{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-11-17","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1929-10-21","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404906\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \u2022Week End\nSPORT NEWS\nSee Page 7 ,\nt lailn Isitog\ntit,\nviae\nvicr\nmxmses-\n*S ..'\".Btftets\nTAKE ON DROP\nSee Page 6\nVOLM\nNelson, B. C.   MONDAY MORNIT*^ .OCTOBER 21,1929\nNo. 159\nPAROLE LADY DOUKHOBOR\nPHIL EDWARDS AND HIS BRIDE\nIThS photograph here show*\" Phil\nwards, negro athletic star of the\nw York University, and his 19-yeor-\n1 bride, Edith .Margaret Cedeloff.\nbe pair wed last Tuesday, are- to\nire In British Guiana, Edwards' home-\nid. Phil Idward* ls the son of Fritz\n, Edwards, former magistrate's clerk\nf British Guiana. Edwards, one of\nte  outstanding  stars  of   1929   track\nseason ln New York, will be remembered was a member of the Canadian\nOlympic track team ln 1926. Ke Ifl\nrecognized as one of the fastest half-\nmllers in the world and runs for\nHamilton Olympic club, which club\nhe assisted ln the meet with combined\nUniversities Oxford-Cambridge , at\nHamilton last summer. He flew part\nof the way from Denver to compete.\nr\nrouble Looms With the\nBritish Government Over\n_   _ f s~*t t       '\nUnemployment Situation\nSeven   Acclamations.   Ontario WOMAN NUKES\nALL OFlffiM u-\u2014    PROiSE m\nARE MEIERS\nON TORY SI\nHEARING UPON\nIC APPEAL\nIS POSTPONED\nReview   Quashing   French\nComplex Ore Patent End\nof Sitting\nALLOWS OR BARS SUIT\nAGAINST THE C. M. ft S.\nSupreme  Court's  Decision\nProbably Appealed to\nPrivy Council\narms (_;itherliig Round Hon.\nMr. Thomas' Head in\nEngland\nLONDON, Oct. ao\u2014Storms are gath-\nh* on tbe political horizon. During\nI. past four months, the Labor gov-\nnment haa enjoyed an almost un-\noken ran ol popularity. Ths Hague,\nrneva and tbs peace mission to the\nllted States have brought praise\n_m all quarters. But In the demo-\nitic field another story seems likely\nbe told. For, dsspite the efforts\nKt. Hon. J. H. Thomas, lord privy\nil and minister for employment, the\nturns oi{er little encouragemenf\n.\"Seasonal Increases,\"' ln the number\nunemployed .continue, and Mr.\nuna* haa frankly admitted - that\n* government will rightly be Judged\nr the actual success of Its employ-\nant   schemes.\nWhen    parliament . reassembles    on\nitober 28 there will undoubtedly be\nrequeat for time to discuss the sltua-\ntn ln the house.   Labor party's con-\nrence   revealed  aome  restlessness   In\nLabor party, which  was  not con-\nid to Jarnes Maxton and hla inde-\nndent Labor party followers.    Some\ntie   Labor   members   criticize   Mr.\nfor   being   too   much   given\nvague   generalization   which   ls  not\n\u2022ly to have results,\nloth. Rt.   Hon.  David   Lloyd   George\n__   Bt.   Hon.   Stanley   Baldwin   have\nited*    at    an    approaching    attack,\nough the Liberal leader haa prompt the  Liberals will .give   the Labor\n\u25a0rernment   a   fair   chance   to -show\nWt lt oan do before they have had\n9 band  In voting  against  it.\nVeteran Trailsman\nLost in Tulameen\nPRINCETON, B. C Oct. 20.\u2014\nJohn Henry Jackson, veteran trails-\nman of tlie Hlmllkaraeen, has been'\npresumed lost fn the hills of the\nI'pper Tutameen country. He left\nthree weeks aeo on a short trip\nand has not been seen since. He\nIs well oil in years hut knows tlie\ncountry. He was proprietor of the\nPrinceton's first hotel the Jackson.\nWRECKS TRAIN\nTO GET EVEN\nWITH COMPANY\nMan Confesses to Lifting Rail\nand Wrecking 11 Cars; Was\nFormer Employee\nCanadian Ru&by\nKelson 2: Trail 3.\nVancouver  Meralomas   13;   Vancouver\n(tie).\nVlotoria University of British Cclum-\nI 6;  Victoria 8.\nCalgaet Tigers 21; Edmonton A.\nUoose  Jaw Maroons 18.   Reglna Pat\n(Junior.)\nQueens 215; Western University 2.\nToronto   Varsity   15;   McOill   1.\nHamilton Tigers S6*  Ottawa  6.\nMontreal   7;   Argonauts   8.\nbalmy Beach 9;  Kitchener  1.\niarnta 18; Windsor' 5.\n_mc Borden iO; St. Michaels 32 .\nHamilton  8 \u2022   Varsity  Orphans  6.\nWinnipeg   Tigers   28;    U.   of   Manila 3.\nlaglna  Bough Riders  14;   Saskatoon\nera 8.\nof   Saskatchewan   10.   Edmonton\nUeglans A\nather and Six\nChildren Killed\nby Leaking Gas\nmtW YORK, Oct. 30.\u2014A father and\ni six. chlldreh, three daughters and\nfe eons, vers suffocated by tllum-\nitlng gas today, while they slept ln\nllr west 40th street apartment,\nptilce said they believed a pan of\nter which boiled over and extin-\nlabed tha Jet on tbe kitchen stove,\nresponsible for the deaths.\nlaylock Is Back\nFrom Ooast Trip\nPBAI. B. 0., Oct. 30\u2014S. O. Blaylock,\n.preoident and general manager of\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\npony    ot   Canada,    returned   Sat-\nlay night trom (trip to th} ooast.\nINDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 20\u2014William\nBreese of Cumberland, Ind., has confessed to wrecking a fast Pennsylvania express train nine' mllea east\nof Indianapolis last Wednesday night,\nbecause of a grievance against the\nrailroad company.' Brooding for two\nand a half years over an Injury Buffered while an employe of the railroad he determined to get even, he\nadmitted.\nAfter his confession Breese was taken\nto the scene of the wreck and re-\nenacted his method. In loosening a\na IJO foot rail, which caused 11 -cars\nto pile up ln a creek by the right\not way. Breese was trailed to his\nhome by a pair of bloodhounds and\nwas arrested the day after the wreck.\nTwo members of the train crew and\na mail clerk were injured and damage of $26,000 was done when the\ntrain, travelling at a rate of 60 miles\nan hour, was hurled into the stream.\nHearing by the supreme court of\nCanada, of the appeal of the French\nComplex Ore Reduction company from\nthe Judgment of the exchequer court,\nat Montreal a year or two ago, quashing its patent on extraction of sine,\nwhich Was to hav* opened at Ottawa\ntoday, has been postponed tor about\nsix weeks, or to the end ot the list\nof appeals. \u25a0\u201e\nTh Preench patent wa* quashed by\nthe exchequer court Judge on an action brought by the Electrolytic Zinc\nProcess company, at the conclusion\nof a lengthy trial at which eminent\nmetallurgists from various parts of the\nworld testified.\nHOLDS   PATENTS   OF   ALL\nThis latter company la a holding\ncompany, holding all the patents on\nelectrolytic sine ot the Consolidated\nMining & Smelting Company af Canada,' the' Anaconda smelter, and others,\nwhich ln turn are licensed by the\nElectrolytic Zinc Process company to\nmake  use  of  the processes.\nSome years ago the French Complex\nOre  Reduction company   entered  suit\nagainst   the   Consolidated   for   alleged\nI -tg .\u00abfrin\u00ab*meift or its patent, and claim\ned  damages of $9,000,000.\nATTACKS   FRENCH  PATENT\nAs. this suit, If successful, would\nnecessarily affect all smelting companies using' the electrolytic process\nfor zinc as used at Trail, that ls to\naay, the licensees of the Electrolytic\nZinc Procea* company, the latter entered the field to protect these patents, making a successful attack on\nthe patent taken out by the French\nComplex Ore Reduction company when\nexperimenting   at  Nelson.\nIf tt)e supreme court of Canada\nreverses the Judgment of the exchequer court, and thus reinstates the\nFrench potest, the $8,000,000 suit\nagainst the Consolidated, based on the\nalleged infringement of that patent,\nwill become alive again, and can be\nbrought to trial if nothing Intervenes.\nSimilarly significant will be the result lf the judgment of the exchequer\ncourt, declaring the French company\nhad produced no patentable process,\nIs upheld, for ln that event the suit\nagainst the Consolidated for damages\nwould be out of court, since if the\nFrench oompany possessed no rights,\nobviously there was nothing to infringe\nMAY   OO   PRIVY   COUNCIL\nIn view of the Interests Involved.\nit seems probable that the question of\nthe validity of the patent on which\nth French Complex Ore Reduction\ncompany is claiming compensation\nfor alleged injury suffered will ultl\nmately go to the privy council for\ndecision.\nR.' C. Crowe, general counsel for\nthe' Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, who had charge\n,of the Electrolytic zinc Process com\npany's case before the exchequer court,\nleft some days ago for Ottawa to\nappear before the supreme court ln\nopposition: to the appeal.\nOver Five Millions\nIs Loss in V. C. Land\nSettlement Schemes\nVICTORIA, OCt. tfr-Low*es 9*1-\nfen*d by the gonrnawnt ot British\nColumbia on toad seUlemeBi\nschemes launched sl*ce the war\nwill total \u00abM?M00, according to\nan estimate |ti\u00bbaie4 by special\nauditors who have, hetu making\nan Intensive Investigation of tbe\nprovince'*   finances.\nIn this est!\u2014te, tbe auditors\nfind that the land settlement\nhoards deficits ofcoee i\u00bbn have\ntotalled approximately 91.561,000.\nThe loss on the Samoa reclamation\nscheme Is placed at $1,750,00*\nand on the South Wcanagan Irrigation   projett at  fl,__7,\u00ab*.\nPROTEST AGAINST\nSPENDING MONEY\nON COAST ROADS\nHon. Charles MacCrea Only\nCabinet Member to Get\nAn Acclamation\nSEVERAL PROTESTS\nUPHELD BY OFFICERS\nUnfair Treatment of East Koot-\nenay Scored by Cranbrook\nMerchants\nWANT IMPROVEMENT TO\nINTERIOR ROADS FIRST\nResolution  Demands  No  New\nWork Until Trunk Roads\nAre in Condition\nRepublican Army\nin Ireland Calls\nMen to the Colors\nHI DUN, Oct. jo.\u2014A proclamation wis ported throughout the\noltj today bt \"Tho Kepulilkun\nArmy Council\" calling on Wsh-\nm-en of military ate to Join the\nIf-mi til I run armr. It stated that\nthe army was determined to\n\"break the Imperial college .and to\nreassure the Inalienable right, ot\nIreland  us a .sovereign  nation.\"\nCanadian Farmers Do Not All\nAgree With Hertzog' Attack\nOn Buying Cars On Time\nWINNIPEG, Oct. ao.\u2014Spokesmen for\nWestern Canada's farmers have expressed their disapproval or an attack\non \"The disease of purchasing motor\ncars on credit\" made by premier Hertzog  of  South  Africa  at  Bloemfonteln.\n\"Why pick on the farmer?'' is the\ncoment on the premier's opinion that\ntoo many rural residents ore paying\ntoo much for motor cars\u2014due to easy\npayment systems. But the premier\nhas a backer here and there, too.\n\"Should the farmer be denied the\nprivilege of buying on credit when\nthe city man* does?\" queries J- H.\nEvans, Manitoba's deputy minister of\nagriculture. \"There should be no Une\ndrawn bfetween the two.\" Actually, the\nfarmer boa even more right to buy\non   credit   than   many   wage-earners,\nbelieves J. W. Shears, assistant manager, Bank of Montreal; the wage earner might suddenly find himself cut off\nfrom- his income, whereas the farmer\nretains his revenue producing apparatus.        .    *\nProm J. H. Sibbald, secretary of the\nUnited Farmers of Manitoba, comes\nsupport for the warning of the South\nAfrican prime minister, that the government sooner or later may take\nstringent measures agalnat the 'menace.\" The more ruthless schemes for\nInstalment sales of cars to farmers ore\n\"inqultlous,\" he believes. \"Ths farmer\nis only gambling on his crop when he\nbuys on the credit system\u2014h\u00ab has no\nsurety of ineome, and some times, does\nnot understand, the interest rate which\nhe is, really, being charged,\" commented   Mr.   Slbbard,\nCRANBROOK, B. (\u00a3 Oct. 3Q-\u2014At a\nrecent meeting of the1 Cranbrook Retail\nMerchants' association, the policy of\nthe government with regard to roads\nwas discussed at some length. It was\ndecided, on motion of J. P. Pin'.: and\nW. H. Wilson that a resolution be\ndrawn up and sent to the heads ot the\nprovincial government protesting\nstrongly at the unfairness and injustice which the Ea*t Kootenay district,\nthe second largest revenue producer\nof the province, has been subjected tn\nthe matter of rood ixpendlture. tn\ncomparison with **| jfc|\\f;nue jwld In\nto the provincial treasurer this district\nhas not received anything- like the road\nallowance earning to it, lt was held.\nI ts thought that the Retail Merchants shpuld be the organization to\ntake he lead in his movement which\nhas the emphatic endorsatlon of every\ncitizen of the district, whatever his\npolitics, for the loss sustained by the\nmerchants by the bad repute In\nwhclh Kootenay trunk roads are held\nIn western provinces and states Would\nbe hard to 'estimate. It is expected\nthat other towns of the interior will fall\nln line and keep up a bombardment\nof the powers-that-be at the coast until they awake to the needs of he\ninterior.\nTHE   KESOUTIOV\nThe  resolution  read  as  follows:\nWhereas, the Cranbrook district ls\nthe second largest revenue producer\nwithin   the  province,  and\nWhereas, the municipality of Kimberley, a part of the Cranbrook district,\npays one-tenth of the total taxation\nof the\/ province, and\nWhereas Klngsgate ls the second\nlargest port of entry In the proivnce\nand\nWhereas, the Cranbrook district is\nbeing dealt with unjustly ln the matter of road expenditure tn comparison\nwith the revenue paid in to the provincial treasurer, and\nWhereas, the greater portion of the\nexpenditures are being made at the\nCoast,, where the greater population\nand greater voting-power are located,\nand\nWhereas, the roads ln the Cranbrook\ndistrict, as in all other parts of the\nInterior, are in a very deplorable condition.\nTherefore, be it resolved that thla\nBoard protest such unfair treatment,\nand demand that the government undertake no new work whatsoever until\nthe main trunk roads in all parts of\nthe interior are put in a first-class\ncondition; and a coup of this resolution be forwarded to the Vancouver\nand Victoria branches, requesting their\nendorsatlon of this resoNtlon, and assistance toward a more equable expenditure, and also that a copy be forwarded to i'U interior towns, and to\ntbe Honorable premier and minister of\npublic   works at  Victoria.\nMoved   by:   J   P  Pink -  \u2022\nSeconded by:  W. H. Wilson.\nCentennarians of\nB. C. Hold Annual\nGathering, Coast\nVANCOUVER. Oct. 20\u2014Vancouver's\ncentennarians held their annual get-\ntogether Saturday night. Headed by\n\"Dad\" Quick, who celebrates his 109th\nbirthday on Tuesday. fb*r of them\nmarched into the reception room of the\nMasonic hall where' a gathering of\nhundreds paid honor to them. In\naddition to \"Dad\" who still pursues\nhis trade as a saddle maker, were Jim\nMcintosh of Kamloops. ill. sotomon\nMutch,   100,   and  W.   H.   Hlggia-s,   .01.\nMaximum Drops 12\nDegrees, Nelson\nA drop of 12 degrees in the maximum temperature oa compared with\nthat of the previous day, was recorded during the 34 hours ending at\n5 p.m. yesterday, when the maximum\ntemperature was 47. Saturday the\nmaximum was SO. A sprinkling of\nrain  was  experienced   late  last night.\nThe minimum temperature yesterday waa also down, lt being 32. Jusfr\nfreezing,. as compared with 30 on\nSaturday.\nContinued fair and mild weather\nis forecast for Nelson and district\ntoday.\n5 Three-Cornered  Fights\nin Prospect; 112 Conservatives, 87 Libs\nTORONTO. Oct. 20\u2014Seven acclamations resulted from nominations tn the\npntarlo provincial election yesterday.\nf-knnouncenwnt here  tonight  that pr\u00a9-\nEts against nomination papers filed\nMrs, Stewart Dies. Prohibitionist, In\nt Hastings, and Charles Marriott.\nCommunist, Pudbury, has been upheld\nOdded two rames to the list oa lt Mood\nfollowing the cloee cf nomination*.\nSaturday. Returning officers will meet\nIn these ridings tomorrow to confirm*\nthe   acclamations.\n: Hon. Charges MacCrea, minister of\nmines,  in  tlie Conservative government)\nSill receive the acclamation ln Sud-\nury, and James P. HaU. Conservative\nin Bast H_u.vt.ings. The seven' acclimations   were   to   tlie   Conservatives.\nAdditional protests are pending In\nBtormont.' Sclidmon and Port Arthur.\n\u2122 Ho fewer than 16 three-cornered oon-\nteats haVe made their appearance, Toronto claim, three, and the remainder\nWe scattered throughout the province.\nIHosi;   \\i iti:\\itv  IN\nThe ridinKP and the names of thg\ncandidates whose aifclamatlons JJa*W\nbeen decided are: bastings. WffK\nHon. J. R. Ct-cke; Kingston. T. A. Kid*\nMUpkoga, ucorgc W. Eccle\u00abone; Ottawa. South. Arthur Ells- Renti\" '\nNorth. E. A. Dunlop. wtth * the exception of Mr. Ellis, all were membera ot\nthe.recently dissolved legislature. '.\n. The.rldli.gs of Hastings East, Toronto\nBell wood* and Welland, found late\nopposition where only one name, for\neach constituency had previously appeared.\nLeaders of the Conservative. Liberal\n^nd. Progressive parties will encpuptfr\nopposition, the lost named in a three-\ncornered' qoni.st. Hon.' O. Howard Fef-\nguson. Conservative premier, is ' opposed In bit constituency cf Greenville\ntry R\u00abv. T. H Bradley. Prohibition**.\nMr.'Forgusoi. has represented the rjfl-\nIng since* he wa\u00ab first elected in  1904.\nTV. E. N. Sincleair, leader of the\nLiberal part), who _has been a member of the legislature continuously\nsince 1919. ls opposed by F. L. Mason,\nConservative, In Ontario south. Mr.\nSinclair mi first elected in 1911 but\nwas   defeated   ln   1914.\nJ. G. Lethbrldge, progressive leader,\nmember since 1915. enters the election\nfight in his Middlesex riding agalnat\ntwo opponents, Dr. L. W. Freele. Conservative, tnd  W. G. Tumbull,  Liberal.\nFive woa.cn candidates have entered\nth? field including Mrs. Stewart Dies,\nIn Cast Hastings, whose nomination\nWa-_ protected. The others are Dr. Minerva Reld Ncedham. Liberal. Toronto\nSt. George; Miss Helen Curtie, tnde-\npondent-Conrervatlve,. Toronto St. Patrick's, and Miss Beckey Buhay, Cbnj-\nmunlst, Windsor. East.\nCOMMCMeTS  IP TO  BIX\n'i he lost minute rush boosted ttvt\nCommunist- total of nominations to\nsit. The ridings that will be contesteed\nby that party and the names Qf tht\nCommnulsi nominees are: Hamilton\nEaat, Stpwa*-. O. Smithy. Port Arthw.\nRev. A. E. Smith; Sudbury, Charles\nMarriott; Toronto, Bell Woods, Timothy Buck. Toronto Beacondale,. T., C.\nSlmms, Windsor East, Mlas Becky pu-\nhay.\nNlnety-li.e members of the last legislature arc in the election fight. TtJey\nare divided hy parties as follows.\nConservative. 04; Liberals, 20; Progressive, 9 and United Farmers of Ontario, 2.\nThe Ca\u00bb_M'lan Press summary of official nominations shows that party\ndesignations and the nominees for\neach   as   follows:\nConservatives 112; Liberals 87; Pro?\ngrcsslves 10. .Prohibitionists. 7; Independent Conservatives 7; Communists\nLabor 8; Independents 3; Untied\nFarmers-^. Ontario 2.\nKing Speaks to\nGerman Lads on\nVisit, England\nLONDON. Oct. 20.\u2014An incident\nconcerning the King and four\nGerman public school boya at\nSandrtngham, Norfolk, a few\ndays ago, came to light today\nThe boys stayed with eight others\nand two masters at Fromberlln\nschool. Norfolk, ln return for\nUke hospltalitiy shown to boys\nfrom thla schcol in a tour of\nEurope.\nThe- German lads were taken\nby a motorist to 8andrlngh*m.\nand they approached the village\nchurch as tbe King and two\nfriends were leaving. Hearing\nwhere the boys were from. Hie\nMajesty, turned back and greeted\nthem, saying: \"I hope you boys\nknow some English, for I fear\nX have forgotten most of my\nGerman. \u2022\nThe King was oesured the boys\nknew some English. He said he\nwas pleaaed to see them on his\nestate, and questioned them on\nthe comparative merits of English\nand German public schools. He\nthen cordially shook hands wtth\nthe boys.\nBRITISH PREMIER\nAND DAUGHTER IN\nMONTREAL TODAY\nMacDonald   Concludes   Conversations With Canadian\nPrime Minister\n. OTTAWA,' Oct. 20\u2014His con***(Ba-\nttons with the prime minister of Cwi-\nxa& conolu4\u00abl, B\u00bbW\u00ab\u00bby 'MacDo-Ua.\n\u25a0Labor premier of Great Britain, boarded his Canadian National special train\nthla evening tor the short Journey to\nito-nt\u2014al. Th\u00ab British premier, bis\nttjighter Ishbel, and -members of their\nparty stepped on board the train tonight, but the actual movement to\nMontreal will not begin until about 6\no'clock' tomorrow morning, when the\ntrain mill start on its three hour run\nto the Canadian club luncheon in\nMontreal, as well as the recipient of\na degree from McGill university ln the\nafternoon. In the evening, the prime\nminister, his daughtr and Sir Robert\nVan Sittart, private secretary, will be\nthe dinner guests of Sir Henry Thornton, president of the Canadian National   railways.\nThe visit of Mr. MacDonald to Ottawa was a comparatively restful one.\nIt occupied four days, and the prime\nminister has been required to speak\nonly a couple of  times.\nReed, Robinson\nOn U. S. Delegation\nTo Naval Parley\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 20\u2014Presidtne\nHoover ls believed to have determined\ndefinitely upon David A. Reed, of\nPennsylvania, a Republican, and Joseph\nJ. Robinson of Arkansas, Democratic\nfloor leader in the senate, as the two\nsenate representatives upon the United\nStates delegation to London naval\nlimitations conference.\nWith the selection of the two senators who will serve with Henry L.\nStlmson, the secretary, of state, as\nohairman. the president had almost\ncompleted his delegation.\nAmerican Legion\nPosts to Decide\n\"Who Won the War\"\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 20\u2014The post*\nof the American Legion in Maryland\nare bound to decide \"Who won the\nwar.\" Each post will hold private\ndebate, thereafter presenting its belief In writing to state headquarters,\nwhere final Judgment will be made.\nHarlan Johnson, state commander,\nhopes the contest will settle the Question for good.\nPremier Ferguson and His\nProhibitionist Opponent\nAppear on Same Platform\nprescott, ont., Oct. 30\u2014Suffering\nfrom an attack of bronchitis which\nmade his voice almost inaudible at\nlime's. Premier O. Howard Perguson\ndelivered an address a nomination\nproceedings here Saturday afternoon\nwhen his prohibition opponent, Rev*\nT. H. Bradley, Prescott, also spofc\u00ab.\nBach candidate was allotted one half\nhour. But Mr. Bradley divided his\nportion of the time with one of h.ls\nsupporters, Rev. W. R. Armstrong,\nMQrewaod\nand other things, they would be better  off.\"\nThe prohibitionists candidate and Mr.\nArmstrong condemned the liquor control set as injurious to the people\nand criticized the prime minister for\nnot giving a referendum on tbe Issue.\nThe people of Ontario today were\nchanging their sttltued with regard to\nthe handling of the liquor problem,\nMr. Ferguson etated. \"They ore changing their attitude throughout the\nworld.\"   he  exclaimed.  It  was\nan ac-\nIf, gentlemen, the prime minister | tual thing, the prime minister stated\ndeclared In reply to statements mode, that drinking had fallen off ln Eng-\nby   nis   opponnt   and   Mr.   Armstrong,\n\"would spend their time in cooperating\nwith us to promote law observance\nand abstinence lf you like, instead of\ngoing about the country,, c\"\nFerguson wtth endeavoring to\nresponsibility  on  the  Uquor  qi\nY THE LAI\nHer Husband Abo Guarantees* Good Behavior of\nFreed Woman\nWAS ARRESTED AND\nSENTENCED, NELSON\nIs First Release From Oakalla; Others to Follow\nIt Is Expected\nVICTORIA, Oct. X.\u2014lrsasrtttll\\t\nthe desire ef the provincial ior-\nernineiit to deal leniently ultli ,\nDoukhobors so lone as ther are\npremred, to eher the lair In future.\nthe attorney general's devartmen'\nannounced Saturday the i\u2014eaee of\nHilda PodoTlllnlkon, first of the\nD-oukhoborH Imprisoned ln Oakalla\nte   be   paroled.\nThe relewe of this woman waa\nordaaaB by the federal department\nof AUtlca an the recommendation\nof Sn. B. M. Pooley. attorney-ren-\neral of iirltlsh Columbia. With\nthis announcement went an Intimation from the department that\nIt would support other applka\ntlons for parole from all Doukhobors wbo had shown,a desire to\nobey the law, and whose relatives\nwere prepared to suarantee .their\ngood behaviour.\nARRESTED  IN   NEMOS\nThe woman who waa ordered reieae-\ned today waa arrested along with others\nof her aect In the recent demonstrations In Nelson Her husband was away\nfrom bome at the time, and It WM\nrepresented to attorney-general Pooley\nthat she had been enticed Into the\ndemonstration. Her husband assured\nthe attorney-general that 11 he had\nbeen preeent his wlja. would not have\ntaken part ln the fltsturbance Ind he\nguaranteed her good behaviour If s(ie\nwere returned to him His two* children, be said, were suffering on. account of her absence from-.b.onte.\nThe release of Hilda POdovlllnlkoff\nls expected to result ln applications\nfor clemency from other Doukhobors\non behalf of relatives now ,ln Oekalls.\nMONTREAL PLANE\nMAY PASS OYER\nNELSON TODAY\nExpect to Leave Grand Forks\non Way to Calgary at 10\nThis Morning\nGRAND FORKS. B. C, Oct. 20 \u2014Capt.\nJ. D. Parkinson and T. E. Blsnchard.\nmechanic, flying from the coast to\nCalgary, landed herp today and will\ntake off about 10 a.m. tomorrow on\nanother lap of their return flight to\nMontreal. They landed here on their\nway to the coast some weeks ago.\nThey are on a tour of the country.\nLeaving here the plane will go by\nway of Nelson and Cranbrook to Calgary. Take-off will depend upen weather conditions at Nelson and Cranbrook.\nArrangements have been made with\nJ. 6. Gouldlng. government meteorologist at Nelson, to wire Orand Forks\nat 9 a.m. tomorrow describing the\nvisibility and the height ot the clouds.\nEfforts to get through by telephone to\nCranbrook   tonight   were   unsuccessful.\nSPOKANE OPENS\nNEW CATHEDRAL\nSPOKANE. Wash. Oct. 30.\u2014Dedication and consecration ceremonies\nat the'opening of the Protestant Episcopal cathedral of St. John the Evangelist at four services today marked\nan ecclesiastical milestone tn the\nmarch of religion In the Pacific Northwest.