen   selected by the audieno* men nignt.\nLectures Every Evening at 8 p.m.\n OPERA HOUSE\nADMISSION FREE FREE WILL OFFERINGS\nCalgary People Will Turn Out\nto  Greet   Newly   Elected\nLeader of Conservatives\nWANTED\nPEARS\nMcDonald Jam Co., Limited\nNELSON, B. C.\nCuban Consul Gets\nCard oi \"Condolence\"\nAfter Jewels Stolen\nBUY ADVERTISED GOODS\nAdvertising Lowers Prices\nOODS I\nices\n.\nPREDICTS   ARMISTICE\nOHICAOO. Oct. 19\u2014An armistice tn\nMexico's warfare will follow the presl.\ndentlal election there, Leopold Relse,\narchbishop of Mlchoacan, predicted\nupon  his  arrival  here.\nFix That Roof Now\nBEFORE THE BAD WEATHER STARTS\nUSE \"W0VAL0ID\"\nThe best quality ready roofing for the purpose.\nWe carry this in one, two and three-ply.\nSamples and prices on request.\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nnelson, aa\nRETAIL\nStruck by a' pole which caroms off\na stump, Joe Burton suffered a compound fracture of his leg at his work\nat Ell Johnson's timber reserve at Six-\nMile lakes yesterday afternoon. Aftor\nfirst aid treatment he was rushed in to\nthe Kootenay Lake General hospital,\nwhere Dr. W, O. Rose attended  him.\nMr. Burton was hauling poles with\na team. One of the poles struck a\nstump, and swinging around, hit him\non the leg, breaking the bones at the\nankle  and  Just  below  the  knee.\nCALGARY. Oct. 19\u2014Calgary plans a\ngreat reception to Hon. R. B. Bennett,\nConservative leader, on his return home\ntoday. Prom the Interest displayed in\nthe preparations, It will amount to an\novation from everybody In the city\nwhatsoever political stripe. The news\nof his selection as leader of the Conservative party was received with a\n-.jreat demonstration In Calgary.\nWhile plans will not be definitely\nshaped until the return early Friday\nof Mayor Osborne from Peace river,\narrangements for the reception have\nreached the point where ,\u25a0* can be announced that a committee of leading\ncitizens will meet his train, and a dinner in his honor will be given at the\nPalliser hotel at 7 p.m. He will be presented with an illuminated address.\nASK REDUCTION IN\nDUTY ON CORKBOARD\nRedeemer Ladies Are\nHostesses at Whist\nLadles of the Church of the Redeemer\nwere hostesses Tuesday night at a delightful whist drive in the church\nparish hall In Fairview.\nMrs. J. Long and T. Nutter were winners, respectively, of the ladles' and\nmen's first prizes, while the consolations went to Mrs- J. Dawson and Mrs.\nD.  Vyse.\nThe committee In charge Included\nMrs. George Brant, Mrs. E. F. Jarvis,\nMrs. S. K: Mills, Mrs. G. C. Massey\nand Mrs. J. W. Craggy.\nOUTLOOK I1RIGHT\nNEW YORK, Oct. 19.\u2014England had\n\"turned the corner\" and the outlook\nfor the future Is bright, declares H.\nWicraam Uttea. editor of Review of\n.Reviews, here today.\nOTTAWA, Oct. 19.\u2014Redlrtlon in the\nduty on corkboard entering Canada\nfrom 30 to 30 per cent was requested\nbefore the tariff advisory board late\ntoday. The question was taken under\nadvisement.\nOn behalf of the applicants, Armstrong Cork & Insulating company,\nlimited, Montreal, R. J Deachman. Ottawa, urged that the decrease be\ngranted.\nQuebec Man Must\nStand Trial for an\nAttempted Murder\nSHERBROOKE, Que., Oct. 19.\u2014Ho-\nnore Volson of this city was today ordered by Magistrate Lemay to stand\ntrial before the next Besslon of the\ncourt of King's Bench on a charge of\nattempted murder on the person of\nConstable Arthur l'Heureux of the local\nforce.