\nWith an archbishop and\" nine bishop*\nwith canons, deans and clergy from\nfour northwest states and the province\nof British Columbia participating, the\nevent aside from its solemnity, was\nmade colorful because of the richness\nof robes and vestments. An augmented\nBurpllced choir sang, a thousand worshippers listened reverently and the\ncelebrants touched their hearers with\ntheir  fervor  and   eloquence.\nFrance May Object\nto Abolition of the\nSub for Defenses\nPARIS. Oct. 20\u2014Abeoulte abolition\nof submarines as defensive weapons\nof war, and the interdependent of the\nproblems of limiting naval aerial and\nland armaments inside the scope of a\ngeneral disarmament agreement are\ntwo principles for which the French\ndelegation to' the naval disarmament\nconference in London next January\nwill   probably   stand   unflinchingly.\nSuch is the Impression which results from discussions In governmental,\nofficial, parliamentary and even opposition   circles.\nQUAKE   IS   FELT\nPORT OP SPAIN, Island of Trinidad,\nland 35 per cent within the P*st 10 Oct, 20\u2014a severe earthquake waa felt\nyean. Education ln the schools, the In Port of Spain at 11:45 o'clock laat\nhomes and the churches, he proceeded, night. The quake lasted for aeveral\nwaa bringing up a generation of young seconds, and waa of sufficient severity\npeople who had been taught to con- to cause considerable alarm. Mo dam-\ntrol tbelr appetites and become tern- age of any serious nature hod been\nperatf  ln  thir   habits. reported  today.\n Page Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 21,1929\nMoose Jaw Wins    ,\nP  Over the Pats\n1 v   For South Title\nMOOM   JAW.   Oct.   20.\nthrough their opponents' Une at random ln the flrat half, to pile up a\nsubstantial lead, and steadying up\nIn Ute flnnal 15 mlnutea span after\nfaltering In the third quarter, Moots\nJaw Maroons annexed the1 championship cf the Southern Saskatchewan\njunior rugby league here on Saturday\nby defeating the Regina Pate, Dominion\nehamptona in l-M, 19 to 11\nAfter   turning    back    the   Mill    City\ngang at Reglna three weeks ago by\n27 polnta, ths Pats were favorites\nWhen they stepped on the field, to\ntake the measure cf tbelr leas experienced opponents and earn the right\nto defend the Dominion title in the\nplay downs.\nKBHHH\nBooms With Running\nWater\nPrivate Hatha  InSulte\nThe Hume\nGEO. BENWELL, Prop.\nThe Premier Hotel of the\nInterior\nLIQUIDATION\nFELT, MONTREAL\nBrazilian and Nickel Responsible for About Three-Quarters of Sales\nTEACHERS TENDERED\nBANQUET, TRINITY;\nLARGELY ATTENDED\nHUMS\u2014J. McCallum. S. H. Hopkins,\nj. Rlohardson. Mrs. A. B. Klrkpatrlck,\nB Bvans, Trail: F. HoUilemer. Ymlt;\nMrs. M. C. Rooney. Nelson: R A.\nNicholson, Procter. Mis. O. Leyall, Mrs\nA D. Bromfleld. Princeton: M Barring-\nton. Ella Carlton, Mar; Knight, E. A.\nCarlton, A. Orant, 8potane: D. Mc-\nParlane, I. Cuthbert, Nelson: O. Russel.\na. H. Aoles. 8. Thompson. D. Teur, O.\nWelland, 8 N. Colcont. R C Wright,\nR L SUIl-MC*, W A. Doreman, W. G.\nWard, W. M. T Ball, R. O. Allder,\nA H Smith, Vancouver: J Gsllo, Poplar:\nW. a. Fuller. Oalt. Ontario; J. D.\nBurns, Kaslo; W. A. Marshal, Cultls\nCreek: Mr, and Mrs. N. 8. Allen, Kim-\nberlley: B. P. O'Orady, Nelson; C. Pll-\ntum. Salmo; a H. Duff, Toronto; P.\nMatthews. Northport; A. E. Avison. New\nDenver; W. Mlddleha. Victoria; V. L.\nWllot, Ottawa; A. Duff, Reglna; H.\nAllmond, Montreal; J. w. Millar, Winnipeg; Mr. and Mrs. Halllvere. L. O.\nHatto. Toronto; J. J Lolsel, Montreal;\nR W. Malkln. Calgary; R H. Edmonds,\nKlmherley; A. J. Woods, Winnipeg; P.\nParry, Victoria; O. A. Snowdon, Toronto; Mrs. W. Laid. New Denver\nMONTREAL. Oct. 20\u2014Eitenslve liquidations accelerated the steady downward pace on the Montreal stock exchange.\nInternational Nlekel and Brazilian,\nwhich were responsible for almost thrse\nquarters of the total sales of 77,246\nshares, held up comparatively well\nunder the selling pressure Imposed\nupon them. Nickel closing IV, points\nlower at ttfri. -while Brazilian weakened ltt points to M\u00abH after touching a low spot of 66..\nThe heaviest losses of the sessioon\nwas scored by National Steel Car.\nwhich slumped eight polnta to a new\nlow of W5. Other Industrial stocks\nfollowed the course of Steel Car, Cockshutt, breaking 1% polnta to 128,\nwhile Massey-Harrls lost IV, points to\n\u202250, and Steel of Canada 1% to !52'\/_.\nDominion Bridge broke 3% points to\n196, while Winnipeg Electric closed\ntwo points lower at \u00bb83.\n^.astritnraniweniwmmniteai \u00bb nssssss>ssss\u00bbnin.\nWhere the Guest is Kin&\nTheS\navoy\nNEI_SON'S   NEWEST   AND   FINEST   HOTS,\nMANY   BOOMS   WITH   PRIVATE\nBATHB OR SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n1\u2014-----T \u2014  \u2014 i\u2014-\"____-_\u00aba_-____a\u00bb-a_\u00bba\u00bb-\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u25a0_-. as.\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE     CENTER    OP   CONVEIENCE\nHot and cold water ln every room.\nSteam   Heated\nA. Lapointe, Prop.\nQUEENS\u2014Mr. \u2022 and Mrs. Hutchuson.\nMr. and Mrs. p. Boulton. Mrs. B.\nBoulton,  Miss  P  Boulton.   Proctor;   H.\n0. Jones, Ymir; Mrs Bandon, New\nYork; K. Murray, Grand Forks; Mr.\nand  Mrs.  Leearn  and  family,  Waneta;\n1. M. Kull, Appledale; A. M. Oalaard.\nT. Oalaard. Mr and Mrs. De Vans,\nTrail; J Buckler, Lethbrldge; H. Cag-\nson. Culture Creek; Mr. and Mrs. Lee-\nson, Quebec; P. Baakln, Nelson; F.\nTurner, J. Price. T. R. Shedding, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. Savlnkel, Calgary; Mr. and Mrs W. O. chokey,\nGrand Forks.\nSAVOY\u2014Wlllla Coles. Jack Peters,\nPost Palls, Idaho: Mrs. A. B. Arnus, Mr.\nand   Mts.   Moore.   Ralph   McNeill,   Mr.\n.and Mrs.W. P. Donnavon. Spokane; Mr.\nand Mra. M. Cummlngs. lone; Mr. and\n-Mra McCarthy, Proctor; Roy Mills, Albert   Elsmore,   W   8.   Ellis,   Sllverton:\n'Viator Erickson, Ross Spur; C. P.\nthlnke, Vernon; R. L. Fllege. Turner\nValley; Albert Angregnon. D. 3 Lannon.\nNew Denver;   Mr.  and  Mrs.  E.  J.  U-\nvegue,   Slocan   City:   A.   A.   Naughton.\nKootenay Landing:   Mrs.  W.  A. Hufty,\nBrilliant;   Mrs.   H.   M   Hurt. .   Seattle;\nMr and  Mrs.  P.  L Biggs,  H. Jennls,\nNew Denver.   A. J.  Bates. 1. Klrtz, 8.\nBlarrant, A B. Smith, Vancouver: w O.\nBates,   Nelson;   Ben   Palmer,   Waneta;\nA. E. Minims. Montreal: P. De Pyffer,\nI Klmberley; Mr. and Mrs. W. Urle. Mr.\nI and Mrs E Urle, Wyondell; E. Crease,\n1 Winnipeg.\nMadden Hotel\nT. i MADDEN, Prop.\nSteam Heated Rooms by the Day\nWeek  or Month\nEvery consideration shown to guests\nOor.   Baker   and   Ward   Sts.   Nelson\nSome 200 Teachers From District Present; P. H. Sheffield Toastmaster\nMADDEN\u2014Mr. and Mrs. F. Schrotf,\nBeattle; E. McNeill, South Slocan; K.\nCampbell, Blueberry; A. McDonald.\n8almo; W. Connery, Creston; O. Rutly,\nNelson; G. P. Griffith, Klmberley; A.\nHerd, Blggar, Sask.; E. Nelson. Winnipeg;   H.   L.   Oray,   Cranbrook\nSteam Heated Throughout\nC6hi\ncA(WGrand\n616 Vernon Street, Nelson, B.C.\nHot and cold Water and Telephone in all Rooms\nRooma by weekly rata or by tho month\nP. L. KAPAKS, Prop.\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n705 Vernon st. Phone G87L\nH.    WA3SICK\nFifty    Rooms    of    Solid    Comfort\nHeadquarters for Loggers and Miners\nNEW ORAND\u2014B Ot Brlen, Westley;\nW. Wong. Jack Sing. Nelson; A. Cherry.\nTrail; Fred Hicks, Slocan; E. Orendon.\nFernie; Wong Kee. Trail; R. M. De\nYosset, Proctor: M. coultour. p. McDougall.   Kaslo;    H.   Yeathfull,   Trail;\nO. Paler. E. Gas&ell, Ymir;  Beer Pal-MeCraney.  Brilliant\nmer, Westley; C. Bowie, Calgary; C.\nShort, Alnsworth; Agnes Antino. Norway; J. Karlslnl. Blueberry: J. Stocka-\nlick. Proctor; D. Demalre, Yahk; A.\nDrummond, Big Valley, Alta.; Y. Co-\nvard. Proctor: O. Palmer, Ymir: Mike\nZlppl, Trail; E, Brook-man, Calgary; M.\nA. P. IXVEBQUE, Prop.\nHotel Arlington\nHot  and   Cold  Running  Water\nSteam Heated\nRotary   Headquarters\nEuropean   Plan\nCentrally Located\nSample    Rooms    ln   connection\nTrail\nB. C.\nQOUGLAC\nmm    HOTEL     W\nRooms with Baths\nE.  L.  AND  A.   OROl'TAOE,  Props.\nSteam   Heated Hot   and   Cold\nriu-ougliout Water\nBos liwi     Pimm- ::i*:i     TraU. II. ft\nThe Standard Cafie\n320  Baker  Street,  Nelson,  B.C.\nOPEN    DAY    AND    NIOHT\n11:30 to ,2:3\u00a9  Special  Lunch   3.%\n5:30 to 8 p. in. supper  35c\nPHONE   134\nApproximately 300 teachers from the\nKootenay and Boundary districts attended a banquet tendered laat evening at Trinity United church by the\nexecutive ln charge of the convention being held here during Friday\npurl Saturdav. Mavor Barnes and the\nNelson school board were also guests\nat  the  banquet.\nP. H, Sheffield, tout master for the\nevening welcomed the guests and tn\norder to Instill a feeling of acquaintance asked everyone of the assembled\nbanqueters to rise ln his turn and\ngive  his  name  and   address.\nW R. Campion on behalf of tha\nNelson school board welcomed th*\nguests and proposed a toast to them\nwhich waa replied to by Miss Dot McLean of Trail, who paid tribute to\nthe teachers of Nelson who had sponsored a convention so valuable to* the\nprufeeston. The procuring of education was something infinitely more intricate than the buying of a yard of\ncloth and the dispensing of same a\nmatter of greatest Importance to all,\nshe   contended.\nIn conclusion she said that, when\nthe teachers who were present at the\nconvention returned \"somewhere back\nof beyond\" t_hey would carry with\nthem pleasant memories of the two\ndays spent in Nelson.\nMRS C. W. TYLER PRESENTS\nVOCAL   MMBER\nMrs. C. W. Tyler'favored the assembly with two vocal numbers, \"The'\nMarket\" by Molly Carews and \"If any'\nlittle song of mine\" by Tersa Del\nRiego. Mlas {na SUed accompanied\nat the piano.\nT. G. Carter In proposing a toast to\nthe B. C. Federation of Teachers pointed out that ln the afternoon session\nH. Charlesworth had spoken of the\nB. C. Federation and its work He was\nof the opinion that if only half the\nthings that Mr. charlesworth had\nmentioned were true the organization\nwould be well worth while. He continued further that this was a day In\nwhich the individual was but a paltry\nforce and that the really big things\nwere being accomplished by groups\ncombines and mergers. A day of unity\nwhen big business and small realize\nthe importance and necessity of cooperation,\nCHARLESWORTH    REPLIES\nH., Charlesworth, secretary of the\nB. C Federation of Teachers, in replying to the toast, emphasized his\npersonal pleasure at being able to attend an interior convention at which\nsuch enthusiasm was displayed. It further pleased him to compare the spirit\nthat compelled .teachers attending this\nconvention from a'distance of 200\nmiles with those in Vancouver who\nwere loath to go 200 yards to a similar assembly.\nTeachers older ln the profession are\nfinding it increasingly hard to compete for positions against the young\npeople who are entering the profession\nln great numbers, the speaker pointed\nout.\nTurning once more to the work of\nthe Federation he gave as an exnmple\nof its activity one of the latest of Its\nbranches whereby that organization ls\nworking out a system for Its members\nthrough which a decreased premium\nmay be realized for those wishing to\ncarry accident on their cars.\n% A convention such as the one convening at present was of greatest value\nto the rural teacher who has the\nchanee of keeping conversant with the\nchanging phac?s of her profession, by\nthis  Brtesns.\nA. A. Pajdin appenred as the second\nsolol3t iu two numbers, \"The Barefoot Trail\" by A. S. Wiggers and '\"Tis\nIrish Girl I Love\" by Johnson\nYoung. Miss Ina M. Steed was at the\npiano.\nSMILLIE    PROPOSES    TOAST\nR. Smillie prefaced his proposal of a\ntoast to the members i of the department of education with a few remarks\nIn praise of the department In which\nteachers had, ln the past few years,\nplaced the utmost confidence. He\npointed out that many membars of\nthe department had gained their experience In Nelson.\nIn reply to this toast, J. M. Ewlng,\nwho is the Junior member of the department, stated that he had recently\ncome from Ontario and that he was\nwilling to make the statement that\nBritslh Columbia had the most progressive system of education In Canada.\nIn concluding the after dinner\nspeeches Mr. Sheffield voiced his regret\nat the unavoidable absence of L. V.\nRodgers and Inspector Manning at the\nconvention.\nFive Candidates\nInitiated Into'\nElks Lodge Here\nThe regular meelng of Nelson LOdge\nNo. S B. P. O. Elks, which had been\nconsidered a get-together one, proved\nto be a very interesting from a business point, aa five candidates appeared\nfor initiation: and Jay the time thee*\nwere obligated, the question of the\nlodge giving support to a bowling team,\nas well as rendering assistance to a\njunior hockey team, the soflel part\nof the meeting was considerably delayed.\nThe ceremony of Initiation was carried out under the direction of a special degree team, comprising J. R.\nRamsden, E. R.; C. F Sedgwick. ELK\nA E Fletcher, E. Loyal K; Fritz Farenholtz, E. L. K; Thomas Dunbar, esquire: R. Bambcr, chaplln: E. J\\'Fletcher, inner gua*d; J Langley, tyler, end T\nPlayer, assistant to the esquire.        ,   *\nAfter a strenuous business\nsession, the refreshment and entertainment committee entertained the large\nnumber present to sandwiches, cake and\ncoffee Added to the splendid repast.\nan orchestra gove several appreciated\nselections during th,' informal feed.\nHALLOWE'EN TO\nBE OBSERVED,\nFERNIE ROTARY\nMonster   Bon-Fire,   Pie-Eating\nContests; Chief Crawford\nSpeaks\nfor 19 Years;\nis Still Alive\nMan Comes Back to See His\nOwn Grave; His Status\nNot Certain\nThe Royal Cafe\nCLASSIC     IM HI U IMM\nRefinement  and  Delicacy  Prevail\nOPE\\    DAY    A.VD    NIOHT\nSpecial Dinner 11:30 to 2:30  35c\nSupper  5:80  to  8   Mc\nWe specleize in Chop] Hueyand Noodles\nPlume    182\nCONFIDENT   MISSING   FLIERS   WILL\nBE   I ()l Mi\nConfidence that Col. MacAlplne and\nhie party are safe though perhaps\n\"frozen In\" on one of the small northern lakes Is expressed by Mrs. R. F.\nBaker of Port Colborne, Ont., wife of\nCol. Robert Baker, who ls a member\nof the missing fliers' party in the barrens. \"It seems Impossible that both\nmachines could crash at once, and lf\none had crashed the other would surely\nhave come out for help\", Mrs. Baker\nsaid. The layout shows LEFT, Mrs.\nRobert F. Baker, and RIGHT, Col. Baker wtth his two sons, Bob, left | and\nBurt, right.\nPERNIE, B. C.\u201e Oct. 18.\u2014At the\nregular meeting of the Rotary Club\nfurther discussion was held aa to\nthe Hallowe'en sports. The committee\nwhich has thla ln charge consisting\nof Rotarians Gee, Suddaby, Harrison.\nKastner and Douglas were told to go\nahead and complete the arrangements.\nA wonderful treat ls ln store for\nthe kiddies. There will be a monster\nbonfire on the vacant lot opposite the\ntelephone exchange. There will be\nstunts such as pie eating contests\nblindfold boxing competitions and numerous other such teet of pdowess as\ndelight tbe younger generation. There\nwill be a parade of children dressed'\nin  Hallowe'en   costume.\nFire-Chief Crawford was'the principal speaker at the luncheon. He\ngave a most Interesting address on\nfire prevention, this being Fire Prevention week. His rmarks also covered\nthe subject of first aid appliances for\nthe xontrol  of fires.\nThe Chief sketched some of the\ncauses of fires as carelessness with\nmatches; improper use of coal oil and\ngasoline, defective chimneys and stove\npipes, and the accumulation of trash\nand rubbish in cellars and basements.\nThe chief ^laboraned briefly on each\nof   these  causative  factors.\nHis discussion of the first aid ap-\nplances for the fighting of fire was\nillustrated by the actual appliances\nwhich he had with him and of which\nhe explained the workings to the\nmembers.\nSODA-ACID   EXTINGUISHER\nThe first was the soda-acid extinguisher. It had to be recharged every\nthree months owing to the hydroscopic\naction of the sulphuric acid which\nwent Into Its composition, explained\nthe Chief.\nThen there was the foam extinguisher. This found its greatest usefulness\nln fires caused by oil gasoline and\npaint,  said  the speaker.\nThe carbon-tetrachloride1 extinguisher\nwas the one most used in the case of\nfires accurring ln motor-boats, automobiles and switchboards, because of\nits being a non-conductor of electricity, explained Chief Crawford. It was\nparticularly useful ln \"low tempera\ntore\" fires, that ls fires which had\nnot made much headway. This form\nof extinguisher must be used only\nwhere there ls free access to air. It\nmust not be used in confined spaces\nsuch as basements or closd rooms because of Its anaesthetic effect which\nwould tend to overcome the operator.\nCarbon tetrachloride was better for\ncleaning purposes than gasoline averred the speaker.\nPRECAX'TION  WITH  GASOLINE\nThe Chief strongly urged upon his\nhearers the Importance of taking the\ngreatest precautions with' gasoline, as\nlt was a highly explosive material.\nThrough familiarity with it since the\nadvent of the auto, lt has somewhat\nlost the power of Its sinister Influence,\"\nsaid the  Chief.\nIn conclusion Chief Crawford asked\nfor the co-operaMbn of the Rotary\nnnd the public to help prevent fires,\nand called attention to the fact that\nbylaws were of Uttle assistance unless\nbacked up by the active co-operation\nof the people.\nAfter the talk the members asked the\nchief a number of questions with reference to Fire-Prevention and ln other\nways dsplayra a keen interest ln the\nSpeakers  remarks.\nDuring Fire Prevention week Chief\nCrawford gave talks to the high school\nstudents and students of the Holy\nFamily convent, in addition' to the\ntalk he gi>vt at Rotary.\nHe also invited the high school\nboys to go over to the fire hall on\nSaturday afternoon and receive iYi-\nstruction on how to turn tn' a fire\nalarm.\nOne French watering place has evolved the fashion of a detachable\ntrain\u2014leaving the wearer to choose\nbetween spirited dancing or languid\nelegance as the spirit moves her.\nALMA. Neb., Oct. 20.\u2014In this Ww\nlittle county seat last week a men\nliterally came back to life after nineteen years and reached across his own\nclearly marked grave to shake hands\nsmilingly wltb the undertaker wbo\nburiied him there.\nThe man is John Bartels. and _ lest\nUie reader become Incredulous and'\ndecline to follow this farther, it, h} explained haa Bartels was not dead,\nbut that every(\\\\e said he Was.\nHis \"widow,\" his best friends wTi\u00bb\nwere tbe pallbearers\u2014all were positive.,\nAnd to make the record more definite\nfound hi the Alma cemetery was the\nBartels plot with a neat granite headstone inscribed*\nJOHN F. BARTELS'\n18Se\u20141009\nTim\u00ab was when John: Ernieet Frederick Bartels wag one of the prosperous citizens of this rich south ~.\nwestern Nevada county. He owned \u00a380\nacres or good farm land and earned\na comfortable living buying and sell-,\ning broom corn. He had a wife Wfoa\nwas a \u25a0 good ccok and an excellent\nhousekeeper, and two daughters who\nencouraged him to keep adding to\nhis bank acount. Yet Bartels was riOt\nhappy.\nSo, tn 1804, he moved- to Missouri,\nand took up his home tn Ntoeho, He\nsoon was established there as a \"broom\nmanufacturer, then a year or two later\nbeame a grower and shipper of strawberries. Crops wee Rood, money seemed\nplentiful and his bank account grew.\nBut still he was,hot happy. One July,\nday. in 1*01, he said to his wlife:\n\"Etta, I'm tired out. For several\nseasons I have been looking after alt\nthe strav\/berry pickers, besides ' the\nloading and shipping1. I've put out\"\n37 cars of berries this summer\u2014and\nthat's an awful lot for cue mah.\"\n\"What are you going to do now,\nJohn?*\" he says his wife asked, looking at hts gaunt face.\n\"Do?\" he retorted. \"I'm going to\nquit.\"\nWANTED   REST\nHe flashed out a checkbook. \"Here,' -\nhe said, tearing out a check, \"Tere's\nan order for the balance I've got in\nthe bank. It's $1600\u2014 yours\u2014take it.\nI'm going to ICansas City-\u2014away, soshe-\nwhere, to rest.\"\nSo he went out of the house and\nout of the lives of his wife, Etta\nHunter Bartels, and Daisy and Grace\nbis daughters. Tbey were not to see\n6r hear from him again foor seventeen\nvears.\nEarly the morning of September 19.\nlast, an old man walked away from the\nBurlington station in Alma. His, gait\nwas Infirm and he depended on a\nstout hickory stick for each step. The\nman was Bartels.\nHe   entered   the   grocery   of   W.   A,\nSwartz   on    Alma's   brood,    well-paved\nmain street.\n\"Hello,  Wyley,\"  he said.\nSwartz  glanced   up   from  the  coffee\ngrinder.\n\"Good morning, air.\"\n\u25a0  \"You    don't    know    me\u2014I'm    John\nBartels.'.\nWyley Swartz stared. '\"John Bftrtels?\nWhy, you can't be\u2014he's been dead and\nburled many years!'\n\"But man alive. I am John Bartels\",\nthe caller insisted.\nSwart* finally grasped his hand and\npatted htm on the shoulder. \"John,\"\nsaid the gray-haired grocer, \"I can't\nbelieve it. Why\u2014why, I was a pallbearer at your funeral nineteen years\n&go last March.\"\n\"They   didn't   get   me,   Wyley,'\nturned Bartels with ft chuckle.\nThe two old friends talked animatedly for a few minutes. Swartz told\nBartels th-re was nn mistake about\nth*\u00bb funeral. He recalled some of the\nothet rtellbenrers\u2014J. G. Thompson,\nnow a vetsran lawyer of Alma: Sam\nWhitney, a decorfttor, and Henry Metz-\nger. the towns plumber.\nLOOKS AT OWN ORAVE\nThe friends sauntered across the\nstreet and into Mr. Thompson's office,\nThere was another amazing recognition\nand nothing, would do Bartels but\nthat Mr. Thompson accompany him to\nthe cemetery to look at his own\ngrave.\nBartels gazed long nnd wonderln-?ly.\nHe was an old man now, older than\nmost men of sevnty-thrc\u00ab For here.\nwere records to show he had lived and\ndied\u2014and now lived again.\nWith John Bartels alive, who lies\ntn thft grave that was supposed to be\nhis? ,\nThe correspond ent sought Oecrge S.\nJoyce, undertaker, who had conducted\nBartels' \"burial.\" \"My records do not\nshow John Bartels was ever buried\nhere.\"   the  undertaker  said.\n\"You have his name on the tombstone.\" he was told.\n\"Yes.\" replied J^yce. \"But. Mrs, Barters ordered that, The name of the\nman whose body we brought backk\nfrom Illinois and buried was recorded,\nas John Mitchell.. I understood that\nJohn Bartels sometimes went by the\nname of John Mitchell, so when his\nwife heard about John Mitchell's death\nin Peoria she Identified the bedy as\nthat of John Bartels. But I looked\nup my records and the records of\ntbs health authorities and the undertaker at Peoria^-and they all agree\u2014\nJohn Mitchell.\" ,   -._.\nWho was John Mitchell? Berths v^ld\nhe never used that name, or any as\ns umed name.\nWhat was the motive of Mrs. Bartels\nNERVES CONE\nCANT SLEEP *\n\"Fruit-a-tive*\" restores\ngood health\n.Are yoa tired? Downcaat swat ef V\ntime? Worried at trifles? Cant deep? V\nJ. a Ringheim, Wydnodrt, B.C., wits\n\"Mr rntrrm ww* toiubtely mm.   1 \u00abM\nfsiNM g\u00bb*d mmmltk w'fruifr**!^ ,\u2022\nTrult-Mives\" is e combination at,\ntmmtaaii fresh fn* jukes and the \u00ab\nadentiflc-medicinal ingredients. Ia a\nteral, gentle way It stirs le*y liver, bo-\nand kidneys, into normal, healthy aa*}\nsoothes the digestive tract, and cabas\ntroubled nerves. 25c or 50c boxes at\ndrugs**.\nin showing these last marks of reap\nto a husband with whom she la a,\nto have completely broken? Why 1\nshe satisfied to assume the man of\ndied ln Illinois was her husban\nReodrds do not show sh) made pe\ntlve identification of the body in -Wot\nThey do show that there wae ml\nidentification here ln Alma.\nLEGALLY  DEAD\nPapers ot administration werq gj*ai\ned the \"widow,\" and the tit-ate Pi\nbated. John Bartels was legally del\nthe courts finding that \"deceased d\nparted this life intesate Ul Mlttoi\non or about the first day of Ju\n1968.\nJohn R. Starr present Judge of t\nHftTlan County court, explained th\nalthough the petitioner stated Bart\nhad died in 1901, the law presum\nhe was al\/ve until seven years later.\nThe  heirs  of  Bartels,  who Inherit\nall his property, were adjudged  to\nEtta Hunter Bartels, the \"widow,\" ai\ntwo   daughters.      Daisy   Bartels,   th\ntwenty-four,   living   at   that   time\nMinneapolis,   and   Grace   Bartels,   th<\neighteen,   cf   Neosho.   Bartels   says\nwas worth  $80,000 at the time of\n\"death.\"\n'Former Judge Shelburn, of the Herb\ncounty court, explained Bartels' leg\nstates.\n\"In the eyes bf the, law he still\nlegally dead, although his living pre\nence makes the findings in the pr\nbatton of his estate void,\" he sal\n\"Bartels, however, cannot recover\nproperty because he has allowed tl\nstatute of limitations, which is\nyears ln Nebraska, to run ont.\".\nPYTHIAN HEADS\nVISIT AT FORK\nORAND FORKS, B. C, Oct. !\u00bb.\nFletcher, Grand Chancellor of tt\nK. of P. for British Columbia paid h\nofficial visit.to the Grand Forks lpdi\nand Mrs. H. Slaughter, Grand Chief t\nthe Pythian Sisters for the provlnc\npaid her official visit to the Gran\nForks Temple on the same eve?\ning. After their respective meetings w\u00ab\nover the two lodges met ana a banqui\nwas served ln the Davis Hall by tf\nPythian Sisters. Mrs. D. C. Manl\nGrand Protectorate of Grand Lodg\npresented Mrs. Slaughter with a sa\nad bowl on behalf of the Grand Forjk\nTemple.\nGrand Forks Notes\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, Oct. 20^-Mla\nDorothy McLachlen, who has beet\nspending the last week with her par\nents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. McLachlen\nhoas left for Golden where she ha\nacepted a position on the hospital sta!\nthere.\nRev. and Mrs. W. J. SUverwood hav\nas their guest this week Mrs. S. J\nGridley of-^Nelson.\nConstable and Mrs. H. H. Vlcktr\nmotored to Kelowna recently.\nMr. and Mrs. Mickey McKay hav\nleft for Boston. Mr. McKay has slgne\nup (or another season of heefct\nthere.\nRev. and Mrs. C. A. S. Storey ftb\nhave been ln charge, of the Pentecojwl\nMission here have left for Pentlcux\nwhere Mr. Storey has .accepted a cal!\nRev. .and Mrs. P. Hayraen who hav\nbeen visiting at the home of Un\nF. R. 8. Barleo have left for Vlctorli\nTHE  GUMPS\u2014BINGO!   AN   IDEA\n\/\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0<\nWELL    UENWIfcTTA -\nTHIS   IS   -VWE   BM-JK  ACCOUNT\nMb  THftTS   KU   - \u00bb a \u00ab? -\n*Nt)   NO   l*0\u00bbE   COIWNfa  IN\nTHAT  IS THE   CA BOOSS \"^ ~\nTOU   M\u00bb\u00ab   Kt'PT   UP\n^pPEASSANCti   SO  ^\"\"V\nTOU WAVE DOME WELL-\n8UT   ITS   \u00ab\u00bbRO\nCOR   Art   E--WPT\n%At<\\   TO   STAND\nSTRAIbM'f-\nft.\nCA\nI*  CAN  SHE   OO OH   ?\nSOF CANNOT   ACCEPT   AN   INVITATION   TO   *NT\nEVENlNfa   ftPFAlS    VMITH   TOW   CAR\u00ab.  -\nUNCLE   bV\/A   WOULD   UAUfaH   AT   MER   IN\nTHESE  tX\u00bbND>r  *M,S -    W\u00ab  *\u25a0\"\u25a0  f\nTMo\\-   ROST DREAMS O*   \"\u00ab\u00a3'\"'\u2022\nMILLIONS    TO   DISSOLVE   TMEMSH-V\/L5\nINTO THIN   AIR f   A COLD   D'S MAL\nFUTURE   STARiNO  HER in THE\nI -fACt   -   A  LIFE  OF POVERTY\nOLD   AfaS   \u2014\nCHILDLESS   -\nAi,ONE  \u2014\nAND   RlbHT  THEN AND TV-4ERE \u2022\nA  TMOOfaMT    -COMES\nTO  OUR   HENRIETTA -\nOUT  OF   A\nClear  Sky -\nthere is a way out\nTET -\nHERE IV  \u25a0*\nStUAON  % . StCOOfciE\n<_REENTR66 109?-\nwf Swall -EE -\n\u00ab&\nKaslo Boys Enlarge\non Toy Torpedoes\nand One Is Injured\nKASLO, B. C. Oct. 20\u2014B6b Pa^tento(\nreceived a nasty cut on, the rio*\nwhen playing at the school with othej\nchildren.\nA number of the boys were c*plodlfij\ntoy torpedoes on rocks. 'Not satlatld\nwith the racket a single exploaivj\na rock and after placing a rock on tea\nmade,' they placed about a doeen d\nof the,lot, fired tbe charge. A flylnj\npiece of rock caught young Paterson oi\nthe nose, inflicting a cut that require!\nfour stitches.\n'University of rfebras^a awarded Hf\ndegrees  during   1929.\nBackache\nCan Be Stopped often ln a few noun\nIf you are losing pep. health aw\nstrength from Getting Up Nights\nBackache, Bladder Weakness, Burning\nLeg or Groin Pains, or Rheumatl'\nAshes, why not try the Cystex 41\nHour Test- Get Cystex (pronounce*\nSiss-tex) today at any drug store, fo\nonly 60c. Money back if you don'\n.soon find pains gone, sleep fine, fag\nyounger,   stronger,   and   full   of   pel\na\nA GREAT\nTONIC,\" SAYS\nMRS. RUSSELL\nAfter Taking  Lydia   E.\nPinkham's Vegetable\nCompound\n.Fnurijk, On-L-rT tat -taking Lydi\u00ab\nK. Pinkham's V\u00abet\u00bbW\u00ab Compound\n'urinr the Chain'\nA Ute tot mmat\nfeelings, lorn ot tf\n[petite mad to f\u00bb>\nstrength. It H\"*\ngrett tonio \u00abn*J\nhsve taken \u00bb<**\u25a0\u00a3<\u25a0*\n\u25a0ttleso-fit. It-WT\nrecommended ta-\nne by t friend snd\nnow I recon-f-Mnd\nit to ail women for\nsuch   troubles   as\ncrane at this time.\"\nW. v. Russell, R. B. Ne. i,\nFmwirk, Ontario.\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 21,1929\nPage1\nQUEENS AND\nHAMILTON ARE\nEASYWINNERS\nraronto Varsity Downs McGil!\nIn GreAt|Battle; Score\n%L Is 15-1\nI.O.D.E. Sale of\nWork Trail, Is a\nSuccess, Reports\nTRAIL, B. C, .ftct. 3D\u2014 I. O. D. E.\nsale of hometfqc&lng ln plovers' store\nhere Saturday .was a sucoaasful undertaking It waa) reported following tip\nsale. Mrs. James Copeland was oavenor,\nassisted by five other ladles. Mutj\u00bb\nwere used ln a lovely, decoration\nscheme.\nTORONTO. Ont., Oct. M.\u2014Tbe great\nfcrt-eclor machine of Queen's, coached\nDf Bed Batstane, clung to the leader-\nihlP or the Intercollegiate Senior Rugby\nJnibn Saturday with a dazzling 25 to\nI *vtetory over Western University at\n.oftclon,\n4U|po moving with the precision of\njhampions, Toronto Varsity moved into\"\nundisputed aecond place by downing\nbfaGlll here, 16 to 1. Over 15.000 saw\nthe blue and white almost mechanically perfect football against the 1928\nHWits.\njHatern scoring records were shattered\nia the mauling Hamilton Tigers pound-\nId down the puny Ottawa team under\nI barrage of touchdowns, that mount*\ned the Bengal total to 55, aa the Senators were scoring six. The Tigers\nwtth the famous Pep Leadley starring\nIn the fourth quarter scored 10 touchdowns\nAt Montreal \"Red\" Moore, Montreal's\nfleetest back field, climaxed a sensational performance by racing for the\ntouchdown that defeated Argnoauts 7 to\n9. Mocrc converted hts touch, and\nbooted   Montreal's  remaining point.\nBalmy Beach went Into the leader\nship of group 1^ ln theO* R P U with\na fl to l win over Kitchener, while\nSarnla downed Windsor to assume\nth* top berth ln group 2. Nearly 3000\nfans Sarnla hand the border city's\ntwelve  a   13-5  drubbing at  Windsor.\nCamp Borden and Varsity Orphons\nfWl by the wayside In the O R F U\nchase, the former being beaten by St.\nMichael's College 32-10. and the latter\nbf  Hamilton  by  a  score  of  8-6.\nGALENA FARM TO\nSHIP REGULARITY\nNew Strike Made in East Tunnel According to\nManager\nRev. W. T. Cameron\nSpeaks at Trail\nTRAIL, B. C. Oct. SO.\u2014Rev. W. T-\nCameron, field secretary for the social\nservice league of Canada gave an interesting address on social service\nwork at the Knox United church tonight.\nKASLO, B. C, Oct. 30\u2014A new strike\nof rich ore has been made In the\neast Hewitt tunnel of Oalena Parm\nConsolidated Mines, Ltd., Sllverton,\nacordlng to an official statement made\nby W. L. Sheeler resident manager. In\ndriving this tunnel, which was in\n2036 feet on October 7, and which ls\nbeing driven right through the mountain to meet the West Hewitt tudnel,\nthe new ore shoot waa encountered.\nThe ore assayed 30 ounces of silver,\n24 per cent lead and 14 per cent\nzinc.\nThe extent of the strike la not\nknown oe yet, but drifting In ore Is\ncontinuing and the news Ib important.\nThe West Hewitt tunnel la now tn\n800 feet and the resident manager\npays he expects Important results at\nthis end before long.\nGOOD   MILLING   ORE \u25a0\nGood milling ore has also ben\nstruck ln the extreme east end of the\nGalena Parm proper workings . In\nraising from the lower level good sll\nver-lead values were disclosed- The\nwinze below the haulage level shows\nthree feet of ore at the bottom.\nMr. Sheeler reporta that the Galena Fbrm concentrator la now treating 100 tons of tailings every 24\nhours. The tonnage is being boosted\ngradually and the company expects\nto be able to handle 1505 tons diiiiy\nExtraction Is good and the new flotation cells are working well. One car'\nload of concentrates has already been\nmade on October 7 and shipments will\nbe mane steadily to the Trail smelter\nfrom now on.\nCHILDREN HAVE TO CHEW IT-*\nAND THEY LIKE THE CRISP SHREDS\nSHREDDED\nWHE A\nWith all the bran\nof the whole wheat\nYou don't h*ve to coax children to chew Shredded Wheat\u2014\nthe more they chew it, the better they like it\u2014and that means\nsound teeth and healthy gums.   Just the food for growing\nyoungsters. So delicious and so easy to serve.\nAU Modern\nImprovements\nJIM AND SALLY knew what they were doing\nwhen they bought the old Jones house. It was\nhopelessly out of date as far as looks and modern comforts went, but it was staunchly built and had a good\nsized lot, and they got it for a song.\nJim's salary wasn't very big, so they didn't try\nto do everything at once: They began with the furnace. They read the heater advrtisements. They chose\njust the equipment they wanted and had it installed.\nThen they started reading up on bathrooms and\nplumbing. The following year they studied woodwork\nadvertising, and replaced the old gingerbread porch\nwith a pretty colonial doorway. Of coruse the house\nneeded painting after that and they found a dream of\na color scheme suggested in an advertisement. Later\ncame new flooring, fresh wall liaper, attractive lighting\nfixtures, shrubbery for the lawn.\nJim and Sally have one of the prettiest homes in\ntown. \"Where did you get such wonderful ideas?\"\ntheir friends   ask, and Sally smiles.\n\"We simply knew what we wanted before we\nbought it,\" she replies. \"Anyone can, who reads the\nadvertisements\".\n\u00ae\nTRAIt RUGBY\nTEAM DEFEATS\nNELSON 3 TO 2\nNo Scoring in Second Half of\nthe Game; Forward Pass\nJs Effective\nWhen th\u00ab Troll rugby team scored\na safety touch and a rouge against the\none safety touch chalked up by Kelson\nthey took the third game of the series\nby a score of 3-2 here yesterday after*\nnor.h.\nDuring the more ragged porta of the\ngame which occurred In the first half\nboth teams acored the points that\nstood at the end of the game In the\nsecond half, during which period Nelson\nhad the better of the play neither\nteam wae able to score, though near\napproaches were made to both goal\nlines.\nUse of the forward pass got better\nresults for the Nelaon team than for\nTroll, whose receivers Invariably fumbled. For Nelson Jeffs and Stewart\nproved themselves adept in the matter\nof snaring the ball safely out *of the\nair.\nStewart several times saved what\nappeared to be sure touchdowns by\ndragging his man to earth in the vicinity  of the 3-yard  Une.\nTrail News of the Day\nTBAIL. B. C. Oct. Vi\u2014ab. and Mrs.\nC\u00bbrl WWW, mtscm marriage- wm boI-\nemnUKd in New Denver September\n38, were hosts lut nunt to a number\nol their friends ln their now reei-\ndence on Birch avenue. Mualc and\ndancing provided the entertainment.\nRefreshmenta were served at the supper\nhour by the hoateaa. During the evening, IL. Maddlaon on behalf of the\noffice atafl, of whlcn Mr. White It\nan employee, presented the young\ncouple with a beautiful gift and the\nbest wishes of all the staff.\nI Former Nelson Girl\nPresident of Young\nPeople at Rossland\nROSSLAKD, B. C\u00bb Oct. .aa\u2014Officers\nof the recently organized. Young People's society of St. Oeorge'a church are:\nMi_ Max-am Beraee, formerly of\nNelson, president: James Towgood. vice\npresident. Walter Stuart, secretary-\ntreasurer; Miss Hilda Towgood, Mre.\nRobert Tweed and . Richard Ayrea,\nstanding committee.\nMRS. SUN IS\nLAffiAT REST\nFuneral Services are From the\nChurch of Mary Immaculate on Saturday\nFuneral services for Mrs. Joseph\nStein took place from Church of Mary\nImmaculate on Saturday, \u25a0 Rev. Father\nJ. Q. McKenzie conducting requiem\nhigh mass services.\nMrs. Stein is survived by her husband, Joseph J. Stein, an employee cf\nthe city, and a family Including two\ndaughters, Mrs. Farmer of Spokane\nand Miss Olga Stein of Nelson and five\nsons, Reggie, Edward, Ben, Joe and\nFrancis. \u25a0\nShe la also survived by her parents.\nMr. and Mrs. Blalkowskl and c-ne grand\nson. Oeorge Former; three sisters. Mrs\nKaroline Doyel, Mrs. Kazlmertera Karo-\nlak, Mrs. Anbonla Zetnuk and twe\nbrothers Joe and Pete Blalkowskl.\nThe fifneral was attended by n\nlarge number of relatives and friends\nand    there   were   many    lovely   floral\nThe pall bearers were Dem Jaremko,\ntributes.\nStaney Doyel, Mike Bachynski. Harry\nKorolak. W. M. Zetnuk and Pete\nBaloekt.\nMr. and Mrs. Peters of Appledale\nmotored to Trail this week and are\nguests at tha home of Mr. and Mrs.\nOeorge   Crawford.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMlsa Margaret Smith ls spending\nthe week end at her home In Fruit\nvale.\nMrs. T. Orleves was a recent-visitor\nto  Troll  from Frultvale.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMra. Roy Harris and two children\nleft for their home ln Cranbrook\nSaturday after a two months' vlalt\nm TraU with relatives and friends.\nMm Harris' father, w. Spooner accompanied har on the trip.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs.  N,  D.  B.   Larmonth and  baby\ndaughter   returned   this   weak  from   a\nfour montha'  visit in Eastern Canada.\n\u00bb   \u2022   *\nMrs. William Shierholtz arrived lost\nnight foom Mooslmin, Beak., where she\nhas been visiting her parents. Mr.\nShelrholtz'o home was previously in\nHerbert, Sask., but she will reside in\nfuture In TraU, taking up residence\nou  Third   avenue,  east.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nL. Vance and A. Eldrldge are spending the week,end  in Nelson.\nRossland Notes\nmeriy  redded ln Trail, am\nS.  Jarvta of thla city.\nUniform divorce laws and Instruction\nof children In home-maklnf were advocated by Youngatown, Ohio, Humane\nsociety counsel.\nConcrete Paving of\nTrail-Rossland Road\nNow Well Under Way\nTRAjt* B.. \u00a3., Oct. an\u2014Tlie laying\nof the concrete on the portion of\nRossland-Trail highway which is being paved from Rossland city limits\nto   Warfleld   ta   well   under   way.      <\nThe contractors expected that a\nstart would be made today with the\nlaying of the asphalt mulch between\nthe   concrete   strips.      ,,\nW. A. Rockliff Is\nBuried From St.\nSaviour's Here\nTrail Man Is Fellow\nAmerican College of\nSurgeons at Chicago\nCHICACIO, Oct. 3D\u2014Canadian surgeons frho accepted the fellowship\nin the American college of surgeons,\nincludes Cyril Stanley Williams, of\nTrail and Prank P. McNamee, of\nKamloops.\nInsulate!\nInvest: ill\nComfort\nthis winter\nROSBLAKD.  B   C.  Oct. JO\u2014Mrs   W\nT. TrerobaUi haa left for Kamloops\nwhere she will be the guest of her\ndaughter.  Mrs.  A.   B.   Davidson.\na     .     *\nattx. A. J. Vetere and daughter\nLo-uiae, have returned from visiting\nwith Mrs r B. Bereeford. Blueberry.\na     .     *\nMrs. Joseph Harris of Klmberley. a\nformer resident of thla city, is tlie\ngueat ot her slater. Mra. Id ward Paul\n\u2022 \u2022 * p\nMrs. H_ Morgan and Mrs. James\nWall are spending the week in Spokane.\n...\nW.  S.  Volume of Winnipeg ta  the\ngueat of hla son, J Volume.\n...\nMrs. M. Freeman haa left for Creston\n... .\nMra. A. N. Skill, Mr*. J. M. TurnbuU.\nMra. J Craddock and Mra M Prentiss,\nwho have been visiting here and ln\nTraU, have returned to Vancouver.\nMrs. Skill and Mra. Turnbull. wbo for-\nBer J o Cam\u00abron of ._\nseating   the  social   Service   _\nCanada,  waa ln tbe elty  Prlday\nThere   are   more   ecatlttte!\nfor baseball  than  for  an otli\ntogether.\nT. H. Waters & Co., ll\nBuiMm awl CMtnctat\nPhone IM P. O. \u25a0\u00ab* M\nraumi, B. 0.\nPrleM S\u00bbrs*_Bjtted Ob \/Up EM af '\u25a0\nCONSTRUCTION WOIK\nLIMB        MICE\nKEEP Old Man Winter out of your\nhome. Free yourself from the tjr-\nrany of a fuel-hungry furnace. A blanket\nof Beaver Insulating Board keeps your\nhomecozy, comfortable, chill-proof even\nin zero weather. The coat ii nominal.\nAsk the nearest builder for an estimate.\nMADE IN CANADA FOR CANADIANS\nBEAVEkaa. BEAVER\n&OARDW'\"l_ft3Nfl\nMAVU HSTW\u00bbLL-3(.SstmessePlassVUlltsttnsI\n. ne -caver Company, Limited -\n* Thorold, Ontario \u2022\n\u2014_aa\u00ab__a.lliinii inia.iiu.ii .1\nWood. Vallance\nHdw., Co.    -\nNelson  B.  C.\nDistrict Distributors\nCROWS NEST GOAL\nUnaurpassed for Steam and Furnace use\nHlgheet ln B.T.U.\nLowest' ln ASH and MOISTURE than any coal mined In\nthe Crowe Neat Paea District.\nPrice gll.oo per ton delivered.\nSpecial prices on Carload  lota\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nPhone 33.    Wholesale ana Retail Fuel Dealers\nTHE\nPEDICORD HOTEL\nYour Spokane Home\n\"Where Canadians Are Among Friends\nWhen in Spokane\"\nThe only hotel in Spokane with FREE\nBUS service and our own garage adjoining.\nBarber Shop, Cigar Store and Cafe. Complete service under one roof.\nJOE PEDICORD, Manager\nt-M TO 219 RIVERSIDE 80S TO tlS IPBAOOI\nSPOKANE, U. S. Aw\nFuneral services of W. A. Rockliff\nwere held at St. Saviour's church Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Venerable\nArchdeacon  F.   H.   Oraham   officiating\nPallbearers were Fred Irvine, R. Andrew, H. A. Parker, P. Goiggln. p\nClorlhew and G. Noll Brown of Bonnlngton.\n' Among the floral tributes received\nwere: Pillow from hts loving wlfr\nwreaths from Mrs. pennett; Owen ami\nWlb; tfhe beys of the shop; Mr. awl\nMrs. John Mulr, Slocan City; Mr. H\nA. Parker; Mr, and Mrs. H. E. Stevenson and' family; Mr. and Mrs. G. E\nHelbecque and Mr. and Mrs,. G. N\nHelbecque. Spravs from Mr. Gordov\nBennett; Bob. Ethel and Lewis: Mr\nand Mrs. W W. Bell; Mr. and Mrs, I,\nH. Choquette; Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nF. Hunter and Jack; Jerry Jerome, Bonnlngton; Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Johnson; Mr. and Mrs. Norcross and family \u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. Andrew; Mr. anti\nMrs. I. C. Campbell; Mr. and Mrs. H\nR. McDonald, South Slocan; Mr. an''\nMrs. A. G. Lambert and family; Mr\nand Mrs. David Kerr; Ool. and Mrs. j\nMurray, South Slocan; Mr. and Mrt.\nJ. T. Bealby Mr. and Mrs. Colllngwooo\nGrey and Mr--,. Kennedy; Mr. and Mr?\nPerry Goggin; Mr. and Mre. G. Clerihew \u25a0 Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Sm*dley; Mr\nand \"Mrs. rtidge,( Bonnlngton; Mr. and\nMrs. J. D. Yeatman, South Slocan:\nMr. and Mrs s. H. Smythe and family; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Vyse and\nfamily; Mrs. Morey's circle; A. C. H\nWallach and family; Mr. and Mrs. A.\nWilly; Mr. and Mrs. P. Stromstead and\nEd.; Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Main- Mr\nand Mra, O. W. Humphery; Mr! and\nJess Saunders; Mr. John Bell and family, Bonnlngtcn; Mr. J. Murray; Mr. and\nMrs.  Doug.  Cummins.\nChurchmen at Trail\nPrepare for Winter\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 30\u2014At a meeting of St. Andrew's Churchmen's club\nln the parish hall plans were made\nfor good entertainment and sports for,\nthe winter.\nThe. entertainment committee was\nasked to make preparations for larger\ncrowds at social activities as the present facilities were Inadequate for\nhandling oo many.\nA. E. Barker heads the sports committee, which will shortly plan badminton activities. E. Bruntlett ls\nchairman of the entertainment committee.\nOther  Rranches   at   rVlnntpeg,  Yorkton,   Saikatoon,  Edmonton,   C\nLadies Extra\nWide Fitting\nHappily shod in style, feet,\nregain much of their lost\nyouthfulncss. Corns and\/\nfoot aches cannat thrive,!\nwhen relieved of all pressure and irritation. Plenty\nof width over the toes, the\ncorrect height of heel for\npleasurable walking. Firm leather flexible soles.\nStocked in half sizes, ind combination fitting E E.\nPrice, per pair        - $5.75\n\u2022   \u2014Main Flow\u2014H B C\u2014\nMen's\nMACKINAW\nnl-jary,   Uthbrldce,   Vancouver,   Kamloops,   Vernon   uul   Victoria.\nChildrens Wear\nWinter Coats for children. Made of blanket cloth.\nTrimmed with French Beaver. Shawl or short col-\nlors. Size 8 to 14 years. In shades of Brown and\nFawn.   Values up to $18.95.   To clear at -08.95\nA choice selection of Winter Coats for the tiny tots.\nMade of blanket cloth, tweed, chinchilla and came-I\nhair.    Size 4 to 8 years. Price $5.95 to 010.05\n\u2014Second Floor\u2014II B C\u2014\nDry Goods\nTrail Diakonias\nHave Camp Fire\nTRAIL, Oct, 20\u2014Twenty-five members of tbe Diakonla Bible class of Bt.\nAndrews church motored to Beaver\ncreek Friday night and enjoyed several\nhours around a biff bonfire. Welners\nand toasted marshmallows provided\ndelicious refreshments.\nMusic was supplied by a gramophone and camp fire songs were\npopular.\nThose ln charge were the Misses\nLaura Churches. Francis Mawdaley and\nElla Mawdsley and Oeorge Robb, Lou\nChristie  and  B.  Oreen.\nNew Army Officer\nArrives at Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 20\u2014Lieutenant\nStoddart of Nanaimo arrived ln Troll\nthis week to take over her new duties\nwith the Salvation Army. Lieutentant\nV, Hinkley Trail officer of the Army\nhas left for Roesland to take over\nher  new   duties.\nOlrl Guords met Friday evening in\nthe Salvation Army hall. Tbe work\nwas proceeded wltb Captain Young\nand Lucy Andrews directing.\nCOATS\nFeaturing the newest production in waterproof mackinaw coats. These coats are made of guaranteed,\nfull weight 32 oz. waterproof mackinaw.\nProofed by a patented process which makes them water*\nrepellant for the life of the coat, and does not effect\nthe color or wearing qualities. Price, Eaoh ... iO.75\nOther makes in mackinaw coats $7.50 and $9.50\nCarss special mackinaw coats in their new patterns.\n36 oi $12.-50\n38 oz $15.50\n40 oz $16.50\n\u2014M iiu Floor\u2014n B c\u2014\nLadies Wear\nDressea. or saitin, georgette and canton.   Featuring\nflares,  ruffles and circular skirts.       Sleeves and\nlong sleeves.   In shades of black, red, navy, monet\nand independence blue.   Size 13 to 20 years.\nSpecial   ..: $16.95\nOne rack of Winter Coats for Misses or matrons.\nMade of duvetyn and imported broadcloth. Trim*-\nmed with mqndel and American oppoeum. Colors,\nBlack, Navy, Brown and Fawn. Values $25.00\nSpecial    , , $19.95\n\u2014Second Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\nLUXURIOUS TRANSPARENT AND CHIFFON\nVELVETS FOR EVENING WEAR\nShown in all the newest shades including black.\n36 inch wide, black chiffon velvet 82.95\n36 inch wide, black and colors, chiffon velvet at $3.50\n36 inch wide, cut velvets shown in the new shades\nat  04.50 and $5.95\n36 inch transparent velvets $4.95 and $5.95\n\u2014Muln Floor\u2014H B f\u2014\nChina\nDepartment\nChildren's Mugs and Cups and Saucers, with nursery\ndesigns 35*\nBaby Plates ..._. 38-f\nTea Set*.  23-piece.    6 cups and saucers,  6 plates,\ncream, sugar and teapot, in new colorings and designs $5.95, 07.50, 06-50, $11.50 and 014.50\nCream and sugar sets.   Very effective Blue and Greeai\nglazed ware. Pretty designs, se|t  69*\nCups and Saucers.   Plain white 15# and Mt}\nCups and Saucers, Clover Leaf  20*\nCups and Saucers, Blue Willow  35^\nCups and Saucers, White and Gold Band 25^\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014II B C\u2014\n_____________\n\u25a0_____\u25a0\n Four\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 21, TUB\"\nDAILY NEWS\n__ every morning except Sun-\nThe   News   Publishing   Com-\n...  limited.  Nelson.  B.  C\nBusiness  letters should  be  addressed\n^^^^Hpka   snd   money   orders   msde\njaoible to The News  Put tahing Com-\najaa),   limited,  snd   ln  no case to indl-\n^^^\u25a0i members  of  the  staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A. B. C.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nifquest, or my be seen st the office\nm any advertising agency recognized by\ntke  Canadian  Press Aaaoclatlon.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES   \u25a0\u25a0\t\nBT mall  (country), per month   -I   -60\n'Fur    ye\u00abr     8.00\nBy mall   icity).  par yer   18.00\n#aUld\u00ab   Canada,   per   month    75\n\u00abPer   year          7.60\nlilvered.   per   week.         M\nyear     ... 13.00\nPayable in Ajlvarbce\nmber   Audit   llureau   ol   Circulation\nMONDAY. OCTOBER 31. 1938\nCANADA NOT MAINTAIN !N(i 'MENACES'\n(\u2022Official Washington is credited with the view tha'\/ Faiifax\nas a fortified naval ):ase is\nTBbout as menacing as a gas\nstation.'' Canadians will not\ntake offense at that. We do not\nclaim to bo. maintaining menacing base.-. Esquimau, we may\nfreely admit, is on a par with\nHalifax sa regards offensive-\nI liegs.\nAdvocates of disarmament\nwaste their time trying to find\nevidences of militarism in this\ndominion. Wisely or unwisely,\nCanada is more completely disarmed than any other country\non earth that has anything to\nexcite the cupidity of others.\nThat, of course, is one result of\nliving alongside a decent neighbor.\nsporting circles, in which he\nhad been such a prominent figure, but in many walks of life\n\u2014for he interested himself in\npolitics and other phases of human endeavor\u2014he will be\nmissed. Frank Slavin was a patriot always, loyal to his Empire and to the country within\nit of his adoption.\nAunt Het\nPHAT XINE TO THE\nFROZEN NORTH\n\"The way ttnmie talks. I reckon\nNature kind o' took pity on her\nan' give her a double chin so's they\ncould rest one another\nHie\nLighter Side\nThis generation never saw a pug\ndog, but It can get the idee, by\nlistening  to   hay   fever.\nin Russia a few men boss the government and control all Industry\nWhat's so -unusual about that?\n': The Hudson Bay railroad has\nreached tlie point where Hon.\nCharles Dunning and party\nlive been able to travel over\nit from Churchill to The Pas in\n_1 hours. It will be ready for\npassenger traffic next summer.\nThat means that this \"Northeast Passage\" is nearing its\nsupreme test. Another year\nshould furnish an answer to the\nold, old question as to whether\nthe Bay will be a practical outlet for the wheat of the prairies.\nI Everybody hopes that it will.\nThese hopes are strengthened\nby the fact that those most intimately connected with the\nbuilding of the road have\ngrown more optimistic as the\n\u25a0work progressed.\nStill everybody will await the\nsupreme lest with something\nakin to bated breath.\nOtyat Soiii} nf\n$0itr0\nBy JA8. W. HABTON, M. D\nFEEDING   PATIENTS\nHAVE ULCER\nWHO\nSome mmonths ago I wrot* about\na young physician who was experimenting with the feeding of patients\nwith ulcer ot tbe stomach. He put a\nfine tube with a small weight at the\nend Into the mouth and had the patient swallow lt down until lt went\ninto the stomach, across the stomach\nand into the small intestine. He fas-\ntenend the outer tube (which was of\ntbe calibre of a slate pencil) by means\nof adhesive tape to the mouth, and\nfed the patients liquids for three or\nfour weeks.\nAs the stomach had no food or water\nwithin lt for all this time, any ulcer\nwould have a real chance to heal, because tt ls the movement of the stomach and the fact that the acid stomach Juice gets Into the uler tbat\nprevents  lt  from healing.\nAnd now we have a reord from two\nEuropean physicians who treated 63\ncases of stomach ulcer, and one df\nulcer in the first few inches of the\nsmall intestine adjoining the stomah.\nThis fine thin elastic tube was introduced through the nose and pushed slowly downward right into the\nsmall Intestine until it went past the\nplaces where these ulcers are located.