\nThe charge' arose when Constable\nl'Heureux recently attempted to question a man who had been discovered recently looking Into the window of a\nlocal dwelling. The man fled on the\nconstable's approach and in the ensuing,\nchase fired at the policeman and es\ncaped.\nNelson News of the Day\nMrs. R. J. Steele, holder of ticket No.\n150, won the luncheon set drawn for\nTuesday night. (1137)\nTORONTO, Oct, 19.\u2014Caesar Branco,\nCuban consul in Toronto, whose suite\nat a downtown hotel was recently looted\nof several thousand dollars' worth of\nJewelry and other articles, today received a postcard on which was written\nin neat Spanish:\n\"Dear Don Caesar\u2014You will kindly\naccept my felicitations. Thanks very\nmuch for Jewels and other articles.\n\"Your    obedient    servants,\n\"The Friends.\"\nThe card was postmarked at Buffalo,\nN.Y.\nSEE THE NEW PORTABLE\nGRAMOPHONE\nSOLID   MAHOGANY,   $35.00\nRECORDS\u2014The   new   Columbia  Viva\nTonal Process.    Any record ordered,\nRUTHERFORD DRUG CO.\nCourt Star of Kootenay meets tonight at 7 p.m. sharp. (1132*\nMilitary Whist and Dance tonight In\nMemorial Hall. Cards eight o'clock\nsharp. Dancing at ten. Blanchard's\nOrchestra. Admission 35c. Everybody\nwelcome. (1134)\nSTRANGER SUICIDES\nAT BURNS LAKE\nBURNS LAKE. B.C., Oct. 18\u2014A man\nregistering under the name of Viktor\nAallonen at a local hotel here last\nevening slashed his throat with a razor\n1(3 minutes later. Dr. Steele stitched\nthe wound, but the man deliberately\ntore open the stitches with his hands\nand died within a few minute*. The\nsuicide wa* a stranger hire.\nELKS    MEET   TONIGHT   AT   EIOHT\nOTLOfK.    BEAN HIPPER. (1111)\nI will not be responsible for any\ndebts conlr'eteil by anyone lt\\ my nam.-\nafter this (lute.\n(Sinned) E.  T1CKELL.\nTrail, B.C., October 18, 1927.     (1112)\nACTOKTS BKABTT pABLOBU\nOur work is a 1'ttle different.\n         410 Baker. (9\u00bb(m\nDr. M. F. Setters\nPhysician   and  Surgeon\nSuite   503   to 601   Rookery   Building\nOver  Whitehouse.\nSPOKANE.    WASH.\nCorner Riverside and Howard\nWhile on\nVacation\nGET YOUR\nDaily News\nJust hotify this oifice\nand your paper will be\nsent to your holiday address.\nNEW OPTOMETRY\nIn attending my recent postgraduate course, lt was surprising and pleasing to see tbe\nadvancement that optometry la\nmaking. t\nWe do not stop with Just\nthe examination of the eye for\nIts eight error, as waa tbe\ncustom, but we go further back\nto the brain, where the real\nseeing take place\u2014and the\nnerve innervation In consideration with the flight and muscular   errors.\nYou may be assured no part\nla left out In thlB new modern\nexamination   we   conduct.\nJ. A. C. Laughton. R. 0.\nSpecializing In Eyesight  Defect*\nGRIFFIN, BLK.       PHONE 121\nJ\nLAST TIME TONIGHT\nSYD CHAPLIN\n'The Missing Link'\n\u25a0 msmam \u25a0\nCOMING TOMORROW\nClara Bow\nIN\nAND\nR\/HeSarsfield\nThe  globe-trotting  entertainer,\nIn song and story.\nUSUAL PRICES\n(\u25a0*M**a**m**B***B____B\n.\u25a0IIBBH.BIII.IIH\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1927_10_20","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0403418","@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":"1927-10-20 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1927-10-20 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\/1.0403418"}