\nFood tn liquid form was poured\ndown the tube, and In this way the\npatient was given butter, milk, eggs,\ncane sugar, flour and fruit Juices. The\nmixture was passed through a fine\nsieve, and was at the natural heat of\nthe body. Small quantities were given at frequent Intervals during the\n24 hours. The patient* were also given water several times a day, and\ntreatment was continued for from three\nto six weeks.\nThe pains generally disappeared\nshortly after the beginning of the\ntreatment. All the patients recovered\nand some had very large ulcers.\nOnly five of the 63 had a relapse.\nYou can see that this would mean\na lot 6f attention on the part of those\nattending such a patient, but it should\nhe worth lt ln all cases where an\noperation was feared or was Inadvisable.\nIT ISN'T NEED THAT MAKES A\nWOMAN BUY A NEW FROCK, BUT\nTHE LASTING HOPE THAT THE\nNEXT ONE WILL MAKE HER LOOK\nRIGHT.\nThe best training for a yes-man Ib\nto caddy for a fellow who asks if\nhis seventh stroke doesn't  make  four.\nEvery community has at least one\nfamily whose numerous connections\naren't good at anything except lying\nfor on\u00ab another in law suits.\nEither the talkies are improving\nrapidly, or else It's because a glue\nfactory Isn't so bad after you get\nused to It.\nMODERNISM: Educating the boy\nso he wilt have a better chance than\ndad; supporting him ln idleness because he can't find a Job good enough\nfor a  youth  of his class.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy LAURA A.  KIRKMAN\nWaffles\nTOMORROW'S  MENT\nBrenkfasst\nGrapefruit\nCereal\nSirup\nSPORTSMAN'S\nDEATH\nA sportsman, one of the\nfighting breed, an adventurer\nin the pioneering sense of that\nword and a very courageous individuality is lost to the life of\nBritish Columbia in the death\nof Frank Slavin. In the long\nyears ago he loomed largely in\nthe pugilistic world when prizes\nwere a mere pittance compared\nwith those offered for ring encounters today, says the Victoria Colonist. He fought then\nin the foremost ranks of the\nheavyweights, always gallantly\nand without fear. He very nearly attained the topmost rung\nof the pugilistic ladder of fame,\nbut, more thjm.^winning the\nheavy weight championship\namong the memories of his ring\ndays, was the thought that he\nhad never done anything of\nwhich he was ashamed and had\ngiven of his best in all his\nfights.\nFrank Slavin was one of the\npioneer gold diggers in the Yukon. Old its he was when the\ns-qmmons of the Great War was\nhe.ard he donned a uniform.\nThe persistency of his character and the indomitability of\nhis manhood led him to the\nfront line trenches. The experiences of the war undoubtedly\nundermined a wonderful physique. He was never the same\nman since. Of all the places of\nhis many travels Victoria perhaps held the warmest in his\nheart. He lived here for many\ny-fars, before and after the war,\nonly removing to the Mainland\na few years ago. Not only in\nC*rx1a*Wee\\W\nTHE POOR WE HAVE WITH\nUS ALWAYN, BIT ALMOST ANY\nMODERN CAN REFER TO HIS\nOTHER PANTS WITHOUT. SEEMING    BOASTFUL.\nAGAIN IT IS TIME TO REMIND\nHUNERS THAT A MOVING OBJECT\nTHAT APPEARS TO BE SMOKING A\nPIPE ISN'T A DEER.\nThe word \"sin\" ls disappearing from\nour national vocabulary. The word\n\"dude\" was dropped, also, when everybody dressed  up.\nNature evens things. California has\nall the earthquakes, but the Florida\nnative gets about the same results\nfrom swamp  ague.\nCorrect this sentence: \"I can't\nhelp earn the living,\" said tlie\nflapper wife, \"So I do my part by\nstudying Jim's tastes and making\nhis life pleasant regardless of my\nown   desires.\"\nbe a doctor or a debtor! E, female;\neminent.    E,   male:   Electrical   wizard.\nF, female: become a flirt. F, male:\nFanner.     G.   female:   Glory   ln   store.\nG, male; Will travel on the Oral\n(Zeppelin). (Make these up to suit\nyour guests I)\n20 Years Ago\n(Frbm The Doily NewB of Oct. 21.1009)\nC. M. Young has been appointed acting chief train despatcher of the CP.R.\nhere. F. F Walker Is acting divisional\nsuperintendent\nF. L. Myers, formerly of the staff of\nthe general superintendent's office at\nVancouver, has been appointed chief\nclerk in the general office of the\nCP.R. here and commences hia duties\noh  Monday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nJ. Aikman, the operator at the Gem\ntheatre has been confined to his bed\nfor two days and during his absence\nfrom work J. W. Cavendish was lining\nhis place\nKircardy, Scotland to Nelson via\nGlasgow and Montreal In 3 2days is\nalmost record time made by a car of\nlinoleums delivered to the Standard\nFurniture,  by  the CP.R.  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHarry Ferguson of Nelson won the\npole vault at the Scottish games in\nNew   Westminster.\n30 Years Ago\n(From The Dally MinerTbct. \u00bb, 1890)\nF. M. Cameron of Vancouver, has accepted a position with the C. P. R.\ntelegraph company in Nelson for the\nwinter.\nRev. Mr. Robertson and Rev. Mr.\nGordon passed through Nelson yesterday, the former to take charge of the\nPresbyterian church in Grand Frks,\nwhile the latter was preceding to a\nsimilar   mission   in   Cranbrook.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nReal estate dealers report that the\ndemand for business centers on Baker\nstreet lota east of Josephine street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA snow shed will be built at the\nLucky Jim mine to cover the slides\nthere. It will be the largest of Its\nkind In the country.\nCoffee\nDirtier\nCelery\nFricasseed   Fowl\nLyonnaise  Potatoes CarroW\nIce Cream Coffee\nHam-potato   Croquettes\nSupper\nLettuce Russian   Dressing\nHot  Biscuits\nOrange   Gelatine   Molds\nCaramel   Cake Cocoa\nPLANNINO   FOR   OUR   GUESTS\nSummertime ls picnic time, travel\ntime, vacation time. But now that\nthe young folks have resumed their\nstudies in school and college, the majority of us have settled down for the\nwinter and must find our amusements\nat theatres, or at parties ln one another's homes. The housekeeper who\nlike to entertain should begin now, to\ncollect Ideas for the parties she may\nwant to give between now and next\nspring. Remember, Hallowe'en will\nsoon be here, then Thanksgiving or\n\"Harvest Home,* followed by Christmas and New Year's. And in the space\nof time which lies between now and\nNew Year's, I know I shall receive\nmany letters from my readers beginning: \"Can you tell me of some good\ngames to play at a party?\" Such readers often wait till the last minute before giving a party, before they write\nto me for help of this sort! So, reader\nfriends, I'm going to ask you to give\nme as much time as possible, this\ncoming winter, if you want my suggestions for refreshments and party\ngames. Often you write so late that\nI can't get the Information to you\nIn time.\nFortune Telling ls a good standard\ntype of game to play at any sort of\nparty \u2014 Hallowe'en, Thanksgiving,\nChristmas, New Year's, birthday\nparties, anniversaries, engagement announcements, or Just ordinary parties\nwhich celebrate no particular season\nor event. Here ls a clever way of\ntelling  fortunes:\nMusical Futures: Ask each guest in\nturn to strike one note on the piano\n(or any musical instrument). If a girl\nstrikes A, she is to become an artist;\nIf a boy strikes A, he will be an Architect. B for girls (or women) signifies\n\"Bride\"; for boys (or men) B means\nBanker. C, female: Charmer. C,\nmale: Carpenter. D, female: Will develop domestic  talents.   D, male:  Will\nWhat Do\nYou Think?\nGrower No. 2 Says\nNeed Is Scheme to\nMarket Whole Crop\nThe   Editor   Nelson   Daily   News:\nIn your Issue of 18 Oct. J. M. Howe,\nthe president of the Vernon Board\nof Trade makes a statement that\nBritish Columbia is being unduly restricted in the marketing of its apples.\nThia I can aupport as a correspondent ln Winnipeg, who once lived ln\nthe Kootenay telle me she is paying\n6c a pound for orchard run apples\nfrom Ontario and that they are small,\nmiehapen, green asd scabbed, such\nas would not be picked off the ground\nhere, yet British Columbia facing this,\nls not allowed to ship under 3ft Inch\nCan you wonder there are many apple\n\u2022\u25a0bootleggers\" about? The temptation is\ntoo great. .\nA 3>4 apple Is quite a convenient\nsize and there ia undoubtedly a large\nmarket over a wide area for it as I\nhear on all sides that house wives\nsay _ their children prefer a small\nwhole apple to a half or one third\nof a large one. Why not cater to this\ntrade and let the poorer buyer have\nwhat she wants and so assist the\naverage rancher to live which he ls\nnot doing at present. I see a statement made that the Kootenay apple\ncrop is 90,000 boxes less than last\nyear, and no wonder when one thinks\nof the thousands ot boxes that have\nto be discarded as being only 21\/* Inch.\nI think Mr. Hows makes a very good\npoint In exposing the enormous cost\nof the Board of Control and their\nlarge army of clerks. Inspectors and\nnumerous informers and hangers on\n(costing over $100,000. I understand\nof course the grower has to pay as\nhe does everything else) and whilst\nhe was about It he might have ir*\nformed the public that this vast\narmy (and he could couple the associated Growers ln this as well) consists\nalmost to a man ot brief growers who\nhaving failed in their own Une.\nIt seems to he the aim of the Board\nof Control not to assist ( as was the\nobject in instituting lt) the average\nranfher to market his crop but to\nmake lt easy for the fruit shipping\nfirms to sell by restricting the grower\nin every possible way they can invent.\nWe have seen a good deal lately\nin the papers as to the bad condition\nof the Lancashire Cotton Spinners\nwho, lt Is acknowledged, have lost\ntheir Eastern trade by reason of their\nrefusing to spin anything except \"fine\ncounts\" which the average native is\nunable to afford eo other nations have\nstepped in and manufacture a low\npriced article, undoubtedly of poorer\nwearing Qualities, but which the native\nconsumer  can  afford.\nThe Board of Control ls trying to\nkey everyone up to the highest standard meanwhile allowing others to\nsnatch a market which could be well\nsupplied by the Kootenays and be of\nvast gain to the Kootenay rancher,\nprobably 00, per cent of .whom have\nI their places mortgaged. It ls easy to\nsell apples hy restriction but show\nus how to market our whole crop.\nGrower No. 2\nWhat the Press\nIs Saying,\nThe  fat  ls  in  the fire.   Goaded  by\ntbe almost r.tter lack of consideration\non the part of the Provincial government for the betterment of roads in\nSoutheast Kcotenay and Eastern British\nColumbia ai a whole, the Cranbrook\nRetail Merchants association has gone\non record In making known its grievance. It- is brief for a document of\nthis nature, but every paragraph in It\ncarries a punch. The mover and seconder of the resolution are two of Cran-\nbrook's most substantial business men.\nTheir integfty cannot be questioned\nThey botii cwn and drive cars and\nhave made extensive tours over the\nroads of the district and the Province,\nThey know the situation from every\nangle. Political affiliations have no\nbearing in the case whatever. The\nquestion simmers down to the point\nwhere it ii the general opinion that in\ntha matte, of road maintenance UMs\ndistrict and this end of the province\nhas been treated, to say the least,\nshabbily.\nAs pointed out in the resolution, the\nCranbrook district ls the second largest revenue producer ln the Province,\nand the municipality of Klmberley, a\npart of the Cranbrook district, pays\none-tenth of its total taxation. In return the roads in this district are in\nabout the rottenest state of repair\nof any in the Province. No wonder the\nCranbrook Retaail Merchants association has raissd a protest. And the spirit\nof Indignation is Just beginning to\nmanifest itself. Other civic bodies will\ntake acton without d^lap. It is a mat-\nter of vital importance and there will\nbe no mincing of matters ln making\na protest. It ls almost inconceivable\nthat the powers that be at Victoria\nwould attenut to launch a project to\nbuild a raid to Alaska with the already built roads in the interior ln\ntheir prcbent deplorable condition.\nSuch an undertaking will be met with\na howl of protest that will shake the\nvery foundation of the capitnl buildings at Victoria.\nDODDS 1\nIkidney\nHi, PILLS\nSoft pastel shades and two-tone color combinations are the present fashion   ln   smart   bedroom   accessories.\nHelp Yourself\nto\nProsperity\nBy\nDemanding\nB.C\nProducts\nto*\nB.C. PRODUCTS BUREAU\nDie Vimewiw Hoard tit Tra.la\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bills of\nBuilding Material. Coast Lumber a specialty.\nJohn Burns & Son\nPlows and Harrows\nFor Fall Work\nAll Sizes.   All Prices\nYour Inquiries Solicited\n. Nelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and  Belall  Quality  llard aim\nNELSON, B (!.\nm\n\\\\V-Cs^|S^X\nto you in reference to your wardrobe. Your wants for sarnie may be\na Dresa, Coat, or Hat No matter\nwhich, we can confidentially suggest to you to buy it from us and\nyou will be assured of the most up-\nto-date stylish garments that can be\nbought here or in any larger city.\nDO CALL AND SEE THE LARGEST AND BEST ASSORTED\nSTOCK WE EVER CARRIED\nReady  to  wear   department   on\nSecond Floor\n\u25a0Ladies' Woolen Dresses\nA nice lot of new arrivals'\nthls week ln light weight\nTweeds, Silk and wool materials\nCrepes, Flannels, etc. $5.60 to\n123 60.\n'GirV Stockings\nBlack   and  some   other  colors\nIn   silk    lisle    and    ribs    also\nchild*   regular   60c   to   86c.\nEnglish Hand Bags-\na real lot ol solid, all leather\nBags at very reasonable prices.\nA REAL SPECIAL\nIndies' Silk Dresses\nIn   all   the   new  shades   and\nstyles,    especially   selected   for\nSaturday   bargain worth  twice\nthe   price   today   only   $14.05.\nFlannelette Blankets\nScottish standard 70x80 Plaids\nPair  12,05\nFlat Crepes\nCanton Crepes, yard  1.79\nBlack Duchess Satin, yard 1.29\nBlack Dutchess Satin, yard 1.29\n:\n:\nLedles' raincoats, all colors, heavy, soft lining  *\u2022\u25a0\u00bb\u2022\niamatott Urns.   \u2022\nSmart Shoppe for Smart Women\nClassified Ads Bring Results\u2014Try One\n\"Beauty Care right\nin your own Dishpan\"\n305 famous \\WWeauty Shops find:\n\"... With all our experience,\nwe actually cannot distinguish between\nthe hands of a woman of wealth and\nleisure and the hands of a woman who\nuses Lux in a dishpan ...\"\nHAVE you envied the smooth, white hands\nof the woman with servants to do all her\nwork? Now millions of women who wash dishes\nevery day of their lives have hands just as truly\nlovely\u2014because they use Lux in the dishpan!\nBeauty experts know the reason ... know that\nmany soaps dry up the precious beauty oils of the\nskin; giving the hands a horridly red, drawn,\n\"work-worn\" look . ; . while gentle, bland Lux\nsoothes and protects the beauty oils\u2014keeps hands\nsmooth and white! That is why 305 famous Beauty\nShops call Lux \"beauty care right in the dishpan.\"-\nGive your hands this wonderful beauty care\u2014the\nwisest, most'inexpensive known! Lux for all your\nidishes costs less than lc a day!\n'Left) Scene in New York btauty\nsalon. . . Experts in such famous\nshops agree that tbe woman wsho\nuses Lux ht ber dishpan gives ber\nbands real \"beauty care.\"\nLever Brother! Linuttd, Tomato   L939\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS  MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 21,1929\nPage SrVB\n*#P^MPawonM'\u00abvw\u00ab\u00ab\u00abePwwwvvvwep\u00ab^vvwvvvv\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\nChwrehs flrii.sk Shoes,\nI\nThey cost a little more, but the WEAR, FIT and\nCOMFORT are in CHURCH Shoes.\nR. ANDREW & Coe\nLeaders in Footfashion\nare Hostesses\nW. ft S. Meeting\nTlie monthly meeting of the Worn-\nb'o Missionary society of St. Paul's\npnlftod   church   held   on  Tuesday  was\n\u25a0Inclal meeting, the occasion beta  the   day   for   special   thank-offer-\ng. collections. .\nThe program was carried out by\nhoae members who ore grandmothers.\n|ne of the subjects considered was\nbat of giving. In this connection\npro. Smiley read a snort poem show-\nthat the essence of true giv-\n|ig was to give one's self.\nM-i. James Brodle read from a paper\nspeech on giving The writer spoke\nfn giving as being (1) unreasoning;\n3) Impulsive; (3 reasoned, and show-\nid ,how only reasoned giving was of\n[nifch  real  value.\nMrs. D. O. Smith gave an abstract\nbf the last two chapters In the book\npn, Africa called \"Drums In the Dark-\n\" She said that the missionary\nproblem Is how to present the gospel\niO the conservative and unprogresslve\n[wople so ss to lead eventually to\nheir maximum good. The problem\nvarious solutios. methods education-\nIndustrial, and medical are all employed to this end.\nInterest In Africa ls now world-wide,\nhine-tenths of African territory ore\npow divided between various European powers. Africa now haa 35,000\npiles of railways and roads, and' air\nlommunlcatlons are many Africa, ls\npow the continent of opportunity\nMrs. James Armstrong spoke of\n[nlsslonaries connected in some way or\npther with Nelson, and said the sum\notal of the years of service of these\nhe mentioned was, in various lands,\n;20  yeans.\nThe meeting was closed by yie pres\nident, Mrs. Robert Armatronff, after\nwhich tea was served with tha grand\nmothers   as  hostesses.\nociety\nThis column ls' conducted by\nMrs. M. J. Vigneux. All knew\u00bb of\na social nature, including receptions, private entertainments, personal Items, marriages, etc., will\nappear In this column. Telephone\nMrs. Vigneux at her home.\n10 Years Ago\n(Prom Tbe Dally News, Oct. 31. 1819)\nBig game throughout the Kootenays\nwill   be  given a merry chase  for  tba\nnext few weeks by a party of Nelaon\nsportsmen. Those comprising tha\nparty are Oeorge Ferguson, Klrby Oren-\nfell, J. Armstrong, J. S. Boss and W.\nBrodie.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHenry Drayton was elected by acclamation for Kingston and Hon. W. L.\nMcKenzle King was returned unopposed to Prince Edward Island was announced   ln  the   Dominion   House.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nC. F. McHardy stated that he had\nlearned the Government was contemplating the installation of a new and\nup-to-date  ferry at Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBrig.-Oen. V. W. Odium, formerly of\nNelson, has beqn elected a director ot\nthe Royal Financial Corporation Ltd.,\nof Vancouver, and appointed Joint\nmanager. E. B. McDlarmld, also formerly of Nelson, is managing director\nof the firm.\nMr. and Mrs George Johnstone. Kootenay street, have oa their guest Mr.\nJohnatone'a brother Wllltan P. Jcbn-\nstone of Revelstoke who will remain\nwltb them until they leave for Vancouver to visit their daughter and son-\nin-law. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lakes who\nrecently moved to the coast.\nMrs. E. E. L. Dewdney and her mother\nMrs. P, Peters, entertained at brtlge\nFriday afternoon, '\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022     *\nMiss Peggy O'Gray daughter of Mr.\nand   Mrs.   B.   T.   O'Gray,    Carbonate\n\\ atreet,  entertained   a few  of  her girt\nfriends Saturday afternoon after which )\nlhe party attended the first show at the\n[ Capitol theatre. Peggy's Invited guests\nwere Miss Mary Walker, Miss Bobby\nWhltehouse, Miss Binky Wragge, Miss\nMary Vance, Miss Rose Mclnnes, Miss\nPeggy Manahan, Miss Kathleen Manahan, Mlsa , Beryl Wilson, , Miss Edith\nPaterson, Miss Doris Weaver. Miss\nJante Venables. Mlsa Dorothy Wheeler,\nMiss Ellis  McLeod.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Robert Quln and two daughters\nThe Misses Helen and MarJorie at\nHarrop spent  Saturday  In town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. T. Tindale of South Slocan\npaid a vlalt to the city Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nA. Deverson of Crawford Bay spent\nSaturday   shopping   in   Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nAlderman and Mrs. J. F. Coates,\nVictoria street, bave Mrs. James Ryley\nof Queens Bay as their house guest.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss G. Leahy of Salmo paid a visit\nto town Saturday.\nElko Notes\nColumbia\nElectric*-\"\nELECTRICAL\nINSTALLATIONS\nREPAIRS\nAPPLIANCES\nPhone 695\u2022\nNelson\nELKO. B. C. Oct. 20.\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Sheridan accompanied by Mrs Hammond of Waldo, motored to Cranbrook\nSunday morning\nMr. Barrett of Ottawa Is relieving\noperator at the local telegraph station,\nduring Mr. Haley's absence on holidays.\nMrs. James McKee of Fernie Is visiting here with her Bister, Mrs. F.\nMiller.\nH. Jones ls again confined to his\nhome here due to a recurrence of\nillness from which he suffered last\nspring.\nJames Bushell of Fernie motored to\nElko on Wednesday, accompanied by\nMrs. R. H. Hubberstey and son Chris\nwho have been staying with Mr. and\nMrs Bushell for the past week.\nR. Duthie of Femie motored to town\nWednesday and visited with Mr. and\nMrs.  Thomas Roberts.\nMr. Haley, operator at the local telegraph station, and Mrs. Haley, have\nleft for Spokane for a weeks vacation\nNELSON-TRAIL\nChange of Schedule\nWEEK DAYS\nLeave Nelson ....10:30 a.m.\nLeave Trail .... 4:00 p.m.\nSUNDAY SCHEDULE\nLeave Nelson 5:00 p.m.\nLeave Trail  7:45 p.m.\nKootenay Valley\nTransportation Co.\nMrs. Evelyn. Wood who teaches at\nGibson Creek spent the week-end\nwith her two daughters tlie Misses\nEdith and Evelyn Wood. Hall Mines\nroad.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nThe home on Kootenay avenue, Fair-\nview of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Porter was\na gay scene Saturday afternoon when\nMiss MarJorie Stobo, who leaves shortly for Toronto, waa the guest of the\nafternoon. Decoration were carried out\nln asters and chrysanthemums. The\nguests were favored\" with a pleasing\nsolo by Mlsa Elsie Trucaott who was\naccompanied by Miss Margaret McLeod.\nMiss Esther Nordman gave a pretty\ndance she being accompanied by\nMiss Margaret Morgan. Those serving\nat the tea hour were Miss Dorothy\nSmith. Mrs. He If. Jenne and Miss\nEvelyn Porter.. Invited guests Inrlud- I\ned Miss MarJorie Stobo, Miss Mary\nMorgan\/ Miss Lillian Smith, Miss Margaret Morgan, Miss Georglna McKeown,\nMiss Ethel Shaw. Miss* Greenwood, Miss\nDorothy Smith, Miss Margaret McLeod.\nMiss Esther Nordman, Miss 'Toots'*\nHouston. Miss Myrald Morrison. Miss\nIsabel Fraser, Miss Lorna McLean,\nMiss Elsie Truscott, Miss Alacla Jackson. Miss Ruth Truscott, Miss Othella\nBrodle. Miss Peggy Cameron, Miss Edna\nChapman, Miss Alice McDougall. Miss\nEdna Campion. Mrs. H_ H. Jenne. Miss\nVera Klrby, Miss Olive Abey, Miss\nRuth Robertson. Miss Grace Rendall.\nMiss Ruth Hancock. M'ss Iris Robertson,\nMiss Alma Smillie. M'ss Charlotte Jeffs.\nMiss Florence Hanna. Miss Eunice Good-\nenough, Mi--.. Irabel Nixon, Miss Jean\nLambert, Miss Jean McKlnnon. Miss\nMargaret Albion. Miss Jessie Croll. Miss\nB. Jeff ers. Miss Gladys Randan, Miss\nEda Randall and Mlso Jean Glentiln-\nnlng.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022   *\nMiss Zellij Manning of the Trail\nteaching staff spent the week-end\nwith  friends in, trwn.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Prlc* of Kaslo were\nweek-end visitors in Nelson.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss A. Rossman of Trail was among\nweek-enders   ln  th**   city.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. 8, TV Yeatman and son Juliar-\nof South Slocan were Nelson shoppers\nSaturday.\n\u2022 *    *\nMiss Othella Olson teacher of Belforr1\n\u00bbwnt. the we*k-end In town with her\nfather,   Mr.   Olson.   SI Ilea   street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. M**Tntvrft of South Slocan. was\namong  city  shiopers   Saturday.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. Robert Stevens of Creston whr>\n*as  b*\u00bben   the   gu-e\u00ab*t,  of  Mr.   and   Mrs\nAlex   Carrie,   Josephine   street   left   for\nher home yesterda\" morning.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nMiss Fthel Shnw, Carbonate street\nhad us hur aues-ts r.ver the week*ewi\nthe Misses Isabella Nixon and Mirli-\nOreenwood who both teach at Brilliant.\nMrs. t%. Jeffa, Saturday night at bar\nhome ln honor of her birthday. Her\nmany friends presented her with a\nsuiwble gift which' was Sowed by\na game of bridge the prlzea of which,\nwere donated by Mrs. Harry JVtnas,\nMrs W. Bennett and Mrs. Herbert\nThorpe were won by Mrs Jooeptv Turner, Mrs. Harry Amas and Mra_ Jones.\nThose preeent were Mrs. Herbert Thorpe.\nMrs. T. 'A. Treves, Mre. Robert Bell.\nMrs. J. Bell, jr., Iflss Dorothy Wright,\nMra. J*me\\ Robertson, M\u00bb V H. Croos-\nley, Urs. Harry Bishop. Mrs. H. Town-\nsend, Mrs. E. H. Woolls, M_u Joseph\nTurner, Mre. J. Lundy, Mrs. R. Y. Brake,\nMor. H Cecil GrlKselle, Mrs. Horry Amas, Mra. Pred Curtis. Mrs. W. Bennett,\nMrs. Jotines, Mrs. Marquis, Mrs. J. T.\nPrice, Mrs. Jasper, Mrs. J. Bird, Mrs.\nA. Johnson, Mra. M. Mlchsleon. Mrs.\nT. W. Sloder and Mrs. <?. B. A. Blm-\nmonds. Waa, Evelyn Jeffa assisted by\nMies Dorothy Wright acted aa hostesses.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. John McKlnnon of Procter waa\nIn the olty Saturday and left tbat\nnight  for  a  visit  to  the cooot.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nOeorge P. Motion returned lost e*fen-\ntng by motAr from Spokane. H\u00ab was\naccompanied by Mrs. Motion and 'West-\nman.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\ntyrs. C. Mawrer of Wesley who Is\nvisiting ber mother, Mrs. J. Andrews at\nSouth Slocan paid a vlalt, to Nelson\nSaturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. C. I. Archibald, Stanley\nstreet has' as their guest over the\nweek-end their daughter,, Mlsa Phyllis\nArchibald  who teaches at Vlllican.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\n,C. W. McBey of Trail waa the\nweek-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. W.\nT. 'Fotheringham   SUlca   street.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMiss Margaret Reisterer cf Salmo\npaid a vlalt to town over the week-end\nand was the guest of her parents, Mr\nand Mra. Julius Reisterer, Robson\nstreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nR.    McLeod    of   Klmberley    was    in\ntown Saturday en route to Trail.\n9   e \u2022 e\nDr. and Mrs. W. B. Steed, Latimer\nstreet, haa as their week-end guests\nMr. and Mrs. O. V. White and their\ngrandson   Richard   all  of  New  Denver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nF. Pierce of Robson p$ld a visit tc\nthe city Saturday.\ni   e   a\nMiss Orace Wilkinson. Cedar street\nhad Miss Jean McCallum of Trail\nover the week-end.\n\u2022 *    *\nA very delightful bridge was given\nrecently whert Mr. and Mrs. I. G. Nelson\nwere hostesses at their home on Carbonate street the Invited guests Including Mr. and Mrs. John Cartmel,\nMr. and Mre. P. G. Morey, Mr. and Mrrs.\nJ, O. Bunyan, Mr. and Mrs, L, V.\nRogers, Mrs. M. J. Vigneux, Mrs, Howard Dennis, W, J. Sturgeon, Fred Irvine\nand L. K.  Larsen.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. A. Wallach, Latimer\nstreet, have had na their guests ever\nthe week-end their daughter Miss Jean\nof Crawford Bay and also Miss Hod-\nnett   pf   Gray   Creek,\n\u2022 *    \u2666\nMrs. A\u201e A. Wl|ley of Bonnlngton was\namong   city  shoppers Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022\u00bb   *\nR. A. McOregor of Crawford Bay\nspent   Saturday   in   trwn.\n\u2022 \u25a0\u00bb   *\nMiss Violet -Towgood has returned\nfrom a few days spent at Castlegar,\nMrs.   A.  O.  Randell   of Trull   was\n.\nTHERMOS\nBOTTLES\nA Thermos Bottle is a household necessity. Keeps\nliquids hot or cold. Genuine thermos bottles in pint\nand ' quart sizes.\nGenuine thermos strong glass bottles in pint and\nquart sizes.\nStanley un breakable vacuum bottles, in pint and\nquart sizes.\nJapanese thermos bottles.\nBlack Japaned lunch kits.\nHipperson Hardware Co.\nLook for the Red Hardware Store\nPhone 497 Box 414\ni\nIb Aroma It\nPo&Wly\nDrnxxatett\nPocWm\nVacnam Airtigmt\ni Tin*\nBlue Ribbon Coffee\nAlways Reliable -- Sold hy all Qrqccrs\n______________________ 11\"'\n! week-end  guest of Mr.  and  Mrs. D. J\n| Robertson, Victoria Btreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss   E.   J.   McLeLav   of   Procter   nc-\neompenled   by  her   niecp   and   nenhew\nI OUve and Donald spent Saturday shop-\nj ping  ln  Nelson.\n* \u2022    *\nMrs. W. IV Jarvis has returned  frrm\nIan extended vi=it tc the coast, Pentlcton  and  Enderby.\n* \u2022    *\nMr.  and  Mrs.  J,  C.  Ollker  of B\u00abn-\nInlngton   were  Nelaon   shoppers   Saturday.\n*   *    *\nJ, Spiers of Kaslo spent Saturday In\n| town. \u2022\n* *    \u2022\nGordon Bowker of Mirror Lak-A tn th*>\nI truest of Mr. and Mrs. James McGregor.\nMill   street.\n\u00bb    *    *\nO. 0, Thomnson. manaHer of the\nReno mine at Ramo. was among visitors to the city Saturday.\n\u2022 * . \u2022\nT. O Carter wbn has been the\npuest of Mr. and Mrs. H. McArthur\nSilica Street has returned to his\nhome in  TraU\nMr. and Mrs. W, A.  Robertson, Silver\nKing    road,    had    as    their    week-end\nguest   their   daughter.   Miss   Ruth    A\nRobertson   who  teaches   ln   Rossland.\na \u25a0  e   a\nMiss M. V. Smith of Trail was among\ncity   visltoils   over   the   week-end.\nfee\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Porter. Kootenav\nAvenue. Fairvlew had as their guest\ntheir daughter Miss Kathlyne Porter,\nwho teaches at Thrums, over the\nweek-end.\n* *   *\nMrs. McCabe of South Slocan paid\na   visit  to   town   Saturday.\n\u2666 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong Bhoppers to town Saturday\nwas J. V. Kosancic of .Crescent Valley.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJack Miller of Trail was a weekend visitor In the city.\n\u2022 \u00bb   *\nW. B. Poole mining man of Salmo\nhas returned from a short visit to\nSpokane\n* *   \u2666\n25 CASES AT\nCHEST CLINIC\nHELD NELSON\nDr.  A.  S.  Lamb,  Tuberculosis\nSpecialist, Examines Cases\nat Hospital\nAbAit 25 cases were examined and\nX Ray pictures taken where necessary,\nwhen Dr. A. S. Lamb, travelling provincial health officer and tuberculosis\nspecialist held a chest clinic at Kootenay Lake General hospital on Friday\nand Saturday.\nThe Tranquille Tuberculosis society\nhas provided a portable X Ray and a\npublic health nurse to assist, at these\nclinics, which are held Ini all the larger towns of the province at Intervals\nAU expenses incurred in the use cf\nthe X- Ray and by the nurse are met\nby the Tranquille Tuberculosis society\nwith  funds specially raised.\nTuesday a -llnlc will be held at\nMichel, Wednesday and Thursday at\nFernie, and Friday and Saturday at\nCranbrook and Klmberley. Kaslo. Sandon, Hew Denver, Nakusp and Revelstoke will   also  be  visited.'\nElko Board to\nLook Into the\nWater Problem\nELKO, B. C Oct., 30\u2014The regular\nmonthly meeting df the Elko board of\ntrade, postponed from October 7th, was\nheld ln the Elko schoolhouse witn the\npresident, Mrs. M. Roo,- In the chair.\nThere was a fair attendance.\nSeveral matters were brought up for\ndiscussion, among them the Elko water\nsupply.\nIt was decided to make a rough estimate as soon as possible of the\namount of pipe needed to put In a\nsupply from the old Oreat Northern\nrailway tank and to have other data\nready when Thomas Uphill. M.P.P..\nmeets the residents here to secure information for presentation at Ihe coast.\nThe secretary of the board was also\nInstructed to write to Mr. CottereU.\nC. P. R. western superintendent, asking\nfor suitable lighting at the local railway   station.\nIt was decided to hold a whist drive\nin the little school at the end of the\nmonth.\nAppledale Notes\nAPPLEDALE. B C. Oct, 30.\u2014Alfred\nHumphreys, the local teacher attended\nthe   teachers'  convention at  Nelson.\nMlsa Dorothy .Cant has returned to\nher   home   here.\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Dickey and\nAlfred and Laird Humphreys spent\nan   evening   In   Nelson   recently.\nVISITING  AT KASLO\nKASLO. B C. Oct. 20\u2014Mr. slid\nMrs. A. Kinsman of Crlstabel, C. Z..\narrived ln Kaslo on Thursday last to\nvisit with Mrs. Kinsman's father R. S.\nGallop at Howser. for a couple of\nweeks.\nKing Gustav of Sweden is an ardent\nbig game hunter. In his search for\nmoose he lives pn I trnlu WfcMI  Mar\nM   KMl. . em   _      -.I-,--,       \u2022_\nQ^Mea&hers\n611 Baker Street.    Plume 200\nStore News^D\nWomen's Afternoon Dresses\nA Special at $25.00 Each\nThese are some of the smartest dresses we have shown\nthis season. They come in Satin, Canton Crepe, Georgette\nor Silk Tweeds. AH the new Fall colors including Black,\nand in a range of sizes from 16 to 44,\nA Special at, Each ?25.00\nMisses' Dress Coats\n$25.00 To $49.50 fcach\nSmart dressy coats of fine quality broadcloth.   Shawl or\ncrush collars of Rich Furs.   Lining of Crepe-de-chene or\nNovelty Rayon.   Colors Black, Navy, Brown, Tan, and\nWine.   Sizes 14, 15, 16 to 20.\nEach $25.00, $35.00 to $49.50\nNew\nTailored Blouses\n$4.50 To $8.50 Each\nBlouses of silk Broadcloth or Heavy\nCrepe.   High or low collars and many\nwith frilly Jabots.   All sizes.\nEach _ S2.50 to $8.50\nNew Hats\n$6.50 To $15.00 Each\nSmart models inspired by Paris. Off the forehead,\nclose fitting turbans, new long back effects, flattering\nnew brims. Every new millinery fashion, every new\nFall color, and every Hat at reasonable prices, juat\nwhen smart hats are needed.\nEach $6.50 to ?15.00\nMANY ATTEND\nTHE INSTITUTE\nCONFAB, NAKUSP\nDr. Thompson Urges Periodical\nExaminations  id\nFrdlonj? Life\nNAKUSP. B. C. Oct. 20\u2014Periodical\nfxaminatlone. which, the sneaker said,\nwould undoubtedlv prolong life, was\nurged bv Dr. Thompson, Who snoke\nb t length on \"Disease and Its Prevention,\" at thf\u00bb district conference\nnf Women's Institute held rn*re Dr.\nThompson showed lantern slides to\nillustrate diet and health habits.\n' Examinations should be made *(\nleast once a vear. the doctor said\nPreventative medicines the aim of\nmedical science to assist nature, tox-\nIncs and vaccination and improvement\nof lnnoeulatlon against typhoid fever,\nwere all  thoroughly  discussed.\nT. Abrld. president of the British\nColumbia Fruit Gmwer\u00ab was called\nupon to speak on \"Cooperative Marketing.\"\nREPORTS RKAftO\nThe first afternoon was given chiefly\nto registration, minutes of last annual\nconference, treasurer's report and Institute report. Th* evening meeting\nwas opened bv singing the institute\node. and O Canada. An address of\nwelcome was given by Mr. W. B. Allen,\nvice-president of the Nukusp Board\nnf Trade, in which he cave his acknowledgement of the work the Institute Was doing in the district anrl\nfor Canada.\nDr. J. H. Young, deputy minister of\nhealth was to have attended but owing to pressure of business was unable\nto.\nMra. H. H. Pitts, president of the\ndistrict board of directors was in the\nchair with Mrs. E. Stevens of Creston\nas secretary.\nMrs. G. H. Oardlner. president of\nNakusp Women's Institute gave an\naddress to the delegates, and visitors'\nwelcoming them to the first annual\nconference since the division of the\ndistrict Into Kootenay and Arrow\nLakes  section.\nThe delegates to register were as\nfollows: Mrs. R. Stevens. Creston district, sec.; Mrs. H, H. Pitts, Nelson\ndistrict, pres.; Mrs. T. L. Huberts.\nBurton; Mra M. Donseleor, Edgwood:\nMra, J. E. H. Kelso, Edgwood; Miss\nH. Greenland, East Areow Park; Mrs.\nT. C. Robinson, SUverton; Mrs. W.\nCliffs. New Denver; Mrs. G. H. Gardner.\nNakusp; Mrs. W. R. Whlttaker, New\nDenver; Mrs. Marsland West Arrow\nPark; Mrs. J. Jackson West Arrow\nPark; Mrs. E. A. Fanrhurst, SUverton;\nMrs, L. Keffer, Burton; Mrs. J. Robin\nEast Arrow Park; Mrs. M. J Twlss,\nKaslo* Mrs W R Rudkln. SeAaoh;\nand others.\nGrand Forks Bride\nElect Is Honored\nj ORAND Forks, B. CU Oct. 20.\u2014Among\nmany social events held lately in\nhonor of Miss Nettle Kldd. whese\nmarriage takes place shortly, was the\nsocial evening held at the home of\nMrs. J. Donaldson, when the members\nof the senior choir of* the United\nchurch met, and presented the bride-\nto-be with a silver cake baaket. Another\nInteresting event was the kitchen shower given by Mlsa V. Lyden and Miss\nE. Cadden at the former's home.\nYmir Notes\nYMIR. B C Oct. -0\u2014Mrs L Robinson of PorcupLna camp was a Ymir\nvisitor od Thursday\nMiss G. RendaU. Ymir school teacher\nIs attending the teachers convention\nNelson and ts tlie gueetcof her\nfiMffltt Wi %\u00ab* Wh % 8M&U,   ,\nFoster s Weekly\nWeather Bulletir\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 19, 1929\u2014Storm\nwaves of mild Intensity, expected to\ncross continent during weeks centering\non 17 and 25, wUl be warm and comparatively dry storm periods; 17 to\n27 will be expected to average a pleasant period, somewhat of the nature of\nthe proverbial Indian Summer. October 38 to Novermber 6 Will be Just\nthe reverse of the preceding tn days;\nthis ten day period will be expected\nto give us a real touch of winter,\nespecially during week centering on\nNovember 1. During week centering\non November I, I will expect killing\nfrosts to ocofir a Uttle farther south\nthan usual, week to average cold, wet\nand stormy over the continents of\nNorth America, Europe and Asia. During the average year, Wiling frosts\noccur near November 1 In North\nAmerica at latitude 32 In the Rockies,\n35 ln Great Central valleys and 36 ln\nAtlantic coast areas; I will expect\nkilling frosts to occur a little farther\nsouth this year than ls usual near\nNovember   1.\nAn eclipse of the sun occus on November I, 1929, but will not be visible\nIn North America excepting Just at\nsun-rise along North Atlantic coast.\nCenter of eclipse will occur in central\nAfrica. Astronomers call this an annular eclipse, meaning that the moon\nwill not completely cover the disc\nof the sun at any time during the\neclipse, as viewed from any point on\nthe   earth.\nPrincipal cropweather features expected during November will appear\nin next weekly bulletin.   Moon phases\nduring the near future occur as fo!-:\nlows,   given   to   the   nearest   hour   of,\nGreenwich Civil time; to change OreeiU\nwlch Civil  time to your local standard' time, count one hour  earlier t4\u00a5-\neach   fifteen   degrees   you   are   locaad\nwest   from   Greenwich:   Last   quarter\nOctober 26 at 8 hours; New moon November   1   at   12  hours;   first  quartet''\n9   at   14   hours;   full   moon   Novemb\u00ab>\n17 at 0 hours;   last quarter 23 at 18\nhours;   new   moon   December   1   it   5 .\nhours.    The   astronomical   day   begin*\nat   midnight   and   goes   through   tho'\ntwenty-four hours without starting thq;\ncount   over   a   noon,   as   ls   done   In\nstandard   time;    O   hours   Greenwich,\nCivil time would be midnight; 14 hours\nastronomical time would be 2:00 p.m,'\nstandard  time.\nA typographical error In last bulletin\ngave  wheat   production  of U.  S.  and,\nCanada,   1929,  as  100  million   bushels\nless than 1928;  this should have rea**\n400 millions.    Latest reports now estimated  the crop of the two countries\nat near 385  million bushels less thai), |\n1928,   but   the   Canadian   crop   continues to be better than expected, bq>\nthat the final production will probably w\nbe near 375 million bushels less than\"\n1928;   this   would   mean   the   smallest\nproduction   these  two   countries   have\nhad ln the past several years, -\nNelson Men Inspect\nKootenay Florence\nKASLO, B. C. Oct. 20\u2014L. K. Larson, J.A. Patenaude and Dr. E. C.\nArthur, of Nelson, were In the city\nrecently. They came on here from a\n.trip of Inspection of the Kootenay\nFlorence property and are much Im-^ '\npressed with progress of development,,\nat the mine.\nI-\n\u25a0\n*\nThe name Edison Mania on a lamp means tested\nquality. It auurea you the full value of current\nconsumed. Buy Ednon Mazda Lamps by the\ncarton and always have a home supply. t,,\nEDISON MAZDA\nn___i______E__i_____x\nLAMPS\nA CANADIAN GENERAL EllECTOIC  DDODUCT\n.ii\nWe carry a complete Mock of Edison Mazda Lamps.\nColumbia Electric Ltd.\nNELSON\nPhone M5\nI* nli\u00abtlH-|| ii-*-- ,-\u25a0\u25a0\u2014-\u2014-\u25a0*\u2014~-\nKIMBERLEY-.\n__________\n Six\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 21,1929\n\u25a0ocks Dumped Overboard in Bear Drive at New York\nISWEILED\nto almost new\nSaturday mark\nbta  Carbon,   one  of  the   more  erratic\nIssues   dropped   21   points.\nUnited States Steel closed off a\ncoupii- of points at 1200, lt failed to\ntouch Its low at October 4 at $208%.\nToronto Stocks\ner   i; uns alttor   and   Half\n-tod; Leaders Suffer in\nBrief Session\njl-  NEW   YORK.   0?t   tO.\u2014An   Intensive bear drive finally shook \u2022nt\nT * large  crop  nf over ripp; hsnei-r*--\non fftm the stock imrkft y*s**rrtav.\nrfnal areonnts. weak*n*d bv the\n^^^K* perpendlnlar  flwllnc nf  the\n*rfV. wire feverl\u00abnly dumped over-\n~ beard.\nJ     Total  W*1m  f*w fh\" +wn  Ww  \u25a0i'*-\nkton Mere swrllrd :i.-lH\u00ab.l(M> shares,\nthe second largest Aaturtlnv *\u00ab\u2022\u25a0\u00ab-\nfv*r In market hUton'. ind \u00bbhp\nticker ran  nearly  one   hour  and   :i\nI half  after  the  12 o'clock   pan*.\ni The leading storks. hlglVT \u00bbr1\u00ab-*rt\nImum renfrtlly. lout from flv to\n13 points, and Anhnrn *u*\u00bb \"M\n\u2022I. I. Oase, two of the mort\\ volatile\nIssues, dropped 25 fand 4ft p.i.ntp.\n,' respectively.\nThe sHlliu* again concentrated\nIn  utilities,  which were In *r*n*rsl\n'   decreased  lo thr  lowest  level  since\nearly   July.   *\n\u25a0 Among the more ccnapicuoufl declines\n\u2666er*  losses  of  18 points  irt   W't1--\nUouse Electric.   12 in Eastman Kodak\nII In American Can, 10 in Si^m-^n^\nand nine in General Electric, Norfolk\nand Western American and Foreign\nfcpwer. Poster Wheeler, and Western\nUnion.\nMontgcmerv   Ward   broke   nenrly   in\nppinta   to   *89^i,   a   new   low   for   the\nSresent stock, and other Issues reaching\nBE. lows Included General Motors,\nAlls Chalmers, Baldwin and Bendix\nJUriatlon.\n\u25a0 United Cigar broke 15 points to 185\nan passing the dividend, and the eom-\nTOcn touched a new low at six, but rallied to cose unchanged at t8\u00a3.   CoUim-\nImportant Strike\nMade on the Minto\nVein of Euphrates\nSamples Taken Give Value of\n$35 in Gold and Silver\nOre\n(By a. W. Robertson Ltd., 1-aaaed win)\nAbana      1JS8\nAconda  \t\nArno    -\nAJax     \u2666\u2022\t\nAmulet      \u2014-.\t\nAmity   \t\nA   P   Consolidated   \t\nAssociated\nBaldwin .03(4\na*\n140\n3 80\n.11\n2 60\n1.T8\nNew York Stocks\nBarkis Teraian, manager of the Euphrates Mining company. Ltd.. when in\nthe city yesterday stated the work on\nthe lower tunnel was progressing nicely\nand it was expected a rich ore shoot\nwill be reached within 100 feet, at\nwhich point a depth* of 500 feet will\nhave been  reached.\nA crew of men has been working on\nthe right of way clearng brush and so\nte thn erection of the tram, which\n. ommeea immediately. The cam-\npany'a saw-mill will be operating at\nonce, cutting lumber for the tram and\nbunkers.\nA most important discovery has recently been mads on tne Minto vein.\nThe discovery was made at a point\n1000 feet from the first surface work\ndone on this vein. The first work\ndone on the vein showed it to have a\nwidth of 16 feet A sample takfn\nar-row the vein by Fred W. Callaway,\ncompany's consulting engineer, gave\ni value in gold and stiver of (24.20\nSamples taken from the 1000 feet point\ngives a value ln gold and silver of\n$35 and \u00ab15 in lead and zinc. Width\nat the point of the new discovery i_\n'Jl feet.\nThe plan ot development ls driving\nof the lower tunnel on the Ell Tee\nvein a further distance of 180 feet;\nwhen cross-cutting will commence to\nstrike the Minto vein, which ls ei-\ntiecud to be reached at a depth of 500\nfeet.\nBaltic   OU\nBritish   American   Oil\nBase   Metals   \t\nBedford    \u2022*\t\nBldgood    -..'. \t\nBarry  Holllnger \t\nBwana\t\nBig   Missouri    -.\nCs_mont_\nC and E Lands\t\nCentral  Manitoba  \u2014.\nChemical Research   \t\nClerlcy -....    _M\n_\u25a0_\n68.75\n. 4.50\n. .43\n. .12\n- .20%\n.   7.10\n: tt\n. 3.01\n25.00\n9 25\nDome ^^^^\nDalhouale    ....\nDuprat   \t\nEastcrest   \t\nFoothills    \t\nFalconbridge\nQoldale    \t\nOoodflsh    \t\nHome Hole\nHarger Oold\nHowey\n8.78\n    1_\u00bb\n      3|14\n    1J\u00bb\n    2.50\n    7.78\n___Z- 13S\n !\u00a7\u2022\nHolllnger  _    tat\nHudson   Bay    _.  18.00\nInternational   Nickel    60.00\nKeelly 43\nKirkland   Lake\nKootenay Florence ....\nMacaasa\t\nMandy     \t\nManitoba   Basin  \t\nMalartlc     \t\nMcDougall\n.01\n.10\n.15\n.43\n.12%\nj04\n_______________________________________________________ _\u00bb\nMclntyre  14*!\nMining   Corporation\nMayland    \t\nMurphy    \t\nNewbec     \u2014\nNew  Imperial  OU  ...\nNlplssing \t\nNoranda\n3.80\n2 70\n.04%\n30\n36.00\n2.25\n45.55\n.00\nHigh\nAllied Chemical .... 310\nAndes    WH\nAmerican   Oan   .... 106\nAm Foreign  Power 142\nAmerican   I_x\u00bb        11SV4\nAm StMl Fdy ..._....   66\nAm Smelt _ Refln 107%\nAm  Telephone     387\n_Am   Tebeoco   ...     218\nAnaconda HO'i\nAtchison  277%\nBaldwin,  New     60\nBait  &  Ohio 131\nBendix Aviation        58\".\nBethlehem Steel.     111%\nCanadian Pacific     til\nCerro de Paaoo *..-   88\nChas _ Olito  264%\nChrysler    66%\n\u25a0Cons Oas 17 V  \u25a0-... 136\n\u25a0Corn   Products   .    1-2-tS,\nCurtis   Wright      18%\nOupont   ..~.  If}\nFreeport Texas .... 48%\nOeneral Motors .... \"-Hi\nOeneral   Electric   .. 347\nOranby          7914\nO N Preferred ... Ill-ft\nOreat   west   Sugar   36%\nHowe   Sound       66\nHudson   Motors 72%\nInspiration   OOPPer   40\nlnt Rapid Tmn ....   2S-.4\nlnt   Nickel 60\nlnt Tel It Tel  : MH4\nKelly Springfield .. 8%\nKennecott   Copper..   79%\nKresge S  S '. :   46%\nKroegger  and Toll   36\n-Mack   Truck    92'.\nNash   Motors .   T\nNat Power <__  lght   47\nM  T  Central  230',i\nNorthern Pacjflo  .. 100\nPackard Motota ....   25%\nPenn  R a   100%\nPhllllpa  Pete       40\nRadio  Corp      86%\nRadio  Keith  Orph   32\nRem  Band       53\njfM-\nOld Colonv  \t\nOregon    Copper     -\t\nPeterson    Cobalt \t\nPend   Oreille       3.K)\nPremier    Oold       1.70\n8 W pete  _ -    lJO\nSherrlt   Gordon       6.80\nHighly Capable Management\nMuch of the. success of the Canadian American Public Service\nCorporation1 and its subsidiaries has been due to its business\nsystems being most efficiently guided and controlled. This decided\nelement in business success should be reflected ln tbe Participating\nClass A Stock of the Corporation now offerd at\n$25 per ahare and accrued cash dividends to yield 107c\nStock; 7% Cash.\nR.P.Clark&Co.,(Vanc.)Ltd.\nTNVESTMENT  BANKERS\nKELSON.  B   C. PHONE  LOo\nSudbury   Basin\nSterling Pacific\nSlscoe    \t\nSt   Anthony   \t\nStadacona\t\nTech   Hughes\n6.20\n1.10\n.70\n.13\n.0\u00ab\n6.70\n,H\u00bb\n.73\nThompson Cadallac  ,ask  ...\nVlpond      ___\nVentures      4.0S\nWright  Hargreaves   1.0\nWalte Ackerman   4.80\nMontreal Stocks\n\u00ab\nf\nBliy Boilds-\nRova. Financial Corporation Ltd\nV4NCOUVM\n'GOVERNMENT, MUNICIPAL. CORPORATION and\n-;    ): PUBLIC   UTILITY   BONDS   AND   SECURITIES\nI   Enquirey invited an information gladly afforded.\n!;\nH   J.  HEWITT.  District  Bepreseotatlv.\nROYAL   ANNE   HOTEL.   Kelowna\n!Qn\\\u00a3FChrisb\nCANADIAN PACIFIC STL\ni\nM\nSAILINGS\nFROM MONTREAL-QUEBEC\nMINNEDOSA J. Not. 26\nTu Glasgow-Belfast-Llverpool\nFROM SAINT JOHN\nDUCHESS ATHOLL  Dec. -a\nTo uias-tow-Belfast-Uverpool\nMONTCALM ,. Dec. 12\nTo (.'lierbourc-Southampton\nDUCHESS RICHMOND  Dec.  ,\nTo  (ila-scsn-Uelfast-Uverpool\n\u2022DUCHESS YORK _ Dec. 1\nTo  (ilas{ow-Belfast-Llverpool\nMETAGAMA  Dec. 27\nTo Cherbourg-London\nREDUCED ROUND TRIP RATES    .\nCABIN, TOURIST, THIRD CLASS\nBerth reservations can now be made.   Ask for Passport information and through rates of fare, one way\ni or return.   Details and literature from any agent or\n\u25a0 Write.\nJ. S. CARTER\nIIINTHI-Cr   PASSENGEB   AGENT\nNelaon, B.C.\n\u25a0l^Mh\u00bbi\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb_q_^%ai\u00bbSi>->\u00bba)9)9i\u00bbS)a).\nThe Consolidated Mi ning and\nSmelting Company of Canada, Ltd\nOffice, Smelting tnd Refining Department\nTRAIL,  BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ort\u00bb\nI Producers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAC, TRAIL\n!\nBank of Commerce   29U\nDominion   Bank     243^\nImperial   Bank     268\nBank  of  Montreal    348\nRoyal  Bank :  345\nBank of Toronto   285\nBank of Nova Scotia     342\nAblttbt Power & Paper   62\nAsbestos Corporation         *\\%\nAtlantic  Sugar        \u00bb\nBell  Telephone    164\nBrazilian T L & Power   88%\nBritish American Oil  MV4\nCanada Bronze   02\u00bb_\nCan Car & Foundry   12_%\nCan   Cement     M\nCan   cement   (pfd)     86\nCana  Industrial Alcohol.   15\nCon  Cotton -\u25a0  86\nCan   Gen  Electric   (pfd)     425\nCan   Power   ,-.., ,-n.,^, \u00ab- 30%\nCan  Steamship Lines  i  33\nCong Mining & Smelting   378\nDominion Bridge   98%\nDominion  Olass   180\nDom   Steel   Corporation     81\nDom   Textile     88%\nA   P   Grain     89\nUke   of   the   Woods     52%\nMassey  Harris   60\nMontreal  Power   185\nMont 'Telegraph   49\nNational   Breweries    145%\nNational  Steel  Car    88%\nOgllvle   Milling    620\nOntario Steel Products   35\nOttawa  L  H &  Power   *  98\nPenrftans.   Ltd     79%\nPower   Corporation  H0%\nPrice   Bros  ..:..  87\nShawinigan      97%\nSherwin  Williams    48\nSo   Canada  Power     48\nSteel   of   Canada     63%\nSt  Lawrence Flour Mills    35\nTuckett Tobacco    204\nWayagamack          88%\nWestern   Grocers    34\nWinnipeg   Railway   Ti\nWinnipeg  Railway   (pfd)     107\nVancouver Stocks\nBv H. W. Robertson Ltd., leased\nBayvlew    .K.\t\ndig   Missouri    -\nBluebird     .-\nCork   Province    _\t\nDuthie.   ask   \t\nGeorgia   Copper   .'.\t\nGeorge   River   \t\nGolconda     -\t\nGarndvlew    ,\t\nIndependence,  ask  \t\nlnt   C   8c   C    - -\nKootenay  Florence  \t\nKootenay  King\t\nLucky   Jim   \t\nMarmot   River    -\t\nNational Silver\t\nNoble  Five,  ask \t\nOregon   Copper    ,.\nPremier     ..\u2014.\t\nPend   Oreille   \t\nPorter   Idaho\t\nReeves   McDonald   \t\nRufus Argent*\t\nRuth   Hope,   ask    -\t\nSllvercrest    - -.\nSilver   Cup   \u00bb\u25a0\nSnowflake     -...\t\nTopley   Richfield   \t\nTorlch    \t\nWellington     \u2014\t\nWhitewater,   ask   \t\nwire)\n.08\n.80\n.06\n.08\n.40\n3.90\nJf\nLow\nClose\n30114\n30114\n48%\n*\u00bb%\n19514\n158\nISO \"4\n13114\n11014\n11014\nM\n55\n103\n105 U,\n18014\n286\n210\n216\n10014\n10714\n\u25a0274'i\n276%\n4414\n44 V,\n13914\n12814\n5514\n5514\nHOW\n111\n110K\n210-44\n85\n85\n259'4\n25914\n5414\n55\n12914\n18114\n11614\n118%\nIW\n1214\n178\n178\n4214\n421\/4\n0014\n80 V,\n338\n830 V\u00ab\n7814\n78>\/_\nUl\n11114\n35%\n36%\n55\n55\n70'4\n70'4\n37V.\n37..\n28>4\n28>4\n48%\n48%\n116\n117\n8\n8\n7614\n76 Va\n44'.\n4414\n3514\n82%\n3514\n92%\n76\n*75'4\n4414\n4414\n216\n216\n98'_\n99\n23\n23\n98 V,\n99\n3814\n39%\n82 44\n83\n38 Vt\n'   29\n61\n51'\/,\n8  l_oula St 8 Fra 119      117 117\nSchulte        1014     18 14\nShell   Union  OU   -    2714     2614 3814\nSinclair   Con        33%     3314 3314\nSouth Calif Edtaon   7414     70% 7014\nSouthern Paclt-   .. 13814   138 138\nStan  Oil of Cal   -   7\u00bb%     7314 72%\nStan Oil of N JJ ..    7814     7614 77\nStewart Warner ...   5614     55% 66%\nStudebaker    8214     -S3 83\nTexaa   COO-..:     63%     62% 6314\nTexaa   Oulf   Sulph   67%     88 6814\nUnion Oil of Cal _   8314     5114 81%\nUnion   Pacific     28414   38314 26314\nU   8   Rubber      51%     50% 61\nU   S  Steel  31314     308 208\n\u25ba\t\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIFBO,   Oct.   30\u2014Oraln quota-\ntlona:\nOpen    High    Low Cloae\nWheat\u2014 .\nOct.   140       140       18714%137%\nNov  1*0       140       137% 138\nDec      _...- WIU    14114   13814 138%\nMay      148       148       14514 14814\nOata\u2014\nOct    81....     6114     80 80%\nWov    _        _-        \u2014 61\nDec    68%     83%     61V4 6114\nMar        67 -37        66% 68%\nBarley\u2014      x\nOct    86%     65%     86% 65\nNot   \u2014       \u2014       \u2014 6814\nDec    8BV4      68%     67% 67%\nMay        75 76 73% 73%\nFlax\u2014\nOct  390       390      289% 3M%\nMot  300%    39114   289% 288%\nDec    \u2014 \u2014        \u2014 38614\nMay      294%    394%   393% 39314\nRye\u2014\nq-\u00a3          _         97\nDec'.    I~_! 100%    i-30%     99% 98%\nMay      10714    107%    107 107\nCaah wheat\u2014No. 1 hard 137%; No. 1\nnorthern 137%; No. 3 northern 134%:\nNo. 3 northern 130%; No. 4 127V,: No.\n6 118%; No. 6 98%; teed 87; track\n137%; screening 310 per ton.\nUTTLE CHANCE\nIN EGG MARKET\n.   OF KOOTENAY\nFinn Fecline Develons In the\nFresh  Stock:  Trail Well\nSupplied; Prices Given\nVery little change la eyldent ln tlu\negg market of the' Kootenays though\na decided firm feeling Is developing\nln regard to fresh atock. Very little\nof this atock Is being offered and the\ndemand la keen, storage atock la\nmining freely at all points and coaat\negg meet wtlh favor. Soma -very poor\nAlberta stock waa met with during\nthe week, but most of lt had not\nbeen candled out of storage.\nAt Nelaon prices are: Produce\u2122, extras 68c; firsts SOc; pulleta extraa,\n46c; retail extraa 88c; firsts SOc; pulleta extraa 80c. No quotations to retail -\nj era on thla atock.\n[. Storage prices to retailers are: Ex-\n! traa 43c; flrata 41c; retail extras 60c;\n' firsts 46c to 60c. A tew small pulleta\nj are coming In. Retailers pay 36c anil\nsell   at  30c.\nI Cranbrook prices are practically tha\nI same aa Nelson, though the retailers\nj seem Inclined to be satisfied with a\nsmaller profit, aome of them quoting\n160c for extraa to the producer.\nStores at Kimberley and Fernie are\nusing   storage   stock   almost   entirely,\nthe few trash eggs  that come  being\nsnapped up by eager consumers.\nTraU   la   being   better   served   with\nfreah egga than ani. other point,\nthough storage atocka are being drawn\nupon to me-pt. tha bulk ot demand.\nPrices at theae polnta ar\u00bb tb* same a*\nln Nelaon.\nThe poultry, market . remains unchanged. Heavy hena meet * ready\nsale at 20c to Sin; light hena Ita,\nroosten 34c to 36c; retail heavy bans\n380 to 38c; light 300;, roosten 88cto40o\nDevelopment of Teddy\nGlacier to Be Helped ,\nby Road Construction\nKASLO, B. C, Oct. 30\u2014 With ths construction of a fine road 7% miles long,\nfrom Ten Mile up Sable creek, development of Teddy Olacler, In tbe Lardeau district, will be greatly facilitated.\nThis wcrk ls being done by Col. A. 8.\nMaccultoch of Vancouver. The property\nwaa owend by the late 'Prof. F. Bloch-\nberger of Vancouver, - who- died lust It\nlt was about to be devetoped.\nLogan & Bryan\nPrints Win\nSTOCKS.   BONDS,   COTTON.\nOftApr\nNew Tork. Montreal and Vanoouver Stock Exchanges. Chicago\nBoard of Trade. Winnipeg Oraln\nExchange and other leading exchangee.\nomen;\nVancouver, Spokane and  Beattle\n30\n.10\n.03\n.10\nAt\n.17\n1.70\n3.78\n.2\n.09\nl|\n.40    '\n.03%\n.40\nCalvary Oil\n(By H- W. Robert\u00abQn Ltd., lemBed wire)\nA  P  Consolidated -    \u00a3.82\nAssociated    -   J-\u2122\nC and E Lands     \u2022\u25a0*?\nCommonwealth   \t\nDalhousle     -   *\nDevenlsh\nEastcrest\nFaby&n\nFreehold\nHargal    ...\nHome   Oil\nIllinois   Alberta\nMcDougall Segur\nMcDougall Segur New\nMercury\nMcLeod\nMia   city\nMayland\nOkalta   New\nRegent    \t\nRoyallte\t\nSterling Pacific     1.11\nVulcan    -     JO\nIl&lted       .-..*......- mm.~.~*mm.mm.  *1\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK. Oct. 30.\u2014Sterling exchange, firm at 84.81 V4 for sixty day\nbills and at 64.8614  for demand.\nForeign   bar   ailver   45%c.\nCanadian dollan 1 1.33c discount.\nFranca  3.93  3-10c.\n\u2022 l_re-\u00ab.38Hc. __**__\n\"What do you think O]\nLife Insurance?\"\n<<\n*\ni\n\"W7HEN John was with us, I fought\nagainst Life Insurance. It seemed\nsuch a slow, unexciting way to invest\nmoney. I wanted a ,new house, a new\ncar, fine clothes and the things that\nmoney could buy ... .1\n\"But John insisted. He took on more\nLife Insurance than I ever dreamed, of.\nSometimes we had to make\nlittle sacrifices because of it.\nAnd John would explain how \/ \/\/\u25a0\nlarge an estate would be nc-    \/ f A\nccssary to provide an income for the\nchildren and myself.\n\"Now, since John has been taken from\nus, how bitterly have I regretted my\nstubborn opposition . . . how deeply\ngrateful have I been for his living forethought which, even in spite of my own\nefforts, now protects us and provides for\nour every need.\n\"It is a fact, my dear, that if\nevery wife knew what every\nwidow knows, every man\nwould carry sufficient Life\nInsurance.\"\nt-*H\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 21,1929\nPage Seven\nSPORTS\nW NORTHWEST\nBAU LEAGUE IS\nLAUNCHED, COAST\n\u25a0\t\nr .Clubs.Si\u00abn Up; Two Oth-\n>if Will Join; Play Five\nDays Per Week\nlEATTTIJ:, Wash., Oft, 19.\u2014Four\nbs, Seattle, Portland, Spokane\nI Vancouver, II. C. took out\nnchisen , here Saturday at the\nanUatlon ,meetlnc of the North-\n\u00abt Baseball League. .,\nFhe rolK will be held open until\nOe tlm* In January, when It\nexpected that two more club* will\nnv from iimong the cities uf\nnrnih. YJJklma, (iray* Harbor,\ntthkham nnd Everett. The clr-\nlt* will be a Clou \"D\" league\nI'Will probably play five game*\nwhek, opening early In May and\nslag Labor day. '\nfinal plgn.t for organization were\n\\i% In abeyance until after the\nHilary session. 1, Cal Ewlng,\nnmentof the Oakland dub tn\ns Pacific Coast League, who pre-\n*4   at   Saturday's   meeting   will\nCassios ta Captain\nElks' Bowling Team\nOn the decision of the Nelaon lodge.\nBenevolent and Protective Order of\nElks, to support a strictly Elks' bowling team, Nick Casslo's, veteran Nelson\nbowler, was elected  captain.\nMr. Casslos stated that as soon aa\nhe had chosen hia team, he would\nchallenge any other bowling team In\nthe city.\nThirty-Five Pound\n. Kamloops Trout Is\nLanded at Premier\nPuts    Up    Two-and-Half-Hour\nBattle; to^Tie Mounted,\nCranbrook\nCRANBROOK. B. C. Oct. 20.\u2014Following a battle which lasted for two\nand a half hours, Joseph Kline sue\nceeded ln bringing, a record Kamloops\ntrout to gaff in Premier Lake. Th *\nmonster fish was weighed In at 35\npounds and eight ounces and measured\n40 Inches in length. It was heavier\nby two and a half pounds that a trout\nof the same species taken from Premier lake several years ago.\nMr. Kline, who came In from the\nlake with William Whiting and William\nSteward, announced his Intention of\nhaving the big trout mounted and of\npresenting it to Cranbrook District Rod\nand   Gun  club  as   the   micleous of   a\n  group   of   fish   representative   of   the\nLt   ^flHkfltnnn    Oiiakora   14 ft   district.   The mounted fish wllll prob-\n,\\  aasKaioon  ituaiteis  ia-o ably be on exhlbltlon here Bhortiy.\nOeorge Ratcliffe also took a good\nfish from Premier Lake. His catch\ntipped the scales at 24 pounds.\n\u25a0 Untie  to head  the organization\nUf rtnal arangements are made.\nGINA ROUGH\nRIDERS CHAMPS\nFinal; Is Fourth Consecutive Title\nRANGERS CREEP\nUP ON ABERDEEN\nIN SCOTTISH PLAY\nTOD MORGAN WILL\nMEET TOWNSEND\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 20,\u2014Tod Morgan, champion of the Junior lightweights, and BUly Townsend, Vancouver    lightweight,    who    came    into\n       prominence   by   his   second   knockout\n\u2022     of   Leslie   \"Wildcat\"    Carter   ln   Los\n..      , _ _ ,_-, ..     Angeles   recently,   will   meet  here   No-\nAberdeen    Earns    Draw    While   vember  l.  Jack  Allen,  local  fight pro-\n\u00bb_._______.    vilmetaetmrntaAmlr   ll\/i-        motor announced  Saturday.    The men\nRangers, Kilmarnock Win     iwl!1 flgllt at ^tchweights and Mcr-\nTheir Matches I ff*n'0 tltle w111 not ** flt Btak*.\nCGINA, Oot. 20\u2014Greater exper-\nf plus superior tal net and a dash\n\u25a0ndomlUhle fighting spirit sufficed\njury j^red Wilsons Reglna Rough\nts tothelr fourth consecutive pro-\nlal senior rugby championship on\nWay whenthe Moroon Warriors\nW off tho challenge ot the Saska-\nGLASOOW. Oct. 20\u2014After Saturday's\ngames in Scottish first division soccer, the championship race has become\non open affair. Aberdeen still lading, but Rangers have crept up to\nwithin two pc'nts of them, while Kll\nmarnock arc; cloee up on the leaders.\nAberdeen could only draw wtth Hearth\nat Fdinburgh, but Rangers bent Part-\nlck Thistle. f\u00bbnd Kllmnmock lowered the\ncolors   cf   Cowden   Beath.\nBattles played a fine name for Hearth\ngettino both their goals while Fallon\nand  McDermld  tallied   for Aberdeen.\nFeming got the goal which enabled\nHangars to Just beat Partick Thistle.\nThe tally came after the Rangers hard\nworn down the fir hill defence. Kilmarnock only Just one against Cowden\nBeath, scoring three out of the five\nmarkers made during the same. Morton, Williamson and McEwen goalerl\nfor the cup holders, and Devlin and\nLindsay for Cowden Beath. The goals\ncf Lindsay and McEwen both came\nfrom  Penalty   kicks.\nCeltic found Queen's Park a tough\nhandful. Thomson and Scarff scored\nfor the winners, and McAlplne for the\namateurs.\nAyr United were the highest scorers\nof the day ln Scotland, putting nix\ngoals into the Dundee United net.\nHart had a couple and the balance\ncame from Tolland. Nisbett, Brae and\nMcLeod. Smith got the Unlted's tally.\nAn early goal by McDougall wan\nenough for Alrdrleonlans. when beat\nHamilton Academicals by one to no-\nthing.\nMotherwell, through carelessness, won\nbv the odd goal ln 7 from Falkirk.\nMcMenimy had 2 and Farrier and Mur-\nd\u00ab?k 1 each for Motherwell. Hamlll.\nHuteheton   and   Morrison   netted   for\n________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________!.      j Falkirk\nPete Miller   aged13!I, of Oregon stato      Hlbernlans   fcll   hravlly   ,t   -undee,\ncollege,   13   believed   to   be   the  oWe\u00abt | whoae a0al scorers, were Robertson. Mc-\nplayer   ln  collegiate   football.  He  ls  a   Nab|   --.omson   and   McCarthy,\nveteran   of   the   world   war   end   the   stone    Simpson counted for Clyde and\nrather of three children. |     \u2014\u201e\u201e  lowly  Ciyde  1(Kt  to  St.   John-\nWebb. Paterson. and Stevenson for the\nSoccer Results in\nOld Country\nthe  srorrwH  if:w.i i:\nFirst Division\nAlrdrlonlans   1,   Hamilton   0.\nAyr United  6,  Dundee United   1.\nCertic 2, Queens   Park  1.\nCowdenbeath,  3,  Kilmarnock 3.\nDundee  4,   Higernians   0.\nHearts 2,  Aberdeen  a.\nMotherwell,   4.   Falkirk   3.\nPatrick Thistle  0,   Rangers   1.\nSt. Johnstone  3, Clyde  1  .\nSt.  Mlrren   5,   Morton   0.\nSecond   Division\nArmadale   1,   St.  Bernards  0.\nBo'ness 1, Albion Rovers 1.\nDumbarton  2,  Ralth   Rovers 3.\nEast Fife 3, Alloa  1.\nEast Stirlingshire   3.  Clydebank  1.\nForfar a, Klngspork 3.\nLelth  4,  Brechin  Ctty  0.\nMontrose  4,   Queen   of  South   1.\nStenhousemulr.   3,   Dunfermline   3.\nThird  Lanark   4,  Arbroath   2.\nTrail Hockey Club\nLoses in a\t\nBasket ball Game\nArrow Boat Club Spurt to Take\n.16-21 Victory; Scouts\nWin 28-20\nWith  the exception  of one game all' Perth  club.\n __. __, , home  football   contests of  the Illinois\nQuakers and t^iinced them 14 to i college this season will be played at\nWore more than 1)000 fans at t&e night on an artificially Illuminated\npttlon grounds; gridiron.\nBOXING\n10  ROUNDS\nORVILLE DARR\n\u25a0-S^ka-iftr\"^-*-'\nrvs     .\nCECIL YOUNG\nGal^ary\nNelson Opera House\nSaturday, Oct 26\nDoors open at 9 P. M.\n1 Semi-Windup\n2 Preliminaries\nADMISSION\n>    S-sa-.-O and $1.10\nTickets on sale at Kirbys,\nBi{shs, Wrights and Cabiimt\n\u25a0 Cigar Stores.\n\u2022 LONDON. Oct. 20.\u2014Leeda United have\ndrawn  out   Into   a  clear  three   points\nlead    in    the    English    first    division\nsoccer   championship   race.     On   Saturday   they    won.   from   Birmingham.\nji   Bunched ln sfwHid place are the Wed-\n31 jiesdav. League ct-tfmploM, and Arsenal\nfT*>-_i Man^-fc-A-fSpity. vflW.*ll KM  the\n-||   imUoii-Hjitet..  o-nfc of ye-cHOty's, fa?\nLEEDS ASSUMES\nLEAD OF THREE\nPOINTS BY WIN\nWednesday, Arsenal, Manchester City Bunched in Second\ntMace\nOver three quarters of a million, people\nwatched league foc-tball matches in\nEngland   yesteday.\nWolverhampton Wanderers devoured\nTottenham Hot, Spurs before 35.000\nat Wolyerhampton aud took the lead- TTuia Ml\nershlp of thfe second division at the ex- University\npease of Oldham Athletics who had\nto concede a point to Charlton Athletics.\nAfter a vigorous start. Preston North\nEnd faded right from the picture\nfor a good part cf the first half against\nBlackpool who led them by four goats\nto two at the interval. Blackpool ultimately won by six goals to four.\nPlymouth just preserved their unbeaten record and did It against their\ndeadliest rivals In the southern section of the third division\u2014Northampton\nTown\u2014at Northampton. They got a\nwell   deserved   draw.each   side   scoring\nTUB   ENGLISH   IXAM K\nFirst  Division\nArsenal   4.   Grimbaby   Town   1.\nAston   Villa   3,   Leicester   City   0.\nBolton  2,   Blackburn   1.\nBurnley  6,  Sheffield  United  0.\nDerby County 3,  Liverpool 3.\nEverton S. Mlddleaboro 2.\nLeeds   1,   Birmingham   0,\nManchester City 4, Westham 3.\nPortsmouth  3,  Manchester United 0.\n,  Sheffield   Wednesday   3.   Hudderfield\nTown l.\nSunderland   1.  Newcastle 0,\nv   Second   Division\nBradford  City  3,   Westbromwlch   Albion 2.\nBristol City   1,  Bury 3.\nCardiff  City   1,  Burnley  0.\nCharlton   1,   Oldham  1.\nHull City 3. Mllwall 3.\nNotts County 2, Chelsea 2.\nPreston   Northern   4,   Blackpool   6.\nReading 0, Nottingham Forest  1.\nStoke City  4,   Southampton  0.\nSwansea   Town   2,   Bradford 4.\nWolverhampton 3, Tottenham 0.\nThird   Division    Southern    section\nBournemouth   \u00ab.   Boscombe   3,   Watford 2.\nCrystal Palace 3, Brighton & Hove 2,\nExeter City   1,  Merthyr Town  1.\nPulham   2,   Brentford   0.\nOillingham  0,  Swrodon  Town 0.\nLuton Town  4,   Newport  County   2.\nNorthampton     Town     1,    Plymouth\nArgyle 1. Av\nNorwich  City  4, jfcistol  Rovers  2.\nQueens Park  1,  C&pton  Orient   1.\nSouthend 1, Torquay l.\nWalsall v, Coventry City 3.\nThird Division Northern Kactlon\nAccrington   Stanletf 3,   Wiganboro   1.\nChesterfield   6,   Crewe   Alexandria   1.\nDarlington   3,   CoiUale   0,\nDoncaster 3,  Soutnfeort  1\nHartlepool   1,  Nel\nHalifax  Town  4,\nLincoln City 3} t}\\\niWchdale ,JB,\t\nR&therhani ai\nSouth Shields 1.\nRugbyr\nTranmere, 3, St&A ^^^^^^^\nLandon Scottish 18, Blackheath 20.\nLondon Welsh 31, London Irish 3.\nOld    Merchant    Taylors    6,    Oxford\nTRAIL, B. C. Oct. 20\u2014Opening a\ndrive hall way through tbe second\nstage. Arrow Boat club doubled their\nscore and held the Hockey club for\na 30-21 victcij In a sentqj men's baaket\nball fixture featuring a turee-game\ncard at lhe Memorial hall Saturday\nnight.\nScouta  scored   a   24-22   victory   over\nrhe Beavers   In   an   in \u2022rr\u00bb'\u00abM)  dlv*\nion  match,   and   Wood   Butchers   ard\nf Pirates   played    an   exhibition   frame.\nWood Butchers winning by two poln.-t.\nThe A. 3 C, Heeney clash was featured by its roughness, 12 personal\nfouls being called by Referee C. H.\nWright The Hookey club offended con\nilstcntly, tight of the fouls being\ncharged to them. Art Mackle committed\nfour   and   Mickey   Brennan   three.\nLloyd Williams, former D. B. C. player, led flhc Boat club to victory. He\nscored five boskets and four free\nshots for a total of 14 points. West-\nwood   tallied   eight   points.\nit was a test game but its unnecessary roughness deauenec its glamor.\nPassing was good but It was evident\nthat the A. B. Cs were better or-\nganlred.\nrhe  teams   were:\nHockey club\u2014M. Brennan (6), Paul\nOavrlllk,   A.   Mackle     (6).     Hornquist\nA. B. Cr-L. Williams (14). MeTler\n(2), Hartley (4). Weatwood (8), Forward (4), W. Williams (4) and P.\nWilliams.\nIn the Scouu-Beaver entanglement\nLundy soored all but two of hla team's\npolnta. Coudy ringed the ball for the\ntwo other points. Balfour and Hood\nled   the   Scouta. -\nThe teams were:\nBeavers\u2014Lundy. MacDonald, Condy,\nCant  and   Stoung.\nScouts\u2014Be Hour, Caldlcott, Graves.\nHood, Lund, Gibson, J. Baldrey and\nW.  Baldrey.\nWheat Drops Three\nCents Per Bushel\nCHICAGO, Oct. 30\u2014Wheat plunged\ndownward 3 cents a bushel yesterday\nand c&rrltd other groins along, with\ncom as wei as wheat smashing low\nprice record: for the session.\n.Closing quotations on wheat here\nwere nervous, 2% to 2% cents a bushel lower than Fridays finish. Corn\nclosed holt a cent to 1 cent down,\nwith oats 'r to cent off, and provisions ranging from 7 cents decline to a\nrise of 2 cents.\nElks to Back a\nJunior Hockey\nTeam in Nelson\nFinancial backing of a team ln the\nNelson Junior hockey league, probably\nthe Ex-High School students, has been\nundertaken by the Nelson lodge. Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks.\nThis was decided at a recent regular\nmeeting\nSASKATOON   KPRINTT.B    WIM\nPRINCE   ALBERT,   Sask.,   Oct.   \u00bb.\u2014\nJack    Wahlburg.    Saskatoon    sprinter,\nw on the 12th annual Herald au-mlle\nroad race Saturday agalnat a field  of\nnine.    Hia time far the course waa S3\nminutes. 30 seconds    Harold McMahog. ..\nSaskatoon,   finished  aeornd   and   J.   H. \"\nShlmpton,    Soakotoon,   third.\nMcMahon     carried     off   -loot     year**\nhonors.\nNewburyport,   Mass.,   man,   aged   87,\n(4J,  Houbrigs   (4),  and   Haszard   <3). predicts  \"terrible  winter\"  ahead.\n\u00b0\u00a3>uvof>e\nCunard\nCANADIAN lAIUM-M\nFrom Montreal\nTo Ply-month-m-fR-u\u2014loa\nAscanl\u00ab    Oct.  as,   HOT. 23\nAural-la    Nor.   8\nAusonla    _ .Not.   IB\nANTHOB DONALDSON\nTo   -Mftut-UTerpftoi-Gbacow\nLttltla    Nor.   1\nAntonia    - Hot.   8\nAlanla  Mot.   18\nAndanla    - Not.   23\nfrom   Halifax,  N.   s.\nTo   n>-mouth-H_irre-l_ndon\nTuncanla  Dec. t\nTo Beirut-Urarpool-OlMiaw\nAthenla   -..Dec.   14\nFrom  St.  jokn  N.  B.\nTo Belfaat-Uverpool-OlMtow\nAthenla   Dec.   13\nRegular Bailing* every week from\nNew York and Boeton to London.\nderry. alaecow. Liverpool. Cobh\n.Queenetown). Plymouth. Southampton, London, Cherbourg and\nHavre\nMoney Order*. Draft* and Traveller**\nCheque* at lowest rates Full Information from Local Agents or Company's\nottices. 622 Hasting* St. W., Vancouver,\nB.  C.\nyusMi\na goal.\nPort  Vale  went  to  Rotherham   and\ndivided   the   points.    They   were   well\nout  in front  ln the  northern  section   Services  10.\nof the third dlvldlon, holding a lead of      Glasgow  Aces   6,\nsix points cn the aecond team, Darlington.\nad Mill Williams-11, Guy Hospital 0.\nRosslyn Park   10,  Richmond 6.\nAberavon   14,   Mortteg   0.\nAbertillery   14,   Ponty   Pool   0.\nBradford   0,   Birkenhead   Park   35.\nBath  9,   Cardiff   10.\nBristol   22,   St,   Barts   6.\nBridgend   17,   Crosskeya   4.\nCambridge   Uvy   24,   Harlequin   0.\nCardiff  0,   Gloucester   10.\nCoverntry 29, Nuneaton 0.\nLeicester   12,   Newport   8.\nLannelly   33,   Penarth   6.\nNorthampton 12, Rugby 8.\nPlymouth    Albion    30,    Old    Crane\nLelghans   14. \u2022\nSwansea  3,  Neath   12\nPortsmouth    Services    5,    Devonport\nEdinburgh Inst. 0.\nEdinburgh   Wander-\nTen British   undertakers  Plan   \"educational tour of  u. S. funeral pallors.\nBleachers Lost\n$100,000 in Cash\nA Few Temporary\npisachb* seat* ih\nTheiJi-SWowdSfj-mes\n' COST ~r>* OWNERS,.\nOFTnE'PHIlUES\n\u2666 60,000 \u2014\n'.. ANP\n_   Hooper\njns iNia The\ninmavisED\nscats -\nWatsonlans   36,\ners 0,   . ^^^^^^^^\nEdinburgh TJvy 3, Edinburgh Aces 34.\nStewartonlans     10,     Glasgow     High\nSchool 3.\nSelkirk 22, Royal High School 6.\nPolice Union  31,  Cumberland  8.\nBlack Heath 18, Old Paulines 8.\nFootball from\nU. S. Grids\nYale 14, Brown 0.\nCornell 13, Princeton 7\nCalifornia 12, Penn. 8.\nDartmouth   34,   Columbia   0.\nNew York University 7, Penn State 0.\nWashington and Jefferson 0, Carnegie  Tech   0.\nBucknell   0,   Lafayette  3.\nPordham 7, Holy  Cross 0.\nGeorgetown 19, West Virginia Wesleyan 0.\nSpringfield   19,   MlddleburyO.\nBowdoln   19,   Wesleyan  0.      _\nNew Hampshire 21, Maine 7.\nDickinson 7, George Washington 8.\nArmy 20,  Harvard  20,\nNavy  45,   Duke   13.\nWest Virginia 36, Dayton 7.\nOhio State 7, Michigan 0.\nGorgia   19,   North  Carolina   13.\nVlrvinla Poly 25, Wlllla mand Mary\n14.\nNotre  Dame   19,  Wisconsin  0.\nColgate   31,   Indiana   0.\nIllinois   7,   Iowa   7.\nMinnesota 26, Northwestern  14,\nGeorgi  Tech   19,   Ploriad   7.\nMissouri 30, Drake 0.\ntiis advertisement is not published or displayed by the LIQ-\nC0NTR0L BOARD or by the Government of B, C.\nf)y  AL PEMAREE\n(Farmer Pitcher New York Giants!\nBill Veek, president olf the Chicago\nCube, has debated the idea cf building\nadditional bleacher seats to nable a\nfew more Chtcagoans to vew the world\nscries, but figure there would be a\n90 per 'cent loss. ,\nTemporary seats ln center field seating only a few^ hundred fans, cost Pres-\nidnt Baker of the Phllles $60,000 In\n1P16.\nIn the fifth game of the series between the Phillies and the Boston Red\nSox, Duffy Lewis and Harry Hooper\nhit home runs Into the temporary\nseats and ended the series. Otherwise\nthe Phillies would have won and this\nwould have necessitated another game\nln Boston that was a sell-out.\nTbe owners returned over 1100,000\nln checks and money they had already\ntaken ln.\nCalgary Tigers\nDefeat Edmonton\nBy Score, 21-5\nCALGARY. Oct. 30.\u2014Saturday, October 19, 1029 was a gala day for the\nCalgary Tigers, as the gridiron squad\ncoached by \"Fritz\" Sandstrcm, were\ngiven ovation after ovation by a large\nenthusiastic crowd for giving this city\ntheir first rugby championship in many\nyears, and the right io enter the\nplay off for the Western Canada rugby\nunion,   honers.\nTigers walked off the field at Htll-\nhurst park on the long end of a 31-6\nscore against Edmonton. It was the I\nBengals fourth successive triumph of\nthe season, which clinched them the\nchampionship cf the Alberta Rugbyb\nUnion, and incidentally the third\nstraight time they hod set book the\ncapital   city   aquad.\nKEEP\nHENNESSY\nBRANDY\nHANDY\nBOTTLED   AT   COGNAC,   FRANCE\ni   i* advertise .e-it is not uiiolished *>r \"   ot\nR CONTROL BOARD or by the Government of B. C\nExrlttHutr 0U)rt0tma0\n(jkrrttttg (EariiB  ,\ni\nPrinted With Your Own Name\nand Address\nTWO DOZEN CARDS FOR $1.50 and various prices up te ?7.50.\nOur prices are low but the cards are of the highest quality including many beautiful English hand-tinted ones in pastel shades. They\nare artistic enough to frame.\nWe will be pleased to mail out of town customers our samples.\nOrder early, last year ive sold out long before Xmas,\nDaily 'News Job Dept\nPhone 144 or 143\nj\n';.\u25a0*\n Page Eighl\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 21,1929\nCAnhel Child\nBy Grace Perkins\nCOPYRIGHT   BT   RUB   B.   HIHKI_*  CO..   IMC.\nINSTALLMENT     13\n(Continued)\nClassified Advertising\nLEGAL NOTICES\nROOM   ana   BOA ^p\nBOARD  AND ROOM -724  Baker.\nBOARD    AND\nVictoria   at.\nROOM\u2014Clour    U.\nLoci   *mdlM(Nfttlcefi__ Thr\u00ab   oents j MARRIAGES <3>,\noer word Men insertion,    in bltckface\nor machine capitals 6c a wcrd. Twenty- CORNER\u2014RUSSI3_-Or, October 18,\nlive per cent dlacount if run daily ' 1929, John L. R. Corner to MarJorie\nwithout change ot copy tor one month | Helen Ruasel at St. Matthew's church,\n84 Mr. Rugslea atoppvd right In\nttomt ot bar and he Jerked his thumb\nat the run in her stocking and he\n\u25a0Ud:\n\u2022'mUcvaa nw, madam, but yeu'.ve\ndropped a atitch!\"\nWhich acored for Mr Rugglea aad\nhe sailed right on into his com-\npert-tent Aad I Just wealed to put\nnv flnffera into my mouth end\nwhistle Uke they do in family circles,\nwhich  are  really  third  balconies.\nWell, lt was pretty near time to\nget ott, and mam* said to Miss\nEden to come to her room as soon\nae they hit the hotel aa the had\nsomething   to talk  about.\nIt was raining something biblical\nwhen we reached St. Louis, and mama\ninvited Miss Eden and Miss Robinson\nto ride up to the hotel with us in\na taxi. Bo I noticed Mr. Ruggles was\nabout to turn and invite the boys\nin his taatl, when I caught his eye\nand shook my head at -him, so he\nJust Jumped in his taxi and drove\noff, and everybody else had to walk\nall the way to the hotel.\nSo Mlaa Eden and Alloc Robinson\noame up to our room (which was\nreally remarkable and had a little\nmachine in the bathroom where you\ncould put in quarters and get out\ntoothpaste and shaving cream and\npowder). Mama made some Oeorge\nWashington coffee and we were Just\nsettling down to it and wishing we\ncould ordee some Welsh Rabbit when\nwhat should happen but a knock at\nthe door. So didn't one of the bellboys give ln a package for Mln Lola\nV\u00bbne. So J accepted ib, not knowlnR\nwho knew me in St. Louis though I\nbad played there twice and made a\nbig success.\nI opened the package, and what did\nI find, but a box of English fruit\ncake wlch I bet was baked by Dolly,\nbecause there was a note with it\nfrom Mr, Rugglea. So lt was rather\na sweet note, as It said:\n\"To  a  sweet little  wise-lot:\nSugar  and   spice   and   everything   nice\nThat's what Uttle \u00ablfia axe made of!\nI  hope  you  will   enjoy  thU.\nAdrian  Ruggles*\nIt tasted very expensive and we\ncertainly enjoyed it with our coffee,\nand Alice Robinson felt much better\nhaving eaten something. So at lost\nwe got rid of her.\nMama wes just about to turn to\nAunt Enid and tell her about Mr. Daring's real wife, when the phone rang.\nMama Jumped to it, and It was MT.\nWolf on the long distance, to Bay\nthat everything was settled for us\nto come to New 'York, and for her to\ngive in our notices. And he said that\nour salaries would be three hundred\na week, and mama would have a small\npart ln the same play of a housekeeper\nthat takes care of me all through\nthe three acts, because I am the kind\nof wealthy child that is left to serv-\naants.\nSo when Miss Eden heard it was Mr\nWolf she kept saying:\n\"Asg him where Tom Is staying!\nAsk him what Tom is doing! Ask\nhim.\"\nAnd mama kept saying \"Shush\" because she was trying to hear all the\nnews from Mr. Wolf, But at laat\nmama did ask Mr Wolf where Mr.\nDaring  was  staying.'\nSo when she hung up. Mtse Eden\nsaid,   \"Where?\"\nAnd mama said:\n\"Tom  ls   at  the  Hermitage.''\nSo Miss Eden said:\n\"I think 1*11 call Tom right up\nnow on the long distance. I'd like\nto show h 1 tn I know where he ls.\nHe  can't  get  away  as   easy  as  that.\"\nSo   mama  said:\n\"Well, who would pay for the call?\nTm as broke as you are. And besides.\nI want to talk to you  about Tom.\"\nSo meanwhile I waa so delighted\nait being set in a New York play that\nI was Jumping up and down on the-\nbed and the spring broke, and mama\ngot very mad because we might have\nto pay for tt.\nWell, pretty soon, mama settled\ndown and she took Aunt Enid's hand\naad she told her that Mr. Daring had\na wife in Saranac that was middle-\naged and ?n insipid invalid. And she\nsaid that was probably why Tom beat\nit right after the wedding ceremony,\nand Aunt Enid's marriage had not\nbeen consumed.\nSo Miss Eden was so staggered by\nthe news that she didn't even cry.\nShe got dead calm, and simply froze\nup. And mama kept pouring out sympathy by the ton, and Aunt Enid\ndidn't even answer. She Just stared\nat the picture of the cow over the bed.\narid never opened her 11 ps. And at\nlast ahe got up, very stiff, and she\nsaid:\n\"Gertrude! I've got to think. I've\ngot tor\nAnd, then without another word.\nshe got up and left us.\nI helpful,   and   Aunt   Enid   merely   said:\n\"I've made up my mind, Qertrude,\nand when my plana are all set, Ml tell\nyou about them.\"\nSo we had to let lt go at that.\nBut everybody remarked what had come\nover Mlsa Eden?\nWeU, we get some send-off when\nat last we set off to take the train\nto Mew Tork, or rather for Chicago,\nwhere we wouW change to New York\nThe whole company was there, even the\nlittle girl and her mama who were\ngoing to take my place. She was\na funnyk looking little thing that I\nguess was Just starting out because\nah\u00ab studied lessons in the daytime and\nalways took naps. I had seen her play\nmy part at the rehersal, and I know\nwhy mama had sacrificed so much for\nme, because really, nobody in the pace\nfelt Uke shedding a tear when she\ncalled for her Daddy (whleh is Eddie\nBorden), and she only took two bows\nthat last Saturday night and they were\nforced. But, of course she wae much\ncheaper than me, because her and her\nmother only got soventy-flve dollar.\nboth together.\nWell, as I say, even sne and her\nmother were at the train to Bee ua\nott, and she gave me a bag cf peanuts which may have been chldlsh.\nbut she wasn't pulling the wool over my\neyes.\n(To be continued)\nSouth Sloean, B. C.\n(11011)\nM[gcEH__yrsmm fob .bai.e__\n<___>\nOne pool table for sale.    Apply South\nSlocan pool hall.    Box  15.      410948)\nor more Where advertisement is set\nout in short lines the charge is I5cv\na Une for Roman type, 20c for blackface and 3Sc for blackfrice capitals.\nMinimum 3*c, if charged \u00ab0c\nWant and Claslfted advertising-\nOne and a half cents a word por insertion. If paid In advance be per word\nper week or 22He per word pe.- month.\nTransient ads accepted only on a\ncash-ln-advance    basis.      Each    Initial\nfigure,  dollar sign,  etc.,  counts fyi one \u25a0 ___   Q.T1B u\u00ab*\u00ab_,H_.i_,     !>_\u00ab_\u2022\u00ab\u00ab   mi\nword.     Minimum   2*c.   of  char_tri   60c,   FOR J^^S^l   xitt^TSSirrlih\nBirth Notice* and  serial item*-Kree. Uttl.    Htt.    H. R. Kltto. Ounsmlth.\nFOR   SALE\u2014Brick   Lined   Heater   (new\ncondition,     Gow.  206  Victoria  St.\n(10940)\nBIRTHS,\n_q>\nMAJOR\u2014To    Mr.    and    Mrs    H-    M.\nMajor,   at   Jubilee   hospital,   Victoria,\n'October   18,  a  son.\nMcKAY\u2014At Kootenay Lake General\nhospital. October 17th, to Mr. and\nMra. D. McKay. Carbonate street, a son.\n(W\nHELP   WANTED\nWANTED\u2014Cook    general    family   two.\nMrs. J-  Blnns.  Kaslo. (11011)\nWANTED\u2014Two   maids   one   of   whom\nmust   be able  to  cook.    Mrs.  S.  O.\nBlaylock,   Trail. (10928)\nWANTED\u2014Reliable housekeeper, middle-aged. Mts. 3. Leary, Nakusp,\nPhone  323L, Nelson. (10931)\nJUNIOR CLERK j with stenographic experience capable ol taking charge of\ngeneral office work Apoly ln own\nhandwriting for particulars. Apply\nBox   10953,   Daily   News. <10953>\nPOR SALE\u2014Wicker Baby carriage in\nfirst class shape. Appiy 1309 High\nSt.,   City. (11014)\nAT STUD\u2014Registered Nubinn Buck.\nFee 12.50. E. Eperson. Chtrry and\nCarbonate Sts. (10973)\nBARGAIN\u2014Ladles\ncoat.       Excellent\nPhone MIL.\nmodern    coon    fur\ncondition.       180.\n(10987)\nFOR SALE\u2014Roller Canaries.\n$5.00. Apply Mrs. John\nFrultvale,   4,   C.\nSingers\nGrieve,\n(10874)\nONE used Bell Piano, One Singer\nSewing Machine. Phone 208X or Box\n10934, Dally News. (10934)\nPOR    8AWt\u2014Three   drop-head    Stnger\nSewing  Machines.  Guaranteed.  Snap.\nSinger Sewing Machine Co., Nelson.\n(10843)\nfor sale\u2014Farm lighting plant, P->ul\nWANTED-Clerk.   Male.     With   steno-1    g\u00bbP. S?nWc*^^\nKrphic   experience,  capable  of  taking,    \u00a3ow'arclt? r\"0!^ .\u00a3' l\u00b0nre Sffoiai\ncharge   of   general   office   work.    Age |\nIran*writing aa'to schoofing and\u00b0ex-   BAKERS;   OVB! 3\u2014Write  for   catalogue\nperlence.      State    references.\nBox   11015.  Dally  News.\nApply\n(11015)\nSell Livestock\nquickly and profitably through\nThe Daily News Wants Ads\nFill This In and Send It to Us.\nClassified Advt. Dept.\nThe Daily News.\nGentlemen:\nThe enclosed $, \u201e  is for classified\nAdvertising to appear in your issues of \t\n  There are, including my name\nPoor mamaa waa quite frantic, and\nBald ahe was afraid Miss Eden would\ndo something to herself, as there\nIs t limit to what any girl can stand.\nAnd she said wasn't lt hard enough\nto run your own life wl-fcout having\nsomebody else's trouble piled on your\nshould*\u2122, and that while she felt very\nheart-broken for Miss Eden she would\nbe kind of glad when she saw the\nlast of her. Besides, weren't we headed for Mr Daring's company, and we\ncertainly dldnt want to get mlied\nup ia any of his intricacies.\nJust the same, twice after we got u\nbad mama got! up and phoned Ml*\nEden'a room to be sure she was all\nright\nWell, the next day we told Mr. Rugglea about our good news, and he had\nalready heard about it, and was all aft\n-with some body' coming on to tak.\nour places. And he wished me well\nand aald be knew I would be a bl.\nsuece*.\nAt dinner that night, we told every\nbody -about our good luck and everybody congratulated us real hearty\nthough they wished like everything they\nwere us.\nMeanwhile, man\u2014 tried to be very\nnloe to Aunt Enid. But that lady\nwu acting very peculiar, aa mama\nMid. First, she wa* oold and silent.\nand nobody could get \"Boo\" out of her.\nThen all of a sudden ahe started to\nspruce up, and while she was not her\nsweet aelf at all. ahe began to take\nan interest in life. And her eyes all\ntbe time were enough to make you\noreak down and cry. They Just pleaded wltb you. And several times mama\nttlei   ts   get   chummy   with   her   and\nand address  words at the rate\nof V\/-t cents per word.   No ad, however, will be inserted for less than 25c.       .\nand list of used ovens. We pay\nfreight to Winnipeg and Vancouver.\nHubbard Oven Company, 1100 Queen\nWrst.   Toronto. (10781)\nTWO 36-gallon o|k Brandy Casks, *3\neach. One BO-gallon elder Cusk, tt.\nAll good condition, pour Portable\nrabbit hutches. % Inch wire front.\nBottoms 4 ft. 6 in. x 2 ft. x 3 tt.\nfl each. Apply box 10947, Dally\nNews. (10947)\nSPECIAL SALE\u2014Of used clothing.\nPlease note the Ark contains It\ngood selection of Men's and Ladles'\nOvercoata at remarkably low prloes.\nIf you want a bargain come and\nlook these over. Corner of Josephine   and   Vernon.     The   Ark.\n(10870)\nl>n\u00abPEBTVF\u00aba_SAI_\n's^*s.*0*0Vsn*.*fsJstanmst0&s^*jVv.^m****s^.m\nJ3H\nFOR   SALB\u2014Seven-roomed   house;   cement  foundation:   2   lots.    205  Victoria  St.    Apply  Telephone 495L.\n(10760)\nFOR, SALE CHEAP\u2014Oood stock: or\nranch land. \")rUierlv '\/a of Lot\n0372 Group 1 Cr taininu 80 acres\nmore or less kootenay District, Province of B. C. Apply Erie Norburir.\nNorthport.  Wash. (10424)\nLAND SACRIFICE\nSALE\n\u25a0 East Shore Kootenay\nLake\nSummer or Permanent\nHome\nNewly built bungalow, four room*\nand bathroom. Hour acrw. 660 feet\nlake frontage. Price only \u00ab600.00 all\ncaah.\nH. E. DILL.\nSee us for city homes for sale.\n508  Ward  St., -Phone  180\nuvkhtocj;^wAli-pa\nWANTED\u2014Good    ranch    horse,   about\ni300.    a. J. Kennedy,  Oranite  Road,\nrtisop. (10810)\nWANTED\u2014Team heavy work horses.\nSuitable for bush work. P. O. Box\n801, Nelson. (10831)\nLOST   AND   FOUND\nLOST\u2014Small gold watch on elastic\nband. Keepsake. Reward. Phone\n393R. '10086)\nL08T\u2014113. Between Hudson's Bay\nand Nelson Business College. Finder\nPlfase return to Dally News.    (10098)\nMINING.   TIMBER  and LUMBER     (38)\nWANTED\u20140 lbs. mine relay rails, one\nor two tons, ln good condition wHh\nsplices and bolts. The Nelson Iron\nWorks  Limited. (10020)\nHOUSES   TO   REM\n(31)\n-934   EDGEWOOD\u20146   rooms   and   bath.\nPhone 371.B. (10936)\nSIX-ROOM  HOUSE\u2014Por   rent.\n618 Carbonate St.\n\u2022*8R\n(108:\nDESIRABLE six room furnished  house.\nFurnace.    Baker street.    Box 525 Nelson, (i0088i\nEXAMINATION FOR IN-\nSPECTOR OF STEAM\nBOILERS   AND\nMACHINERY\nCompetitive examination! for Inspector of Steam-BoUera and Machinery\nwill be held at the office of the Boiler\nInspection Department in the Workmen's Compensation and Labour Offices. 411 Dunsmulr Street, Vancouver,\nB. C, commencing November 18th,\n1029.  at   10  a.m. >\nApplication forms and further Information may be obtained from tho\nBoiler Inspection Department at above\naddress.\nA.  N.   BAKEB,\nCivil  Service Commissioner.\nPhone   604   R.\n-POUND   PfttBlft   ACT\"\n,    Pursuant   to  the   provision* of   Sec-\ni tion  11  of this   Act.   notice  U hereby   _\ngiven of the resignation of P. J. Cote f BntRn AWT> pnnM\u2014N\u00abir H^hfel\nas   poundkeeper   of   the   pound   estab-   B\nlished  at Harrop  in  the Creaton Electoral  District,  and  of the  appointment\nas poundkeeper iu  his stead ot JACOB\nA.   KNAUP  of   Harrcp.  B.  C.\nThe location  of  the pound  premises\nls Map 731 B, Subdivision 008 and ooe.\nWM.   ATKINSON.\nMinister of Agriculture.\nDepartment  of  Agriculture,\nVictoria, B.  C.\nBept.   20th,   1939. (10694)\nLIVESTOCK    FOB    BAU& _\n.(\u00ab>_\nPOR     SALB\u2014Oeese.\nSalmo.\nBoattger,\n(10845)\n7 WEEKS OLD PIOS\u2014At $4-50 By John\nEgloff, Edgewood, B. C. (10981)\nTWENTY real plKS, Yorkshires, eight\nweeks old. $5.60 P.OJ3. Major Bros.,\nProctor, (10847)\nYOUNO 8IX-WE-TK-OLD PIOS-^For\nsale. IS f.o.b. Harrop. Yorkshire.\nJ. A. Klnauf. (10818)\nWANTED\u2014One Jersey-Guernsey cow,\nrecently freshened. Apply Box 10997\nDally News. (10997)\nYOUNG EIGHT-WEEK-OLD PIGS\u2014For\nsale. $5 f.o.b. Harrop. Yorkshire.\nJ.   A.  Knauf. (10813)\nFOR SALE\u2014Boston Bull terrier regd.,\ntwo months old, cheap. Apply P- O.\nBox 558, Femie, B. C. (10844)\nPOR SALE\u2014Pure bred Chinchilla rabbits. Seven months old. W- Baln-\nbridge, Boswell, B. C. (10982)\nFOR SALE\u20146 weeks old pigs, \u00bb5 a\npiece. 1 good work horse cheap. Mr.\nKarl Jansen, Nakusp, B. C.      (10022)\nFOR SALE\u2014To make room for Reg.\natock will sell two or three good\ncows; right to the live buyer. Geo.\nYork, Taghum. (10811)\nFOR SALE\u2014Liver colored Cocker Spaniels. 3 months old. Born hunters.\nSplendid watch dogs. Males 810.\nFemales $5. T. Roynon, Nelson,\nPhone 434   L2. (10851)\nFOR SALE\u2014One team logging homes,\nabout 1500 pounds each. Age nine\nand ten. Call at 1405 Stanley street\nSunday's or at Oroman Creek during\nweek.   James Tedesco. (10826)\nFOR SALE\u2014Registered Silver Black\nFoxes; also Blue Foxes, both adults\nand this year's pups. Reasonable\nprices. Ranch, British Columbia.\nBox  10815,  Dally  News,  Nelson.\n(10815)\nFOR SALE\u2014Two Pedigreed German\nPolice Female Puppies, 4 months\nold, (10. One Female 18 months\nold $20. Splendid type and kind disposition. Apply H. Wilson. WeBt Arrow Park, B. C. (10884)\nSPECIAL OFFER\n$250.00 Wfll Handle\nA New Bungalow, has 2 bedrooms\nwith closets, good bathroom, modern,\nFireplace, Living and Dining Room,\niltchen, good cellar, cement floor, level lots fenced, close to school, one\nblock from street car\u2014A Modern home\n\u2014Price is $3200 and monthly payments\noan  be  arranged  for  balance.\nRobertson Realty\nCo., Ltd.\n414  Ward Street Phono ei\n(10908)\nFURNISHED    BOOMS\u2014fror   Rent\u2014-(18)\nFOR RENT\u2014Rooms, private House near\nHospital. Apply Box 10893. Dally\nNews. (10893)\nFOR   SALE   OR   RENT\nmt\nFOR SALE OR RENT\u2014Furnished seven\nroom house. Six months lease,\navailable 1st of November. Apply\nMrs. John Hamilton. Nelson     (109S6)\nPIH'LTRY    AND    EGOS\n(26)\nFIVE times as many eggs obtained by\ndelighted user as direct result Karswood Poultry Spice (cbntalntng\nground Insects). Costs only one cent\ndally for twelve hens Obtainable\nfrom all dealers. (11010)\nSITUATIONS    WANTED\nJill\nEXPERIENCED YOUNQ LADY\u2014Desires\nhousework. Phone Mrs. Bradley at\nBeaver   Meadows. (11016)\nTRUCK DRIVING, caterpillar driving\nor any steady work. Dallv News,\nBox   10961. (10951)\nEXPERIENCED BLACKSMITH\u2014Want3\nposition ln camp or blacksmith shop.\nBox   10986. (10986)\nBOARD- AND  ROOM\u2014Cloae  Ul.\nto  618  Victoria  St. It\nROOM AND BOARD\u2014(tor Olrls or j\nApply Box 11003 pally News.   (1_|\nkinims\u2014ro    rent\u2014\nfurnished two room suite for _\nPhone   13. (1C(\nTORWISHBD   HOOSSKBEPHiQ\nto 819 Vamon St. (I\nTWO   or   three   housekeeping\n619 Victoria. (iq\nAUTOMOBILES   FOBS-'P\nFOR    8ALE\u2014Essex    coach,    flnt\ncondition.   Travelled less than  li\nmiles.    8326.    Phone 663 or 5101*\n(1-9\nFOR   SALE\u2014Late   Model   Bulck\nflrat  class  mechanically.    Paint ]\nnew.     Rubber   gooc.    owner   lei\ncity.     WIU   sell   for   1900.     Bo\u00bb *'.\nTrail. B. C.      ..   (1-ji\nBUSINESS,    PROFESSIOl-i\nDIKECTOR-\nAmbulance  Service\nNOTICE   OF   INTENTION\nTO   APPLY   TO   LEASE\nI.AM)\nP.   E.   HOWELL.   -FUNERAL  Dl]\nTttetini   or.   Sucessor  to  Standard   Undertl\n111,1,1   Co.   All   local   Ambulance   caH*   .\nPhone   252,   Day   or  Night. (10\nAccounting -\nIn Nelson Land Recording District\nof Kootenav District and situate ln\nKootenay River four miles west of\nNelson and adjoining Lots 10426 and\n8370.\nTake notice that West Kootenav\nPower and Light Company Limited\nof Rossland. B. C. occupation Producers of Electrical Energv. intends to\napply for lease of the following described lands: Commencing at a post\nplanted 1.818 chains due north of\nIron Post Number  26  as shown on  __\nf'lan filed In the Land Registry Office\nn the City of Nelson as number 628-   \t\nD: thence N 51 degrees 41' W 17.909 cF.CII\nchains, more or leas, to the northeast\ncorner of Parcel \"A\" of Lot 10426,\nKootenav District, as shown on explanatory plan No. 28095-1: thence\nIn a southerly direction and following high water mark on the westerly\nbank of the Kootenay River to a point\ndistant 2.73 chains downstream from\nthe south east corner of said Lot\n10426: thence S 69 degrees 27 E.\n10.887 chains to high water mark\neasterly bank of the Kootenay River:\nthence northerly and followllng high\nwater mark of the Kootenay River\nto point of commencement. Saving\nand excepting the two Islands designated an Lots 14243 and 14244: containing 22 acres more or less.\nWEST   KOOTENAY\nPOWER    AND    LIGHT\nCOMPANY.  LIMITED\nBy C. B. SMITH.\nSecret ary-Tres purer\nAugust  16.  1929 (10256)\nHARRY   D.   BAMSDEN.   Publlo\ncounting. P. O. Box 1176. Ntlson.  _\n(101\nCHARLES F. HINTER\u2014AUDITOR,\nDonald Jam Building. Box 1911. U\nson. B. C. (10|\nAswyeri\nGOVERNMENT  OF BRITISH\nCOLUMBIA\nNOTICE   TO   CONTRACTORS\nKASLO-SLOCAN  DISTRICT\nConstruction   of   Canning  Bridge   over\nLower   Imuran   River\nE. W. WIDDOWSON. Box AI108  Ne|\nB.   O.   Standard   western  charge*!\nE.      CROSSLET.        Provll\nAssayer.     Address   Reno   Oold   M]\nLtd.,    Salmo,   B.   O. (10\nAuctioneer and Kailiff\nJAMES   H.   DOYLE\u2014Bailiff.   Auctlm\nNelson.   B.  C. <10'\nChiropractor!\nDB.    MITTUN.   X-BAY,   CBANBRO\nar\u2122\nDR.   OBAY,   OILKEB   B1.K,   NEL8\n(10\nDentist!\nDR.   O.  A.  C.  WALLEY\u2014Griffin  Bl\nNelson. B. C. (10'\nEngineer!\nH.  D.  DAWSON\u2014I_n\u00ab  Surveyors  ll\nIns and Civil  Engineer Kaalo.  B.\n(10\nu.    \u25a0.    inr.Ai)\u2014Mine    surveying\nAerial  Tram  Construction.   Kaslo.\nC. (101\nA.     H.      IXKEKN      CO.\u2014HJ.MKA-Ult\nFormerly Green Bros.. Burden Nel\nCivil and Mining Engineers. B.\nAlberta and Dominion Land _\nveyors. (io-\nFlorist!\nSEALED Tenders,   superscribed   \"Tender     for     Construction     ot     Canning ' UUIZZKLLE'S    GREENHOUSE,      Nel\nwill  be received  by tho Mm-,    out flowers and floral designs.\nInsurance and Real Eltat\nB. W. '\u2022DAWSON\u2014Real Estate, Ira\nance. Rentals. Next Hlpperson H,\nware,  Baker St. (10'\nE.   DILL\u2014INSURANSE\nFARM ANI) CITY PROPERTY\n508 Ward St.\n(IC\nBridge'\nIster  of Public  Works   up  to  noon  of\nWednesday,   the   23rd   day   of   October. ,\t\n1B\u00bb9- ,_    . !WM.   8.   JOHNSON\u2014\nPlans,    Specifications,   Contract   and i    Phone 342 Cut flowers Potted 8\nForms of Tender may be obtained from   and   Floral   Emblems (10'\nthe District Engineer's office. Nelson.\nA sum of Ten (10) Dollars will be required as deposit on Plans, etc.. which\nwill be refunded upoh the return of\nsame ln good order. Each tender must\nbe accompanied b:- an accented bank\ncheque on a Chartered Bank of Canada, made payable to the MlnistPr of\nPublic Works for the sum of Seven\nHundred (700) Dollars which shall be\nforfeited lf the tenderer declines to\nenter Into contract, or lf he falls to\ncomplete  the  work   contracted   for.\nThe cheques of unsuccessful tenderers will be returned to them upon the\nexecution of the Contract.\nTenders must be made out on the\nforms supplied, signed by the actual\nsignature of the tenderer, and enclosed\nln  the envelopes  furnished.\nThe lowest or any tender will not\nnerpssarlly   he   accepted.\nTenders will be ooened ln public at\nthe Parliament Buildings. Victoria, at\n3:30 p.m. of Wednesday. 23rd October,\n1929.\nP. PHILIP.\nDeputy   Minister  and\nSMART. CLEAN GIRL\u201418. wants work, Public   Works   Engineer,\nwork.       housework.       chambermaid.  Department of Public Works,\nnursemaid,   etc.     Apply   Box   11018,  Parliament   Buildings,\nDaily News.                                (11018)   Victoria, B. C. rt\n    October loth. 1929.                        (10980)\nD. A. Mil AKI.ANI) REAL ESTA\nInsurance, Coal. Board of Trade RO\nTelephone 40. P. O. Box 24.    (101\nPhotograp*\u00bb\u00bb\nGEORGE A. MEEREB\u2014Artist snd V\ntographer.    716  Baker St. (10-\nTransfer\n\u00abVJJ_JL.lAftl_S'\nand wood.\nJ rain si ru\u2014i.aijragr, i\nPhone 106. (107\nWood  Working Factory\nLAWSON\u2014Baker    St.,   Carpenter\nJoiner.  Bash  and Hardwood.\n(101\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Westo\nUrTNGING UP FATHEK\nBr George McMan\nWH---KT DO \"TOO\nM6AN BV CA-V-'KlG\nME OUT OF THE\nROOM WHILE MR\\\nCLE1\u00bbP\n THE NELSON _>AILY NEWS MONDAY MORNING, OCTO\u00a3E15 21,1929\n'Page Nine\n\u25a0 I'\u00bb\nRANCE BUILDS\nA GREAT EMPIRE\nAck France\" Is Grtatcr Than\nAR  Other  French\nPossessions\n:\nAltlS. Oct 19.\u2014From the shores of\nMediterranean   to   th*   bank*   of\nCongo, from tba Atlantic to the\nlo*Egyptlan SutUn, Prance Is bulld-\nfor   hemttt   a  great   new   Empire.\nwrlten, htr special correspoadanM,\nteetttrers are  telling  of  llife  pos-\nof \"-flack Fiance*', south and\nof Bio de Oro.   Her scientists are\nking to bsftish from It the menace\ntropical   disease.    In   her   schools,\nrts graphically demonstrate the area\nPtench \"regions\"  beyond tbe eeee.\nBlack France ls greater in extent\nn all the other colonies of Prance\n;   together\u2014ahd   the     colonies     of\nhoe dot the seven  seas from  Mtq-\nan  in ihe North Atlantic  to  New\ndeola in the South Pacific.\n. area,  Black France almost  rivals\nempiae she won and lOfet In North\nerica.    Within  the greet block  of\nnee In Afrioa, the four British col-\nfee  of  the  Oold  Coast and   Nigeria\nCs  Uttl*   more   than   wedges   with\n\u25a0ee.  cm  one side  and  France  all\nt.    Between  the  two terrltorlee\u2014\ntish and French\u2014there are all winded   frontiers.    And   these   paper\nitlers    mark   more    than    political\nmdaries.    They mark two different\nItlcal   philosophies,   each   of   whloh\nleave  .Its   mark   on   the   world,\nnee   centralizes.    Britain   alms   ta\ncentralization.   Britain endeavors to\nId   up   her   colonial   administration\nthe basis of local Institutions.    \"Let\n(Oft  be  Africa  and  Europe.  Europe.\nAfrican should be a good African\nnot a European, either blended or\nnlshed;'    The  French   Idea   is   dlf-\nrat.    Administration of the  French\nm\\te   follows,   or   alms   to   follow\nntually, the lines of administration\ndepartments and  its parliamentary\nntatlont.      The French  colonies\nnine members to th Chamber of\nutles and four to the Senate.   The\nblooded Senegalese mayor of Dakar\nipital   of   French   West   Africa\u2014   Is\neputy.   Nor does one have to travel\nIn France without coming across a\ntk in uniform.\ntOEST   COLONT\nrench West Africa ls the largest\nall French colonies. Ita thirteen\na half millions of native (and\nt 14,000 of European) population ls\ntered over an area of roughly one\nthree quarter million skuare miles,\narea nine times as big as that of\nnee. It's chief port, Dakar, Is with-\nnine days sail of Marseilles and\nf three days by air from Toulouse,\nhas a weekly airmail service from\nnee via Morocco. Its military air\nrice has nearly 270 landing grounds.\nrteen are provided with hangars\nworkshops. There are 642 public\nools of various grades, attended by\n\u25ba00 pupils. Apart from these there\n69 so-<_^lted private schools\u2014\nools ln which Marabouts teach nn-\n'\u00ab the rudiments of the Koran.\nlut all this development his Its re-\nIons. The native ts making new de-\nnds. He has the vote. He rather\nss the uniform. But he's not quite\nkeen as he was over peanuts. And.\nwhimsical vein, a special correspond-\nthus describes Dakar, where peals king;\nFor the whites, there Is only one\nng that counts: the peanut. For\n.blacks, It is tbe ballot-paper. And\nthe extent that the blacks are ln-\nite'U in the ballot paper, they turn\nr noses up at the peanut. Tbey\nluce enough to live, to pay the\n, to buy 'bonbons' and bracelets\ntheir wives.\nWithout the peanut is there no sal-\nIon\".\n*T or peanut increasing\nBut unfortunately the peanut must\n\u25a0own, reaped and transported. For-\n\u25a0ly, these things were easy. The\nof living was low. A black could\non almost nothing. Labor was\nap. There was good profit to be\nle ln peanut trading. Today, ev-\n;hlng Is changed. A black work-\nwants to earn as much as a\nte, although his labor Is inferior\nhe doesn't work so hard. Being\nelector, he wants the 8-hour day,\nal insurance and so forth. In con-\nuence, the net cost of the peanut\nIncreasing in terrifying proportions.\nby day, Europeans become more\nlouraged. Some give up the fight.\nten start establishments on the\nry Coast, in Dahomey, ln the Cam-\nhu.\nThe administration does what It\nBut It is useless to post de-\nIssue circulars. They don't make\nluts grow by themselves. There\nit be colloboratlon with the\n*s. The problem ls difficult to\n). But each passing day sees\nblacks with new needs. The more\nley they must have to satisfy these\nneeds, the more they will work\nthe more peanuts there will be.\nLt any rate, that's possible. But\nm't quite certain.\" Still the base-\nfan need not be unduly alarmed.\n>lte this terrifying picture of\nwithout peanuts and blacks\ni votes, there is not likely to be a\nmt famine yet awhile,\ni 1927, French West Africa exported\nmillion pounds.\nindermere Home\n! Burned to Ground; '\nOccupants Escape\nBFVERMeRe, B. C\u201e Oct. 18.\u2014Ernest\nof Windermere, farmer and veteran\nhe world war and his family nearly\ntheir   lives   when  their  large  log\nframe house was burned to the\nind. He and hla wife and five\n3ren were only awakened by the\nily barking of the house dog and\nbarelv time to escape ln night at-\nfrom the burning home. The\nding with all ite contents, per-\ntl and otherwise, was a prey to\nflames.\nie house was one of the land\nes of the village of Windermere\ng situate on high ground Just\nthe main road leading Into the\nEe. '  It   was   built   over   30   years\nby Malcolm Cameron at present\nling In SpiUlmacheen. In order\nave the house a dandy of Its time,\nCameron made a special selection\nedar logs of Briscoe and had them\nled to the site a distance of some\nlies.\n>0SVILLE GIRL\nIARRIED, FERNIE\nKO. B. C.\u201e Oct. 18.\u2014A wedding of\n*t to a number of Eflkottes took\nat Fernie on Saturday. October.\nj when Miss Kathleen Stocks of\nlevllle was married to William\nkklns. After a short wedding trip\nj happy couple will reside ln tht\nfjjvllle  Valley.\nCO, B. C, Oct. 18.\u2014A number of\nwith TValrle licence plates\nthrough here recently for the\nwtth large loads of apples\n\" & <J& Crgjton aietrlot. ^\nThe Island\n< By GERALD S. REES\nA MttfUl T, t capital H and t\ncapitol I, The Island, a sketchy\n\"little bit about Vancouver Island,\nand X trow that any lsland carrying\nsuch sporty nana* as KyiUtiMt. tfclu-\nelet and CUrMUot MMrfw mere than\npassing rneptteh. TAt Midst ei courte\nmeani Vfciwlil\u2014\"il little wi et Kn-\n-tunn, etc., etc,\" you know the slogan. There Is also \"a little bit of\nAsia, etc., etc.-* about Victoria, and\nthis la \"not so nod,\" certain Ir no\nless shabbier thou Nelson's Clllllalowrl.\nIt (the Mi-tltl; hot Chinatown) ts\nmerely an incidental setting, so all\ngood Victorians think, for the beauty\nof the capital city, a city of lovely\nhome*, gorgeous flower gardens, and\nunlimited afternoon teas wit* crumpets.\nI had slipped across trom Use mainland wtth tl)e lulls drifting atld wheeling on th-fli- Bllrtt curved Wings like\ntossed Sails, on a sea as smooth (but\nmore salty, ar. the forebay of the Bonnlngton power plant, ao calm indeed\nthat a cast stone would surely have\nspread its circling rtple-to to the driftwood M\u00bbeh-ss bf northern Prince Ru-\nD-ert. and lapped against the hull of\na  rum-runner  down  Tacoma  way.\nOur ship's company scintillated with\nthe presence of Miss Colleen Moore.\none of the brightest stars ln the movie\nfirmament with a salary of astronomic\nfigures. En route from the Oold coast\nof California to Ohe wishing wells and\n\"banshees-1 in the land ofthe Shamrock; the colleen's latest picture 19\n\"Smiling Irish tttt,\" and presumably she Intended, with her stalwart\nIrish husbond, te visit Brill's Isle, and\nchecg up on her Irish accent, a la\ntalkies.\nShe  will  find  no  marble bathrooms\nwith  gold  plated  fittings  around  the\nemerald   Islets   of   Klllarney,   but   will\nneed  her umbrella and  her brogues.\n'TO   THE   (1LOBY   OF   OOp'\nvictoria ai the time of my very\nbrief visit, was inundated by a tidal\n*iwf \u00b0> AiWllcan bishops, with many\nor the hi|her and lower hierarchy of\neccksiastical dignitaries, their presence\n\"T^\"*!1 tl*-t eotststttttlat-ot a new\ncathedral, a long cherished dream come\nJrue. a vision realized In part; the\npatient labor of honorable craftsmen\n\u2022as createl a structure of striking\nbeauty and nobility that will last for\nmany generations; It marks the fulfillment of a hope, an inspiration of\nmen to link this generation with the\ndays of the pioneers. Eventually the\ncathedral towers will rise up to be\na landmark visible many miles from\nland and sea.\nVlotoria la not a frightfully noisy\nplace on Sunday, nor a weekday, as you\nmay know Victorians take time to\nlive, and their lives are not shortened\nhy the constant inhalations of ozone\ntinctured wtth carbon monoxide, though\nthere are plenty of motor cars for\nbusiness and pleasure, and such courteous drivers.\nEND  OF  X  PERFECT   DAY\nAs the mellow chimes of the post\noffice clock announced the hour of\nsix p. m., I stood on one Sunday lately, almost a lonely wayfarer on Government street, and could have fired\na machine gun Its entire length without -riddling the radiator of a single\nmotor for none was visible. Believe\nit or not, but this is a fact not fiction. The stop-go sign had been\nparked for keeps on the side walk at\n4 p. m , and the civic policeman had\ngone home for his' tea.\nI even tried dropping a pin to hear\nIts contact on the bumpety-bump wood\nroad way, but- the experiment was\nspoiled by the -Kathleen') at that moment booming-* a parting salute, which\nawoke the post office pigeons from\ntheir slctsa Imgatne, If you can. auch\na state of affairs at the same hour on\nPlfth   Avenue   ln   Seattle.\nIt haa beer claimed that one standing on the pier where three funnellers\ndock several tlmee a day. will see every\nhoneymoon couple that eveh whispered\n\"I wlU\" on the mainland. Incidentally\none standing at the luncheon hour\non Granville Street, Vancouver will\nsurely meet everyone ever known ln\nthe upper country, and some of them\narc 'out of luck\". Bang goes sax-\npence.\n\"Hey, you, where'n ell you gotn-\u00bb.\"\nI had come from Seattle where the\n\"Jaybells\" ring continuously by day;\ntry and cross one of her main thorugh-\nfares before you receive your marching\norders from the traffic cop\u2014he is lke-\nly to pull out his automatic, and Bang.\nBang, you may find a coupla bullets\nln your hip pocket. I stood awhile\non Yates street waiting for a bell to\nring till a C P. R. policeman walked\nfour blocks over from the wharf to\nwarn me I might be arrested for lol-\ntegrlng: the civic custodian was having his day off at Cadboro bay on a\nbasket picnic with  the twins.\nIf all the western folk follow the\nbirds to Victoria, all the remaining\ntimber will have to be hewn down, and\nthe Island converted into fporty golf\ncourses. Everyone Ptays golf now. and\nsome of tne extra plus forties, with\npractically no road clearance at all. are\nenoiwn  to put  a  m\u00bbn  off his stroke.\nVICTORIA, 6R BUST!\nThis on-j believes, is the slogan of\nall Canadians west of Port William.\nVancouver excepted. Some unfortunately pass on to other plane* of activity remote from the flesh before\nachievement of their purpose. This\nseems hardly fair! I myself Picked\nout at least a dozen homes any one\nof Which will be a pleasing residence,\nagainst the day of a forcible retirement from active service: I should\nprobably Bo Into the antique business\nln Victoria, or concentrate on tea and\ncrumpeta. Believe lt or not again, on\nmy wav towards the outskirts of the\ncity after night had fallen, I was almost crowded off the pavement (sounds\nmore homely than sidewalk) by the\ngood folk of suburbia hurrying to\nchurch. In Seattle, maybe, one would\nhave been jostled along by a muoh\nlarger crowd scurrying to the \"first\nhouse'- to get an eyeful and earful\nof the canned chorines of \"The Broad-\nWay Beauties\". In Victoria I had time\neven to prick my finger on the green\nand glossy holly that abounds.and to\nretrieve for it's life purpose a tender\nacorn from beneath a wide spradlng\noak tree.\nOne good cltizeness, after pointing\nout to mo many of the Improvements\nthat have arrived In Victoria during\nrecently yean finally exclaimed. \"We're\nnot so slow after all, you see\", almost\npathetically To which I made reply.\n\"My dear kind Christian lady, lf you\nonly knew thot in your so called \"slowness* lies one of the greatest oharms\nof your beauteous city. Your apologies\nare entirely superfluous. No one could\n\u2022wish to have your city otherwise than\nit Is; we back benchers of the fruit\nbelt and trolodytes of the Kootenay\nvalleys come hither to rest from our\nfeverish activities ln the hinterland.\"\nShe brightened up considerably at\nthis tribute. I know of no other city\non the North American continent that\nshould softer lees inferiority complex.\nand lf she speeds up to the tempo\nof her neighborly, city of Seattle, her\nglory will become sadly dimmed. More\nanon.\nSubterranean Lake,\nEngland, of Unknown |\nDepth is Discovered\nLEtDS.   Big..   Oct    19.\u2014A   subteran-\ntan lake of unknown depth has been ]\ndiscovered in the heart of Ingleborougb \u25a0\nMountain. Yorkshire, one of the highest Units In thl Pehnlne range.     It\nlie* 600 feet below the surface and Is !\n300   yarda   long.    So   far  tt  has  been I\nimpossible to find IU depth.    Plumb I\nlines have been dropped  from a  raft. I\nbtlt   hont   Of  them   hu   touched   the\nbottom.      The    underground    stream\nwhich   runs   into   the   lake   continues I\nalong a wonderful canyon, finally cas- '\nceding  over  a  rock   and   disappearing\nto   a   still   lower   level.     The   canyon\nItseHls one of Nature's wonder houses.\nIt has columns of glittering stalagmites\n\u2022nd    stalactites   formed   by    trickling\nwater during millions of years,   ingle-\nborough    Mountain    ls   eight    males\nnorthwest of  Settle and  ls  2.373 Jeet\nhigh.   It's base ls 30 miles tn circuit\nand on the summit are traces of an\nancient camp.\nNews of the Junior\nHigh School\nHINTS GIVEN FOR\nMAKING VINEGAR\nTht_ column will appear once\neach week. It ls being conducted\nby tbe students, with Jean Maasey\nna rdftor-liV-chtef. and Ruth olndel.\nDorothy Hal' and Reuben Mc-\nCundlUh ae reporters.\nrxI7.1BETH    VANCE     18     PRESIDENT\nMtoa Martin la instructor of tba\nGirls' Indoor Track club. Elisabeth\nVance\" was elected president, Clara\nTalberg aa secr-tary. The club meets\nat 1 p.m. on Thursdays. Stunts and\ndifferent exercises will form the program of  the evening.\nMore school clubs will be organized\nlater on.\nS1N<;   AT  CONVENTION\nOn    Saturday    morning    after    Mlsa\nExperimental Farm Man Tells\nof Preparation of Home-\nMade Variety\n15,000 Air-Minded\nin South Africa\nCAPETOWN, South Africa. Oct. IS.\u2014\nReplying to a statement made to the\npress recently by tbe Minister of posts\nand telegrapha, Hon. H. W. Sampson.\ntbat the population of the Union of\nSouth Africa wai unconcerned about\naviation, the chairman of the Aero\nClub of South Africa says: \"We would\nremind tbe minister of the fact that\nthere are over 1400 numbers of the\nAero club, and that club aircraft have\ncarried over 10,000 passengers which\nlf addsd to the number carried by the\nsmall alrcrtaft companies operatli^\nIn tht Union, would probably bring\nthe total to nearer 30,000. Of these\n30,000 It ls safe to say that 15,000.\nhaving once experienced the air are\npermanently converted 'air minded'\ncitlzena.\" The department of posts\nand telegraphs controls civil aviation\nln South Africa.\nUNLOADINO   CAR,  ELKO\nELKO,  B.   C.   Oct.   18.\u2014J.  A.   Sheridan  Is  unloading  a oar of hay  and\npart of a car of feed for JV. Wood\nlocal i^-rchant,     , m||   ||B_>|| |\nThs new football stadium of Duke\nuniversity has a scout box at the\nend of Uie horseBhoe. There ts room\nfor 00 scouts.\n4-t.MEHA   WORK   INTKI4KST1V.\nPrincipal H. McArthur, who ls taking the Camera club, ts going to make\nthis club' very interesting. There Is\na great deal of valuable lnfdrmation\nln   the   art   of   developing.     All   the\nofficers have not been elected, but the Btter had given a \u00ab-mlnute speech on\nchairman Is Ruth Stndel and the music, 49 girls sang before the teach-\nsecretary   Margery   Myers. I ers'    convention    In    the    auditorium.\n__ t They   sang   \"The   Shepherd   Boy\"   and\nMOROAN  HEADS   HANDICRAFA   CLLB   two    Mermaid   Songs,\"   the  second   of\nPrank Morgan has been elected prasl- the, \"Mermaid\" songs being an encore\ndent of the Boys' Handlcarff club, in response to the applause with which\nwhich meets at 7 p.m. on Wednesdays, the girls' singing was greeted. A num-\nVlce-prestdent is Victor Melneceuk and ber of boys gave an exhibition^ of club\nthe secretary Is Ted Baker. Committee singing which was also well received\nln charge are Myles Riddle. Jack Win-  by the visiting teachers.\nThe   school   was   closed   on   Friday\nowing    to    the    teachers*    convention.\nFEW ARRIVALS AT SCHOOL\nlaw   and   Gilbert   Hunt.     Mr.   Cornish\nls   instructor of   this   club.\nSCOTT   PRESIDENT   Ol1   DERAILS\n\u00ab_____ .   IZ     r_.w a. .  ._.       Bonnie Bowell has arrived from Van-\nOrganizai ioni   of   the   Debating   club , couver    t0    attend    the    Junlo_    mh\nfor the fall    term has been completed,   gcjyx,]\nTtYi \"^,!'?? __ b0no2rF\u00bbprWl: I     Margaret   Belton    Is    attending   the\ndent,   David   Scott   as   president   and I flCh0O,   comln    ,rom TtM \"\u2022\nPern  Morris   as   secretary-treasurer.       I     c^   9A   u-ys   beat   0B   boya   in  a\nThe object of the Debating club  Is   basketball game on Tuesday  afternoon\nto gain pactlse ln public speaking and   by  a  score  of   13-13.\na    knowledge   of   parliamentary   pro- |    Stella Creese has arrived from Sum-\ncedure. merland and Is attending Junior high.\nNew Strike May Add\nMillion Tons Known\nOre Reserve, Reeves\nKASLO, B. C Oct. 30.\u2014Diamond\ndriling co Reeves MacDonald has revealed the presence of 28 feet of ore\nthat the new strike will add well pver a\nin virgin ground, and ' it ls cleamed\nmllllono tons of the known ore reserve\nof the property. A month ago, cue\nof the diamond drill holes disclosed\nthree feet of steel galena east of the\nReeves ore  body.\nFishing Is Oood\nat Kaslo; Several\nFine Catches Made\nKASLO, B. C. Oct. 30.\u2014Pishing ls\ngood Just at present and some fine\ncatches are being made. J. R Bailey\nlanded a sixteen pound salmon and\nOordon Moore orougnt in two fine\nfish that would go around IS pounds\neach, besidss' a pair of fine trout.\nFrank  chandler got four  nice salmon.\nVinegar as ordinarily produced is\nmade from apple Jules. It can, however,\nbe made from many other sweet\nJulcea. from honey, etc., provided the\nmaterial used contains sufficient sugar and is in no way objectionable,\naccording to A. O. Lockhead, Dominion\nagricultural bacteriologist, central experimental   farm,  Ottawa.\nTh* production of vinegar ia Uie\nprocesses, both depending on the action ot micro-organisms. Tbe first\nprocess consists in the changing of\ntbe sugar in the juice to alcohol\nand carbon dioxide, and ls brought\nabout by the action of yeasts. The\nsecond Is brought about by action\nof bacteria, capable of acting on the\nalcohol and forming from lt acetic\nalcd which gives the vinegar Its\ncharacteristic   sour   taste.\nThe time repulred for the fermentation will depend largely upon the\ntemperature. The moet favorable temperatures are 65-75 degrees P. under\nwhich conditions the alcoholic fermentation ahould be finished inside\nseveral days or a couple of weeks, as\nindicated by the cessation of frothing. A frequent cause of failure is\nstorage of the barrel at too low\ntemperatures, which are unfavorable\nto the yeasts and permit other organisms of an undesirable type to\nflourish. Furthermore it is ndvlsable\nto add a starter in the form of a\nyeast cake to every 4-5 gallons of\nJuice.\nThe barrel should not be filled more\nthan two-thirds full, and Is best\ni placed on Its side, bunghole up,\nj and open, to allow the gas to scape.\nThe opening should also be covered wtth a light cloth to keep out\nfiles, dust,  etc.\nThe acetic fermentation is best\nregulated by adding likewise a starter In the fortn of \"mother of vinegar,\"   This   should   never   be   added\nto ttie awaefa ewer wae ya>\ncider. Unlike the alcollotte\natton, plenty of Sir Is \"fl\"4\"*\nthe acetic bacteria and It H amrnaaaai\nto ventilate the barrel by boring1\nopenings In the ends for the better\ncirculation of atr. Th same temperature should be maintained aa lor\nthe alcoholic fermentation, and trader\nsuch conditions, the vinegar should\nbe ready tn a few months. It may\nthen be racked oft carefully and\nstored in clean casks in a oool tfaea\nafter closing up to exclude the air.\nThroi^hout ttie whole process at\nvinegar making cleanliness- la aa-\ntremely important to keep undesirable\norganisms from affecting the flavor\nand strength of the product\nEnglish Earl\nSays Canada\nis\nTORONTO. Oct. 19\u2014\"tSttsttla \u2022h\u00abrm\u00bb\nme\u2014whit little 1 6a.\u00bb\u00ab testrs est lt\u2014\nbut lrom the commercial xtsA Industrial standpoint thla oountr-j pn-\nsents unique opportunities for tlie Investment of British capital,\" til* fcrl\nof Carlisle told a reporter ln the course\nof the Boyal York hotel,\nof   an   Interview   ln   the   Royal   Suite\nGeorge Josslyn L'Estrange Howard,\neleventh Earl of Carlisle. lx In Canada\naccompanied by Commander O. X.\nAttwood. R. N. R, on a financial mission for one or more British financial\nand  brokerage  houses.\nHe was surveying the altuatlon here,\nhe told The Telegram, from the stand\npoint of British Investors, but he W\ncartful to state that lt was contrary\nto the ethics of brokerage houses to\nadvertise, and therefore he was not\nln a position to state whom he represented.\nIn 1920 the Ian of Carlisle rethed\nI'Kllltv IN THE FIELD\nWILLIAMS LAKE, B. C, Oct. 30\u2014H.\nO. Perry of Prince George, a former\nmember of the legislature has been\nselected by the Cariboo Liberal Association as Its candidate ln the next federal election.\n\u00bb ttis.T\ntm}**.\ntf\nt%trdipOOKAW\nSweepstake Winner at the Toraf&fy\nExhibition whose daily diet include!*\nRED RIVER CEREAL\nA Real Tiiumphioi a Western Product\nHERE he is... Master Donald James Baldoclc of 520\nKingston Road, Toronto... robust, healthy, happy...\nbom in April, 1928. He is a grand winner of the\nCanadian National Exhibition Sweepstakes in a contest\namong 600 kiddies.\nMrs. Baldock, whose youthful son has been awarded this\nearly honor, believes in a regular program, li includes diet,\ntleep and exercise. Meals at regular hours, plenty of sun-\nshine, early to bed and natural, balanced bods.\nMaster Donald eats RED RIVER CEREAL daily and has\ndone so since he was eleven months old.\nRed River Cereal is recommended by the medical profession\nas an easily digested, body-building food m.-.e of Canada s\nfinest grains\u2014cracked wheat, cracked rye and whole flax\u2014\nin their natural state. It perfectly combines nutritive properties with nature's mild regulators.\nTry this appetizing cereal. Children love it. It keeps them\nhealthy and energetic\u2014promotes growth and development.\nAt all grocets,\nMAPLE LEAF MILLING COMPANY LIMITF\nWinnipeg Medicine Hut Vancouv:\nRED\nRIVER\nC G R E AL\nN    A   T    U    IV    C * > Q   W   N FOOD\n f\u00abi\nTHE NELSON MIL? NEWS MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 21,1929\nJnlike Ordinary Gb_ Liver\nOil\nWAMPOLES\n__jrtr\u00abt of Cod' Liver Oil\nFor coughs, colds and\ninfluenza.\nf 1.00 _>ER BOTTLE\nMann, Rutherford\nCo.\nil, .'\t\nI \"Lenses\njput aocuteaeaa ot viand, when mounted In our\nJHpMl designs of mountlnga,\nmt will not only add to your com-\nT tort, but also be more becoming\n*to you th_an others you may\nit have worn.\nJj.O.PATENAUDl\nOptometrist and Optician\nExpert Optical Service\n{City Drug Co.\nSL-tON'S      IMHrCNSIMi      CHEMIST.\n&\u00bb_.:__\u25a0.     Kodak**.    Drugs     Btatlonera\n. .H-ders   promptly   despatched\n|    1U38   ireuSON.   B.C.   PHONF   8a\nin and Oat Yaw Weight free\nTaxi and Transfer\nM      Oon   Cummina      Bot  81\n(Freight and Ixprasa Bervlcs DaUy\nIntermediate\nHunter Electric\n6c Plumbing\nPhone $80 Box 191\nNELSON\nAll the newest dealgaa ln\nBectric Beaten and -fires trom\n600  watte to 8000  watte.\nBome really beautiful designs\nln our new lighting fixture: Juat\nreceived.\nHISTORY TELLS\nMAN'S ADVANCE\nHOLDS HARVEY\n_\u2014 *\nProfessoi   of  History  Is  Hostile to Talk of World\nDecline\nEasy   terms\nments arranged,\ntra charge*\nof   pay-\nNo ex-\nOUTLINES TO TEACHERS\nMANY INTERPRETATIONS\nNone of Them All the Truth;\nPsycho-Analysts\nBusy\nnaturally their ona point of view waa\nbrought out In the records, and naturally their Interpretations was\nagainst the secular side This theory,\nthat history existed to Justify Ood.\nand which pointed the finger of Ood\nat thoee who differed, held away for\nmany  yeas, -\nThen came tbe attempt to substitute the dogma of reason for the\nformerly accepted theological basis.\nVoltaire expounding this, and claiming that history was only playing with\nthe dead.\nUnder thla Ideal, the Idea of human\nprogress em.\nand Montaigne developed the   concep.\ntion   of   perfectaMllty.\nA  III.MAN   EVOLUTION\nIn tbe nineteenth century arose the\nconception that history waa an evolu-\ntloh. that It was not a chronicle of\nIcings and diplomacy and a list of\ndates, but a record of human advance.\nThere   was   social   development;\nMAYLAND SUFFERS\nANOTHER SETBACK\nLoses 4800 Feet of Drill Pipe\nat No. 1 WeU; Royallte No.\n4 Near Normal\nau\nPolnta\n\u2022JO.\u2014Nelson to Trail and Roaaland\n11_-Blooan CUy, Sllverton. New\nDenver and Ha-ndon*\ni Taxi-Transfer\nPhone 77\n\u2014 Can\nOaf mat Night Berrloe\nOpen Saturday\nEvenings\u2014\n5 For those unable  to  spare the\n6 time during tbe day.\n*f Any    evening   by    eppolntment.\n| J. A. C. Laughton R. O.\n: SpecKUslng  ln  Eyesight  Defecta\nIa the Griffin  Meek\nSomething New\nChristmas Cards\nMade  from your  own  negative*\nSee Samples at\niALLENS!\n806 Baker Street       N-ilaon, B. C,\nT-het history was ot the people, that n0mal ldwl, .^.^ reac_.ed de-\nIt was many-aided, that ln different moeracy by different routes.\nagea it had been given many different Prof. Harvey mentioned numerous\nInterpretations, that few works of other Interpretations ot history by\nhistory failed to embody to some ex- different schools of thought. One of\ntent the views of the author, and\\hat. these was that of the psychology\nwith all the double regarding ita facts school, which analysed progress aa re-\nand Its meaning, It was possible to, action to stimuli,\nbe happy In the teaching and tn the | AU theae theories, he said, were but\nenjoyment of It. because of Its all- . partial views ot the multiplied and\npervading usefulness, waa the meaaage I manifold activities of human\nof Prof. D. C. arvey, professor of history   In   British   Columbia   university,\nCALGARY.  Oct.    1\u00bb\u2014 <B>    Hugh   W.\neomewhat, and Bacon   -Robertson  Ltd..  leased   wire I\u2014Mayland\nNo.   1   loet   about  4800  feett   of   drill\npipe   Prlday  afternoon,   lt   ls  reported.\nLate  last   nUht   attempts   to   oonneot\nwttb the pipe to eetaablleh circulation\nto keep  mud  from settling  about the\nMt and drill rods continued.\nSouthwest   Pete    waa    standing   oe-\n_   mented   laat   night.  New   cement   wae\n,!,\u201e'   placed   to   prevent   caving   which   de-\nadvance to  economic  freedom.      Th.   \"****.\u00ab;\"JTlHSL !\" \u201e, rf&mS\nevolution   conception    was    consistent   \u2022\u00ab. ctsing   was   drillng   tbru._Drilling\nwith   both   the   theological   and   the\nVIC.    GEAVES\nMaster Plumber\n18 Tears Practical Experience\nNELSON,  B.O.\nP. O. Box 817 Phone 818\nCRE-O-VIN\ntfi an   tissue   ci nfl\n01.UU BUILDER \u00a9i.uu\nnod   Liver   Extract   with   Creosote\nRelieves\nDeep Bested Cough\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrescription Specialists\nWl  Baker Phon*   .\nLearn to Earn\nThat furniture you don't need will\naell lf you advertise lt ln The Dally\nDally News classified columns.\nYou Can Buy\nLumber, Lath, Shingles, Building Paper and Roofing Felt.\nAT\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nto the teachers ol Kootenayt and\nBoundary in convention here, yesterday afternoon.   \"\nWhile Prof. Harvey denied that he\nwas a \"man with a mission\", or an\nupltfter or a reformer, and claimed\nthat he came as a gentle Investigator.\nwho had a certain responsibility for\narticulating the history work ln the\nschools and university, nevertheless he\nImparted to most of his hearers a\nnew conception ol history, both as a\nbody of facts, and ss a subject capable of being taught very effectively.\nCHRONOLOGr   OF   KINOS\nHis conception differed markedly\nfrom that stated by the afternoon\nchairman, R. Smillie, to have been\ncurrent in his own youth. At that\ntime, Mr. Smillie said, the first definite course in history taught ln tne\nschools consisted of memorizing the\nnames, birth dates, and dates of\nreigns of all British sovereigns, and\none fact about  each.\nIn the \"Program of Studies,\" said\nProf. Harvey, whose theme was \"The\nTeaching of History\", It was stated,\n\"The scope of the subject Is wide.\"\nH. O. Wells, in his book, Men Like\nGods,'1 held that \"Our education is\nouj\u00bb government,\" his point being that\nlf all were perfectly educated, no government ' would be needd. But the\nspt-wer douoted lf education and If a\nknowledge of right snd wrong could\nbe relied upon to satisfy the needs\nnow met by the existence of government.\nPlrst was the qusstlon whether a definite interpretation of history could\nbe obtained, that would Justify the\nImportance and emphasis placed on lt.\nTo throw light on this, Prof. Harvey\nfirst outlined briefly the \"history of\nhistory\".\nINTERPRETATIONS   OF  HISTORY\nWhen the  monks kept  the  records.\nToo Late to Classify\nWANTED\u201411000 loan, highest security.\nApply Box 11019, Dally News. (11019)\nFUNERAL   NOTICE\nThe funeral of the late Charles Alexander  Campbell   will   take  place   from\nthe Church of the Redeemer. Fairvlew,\non Tuesday  afternoon at 2:30  o'clock.\n(11033)\nnature\nand ths multiplied and manifold reactions   to  those  activities.\nA recent Writer called the Idea of\nhuman progress, \"an illusion which has\nhad   Its   day\".\nAnother argued that there wss no\nsuch thing as progress, by any reasonable test, pointing out that a comparison of modern philosophers with\nPlato showed that there had been no\nintellectual betterment, while a comparison of modern civilized men with\nKaffirs showed there had been no betterment ln physique.\nSEES PROURES8 AU ABOUND\n\"\"If I don't believe there 4s a development and q, progress between the\nchild when he comes to me In his\nfirst yesr, and ths child going out in\nhts fourth year, then my vocation\nis gone, and the sooner I go Into the\nriver the better,\" declared the professor.\nBut the books that were being\npoured out, declaring that the white\nrace wu declining, that civilisation\nwas ruining Itself, snd that more barbarous races would come up to supplant those at present running iu_-- -i\nThe speaker did not round out the\nsentence, leaving his comment to De\nInferred.\n\"Por my part, I can see human progress all around,\" he declared. \"Bven\nIf our own nation has arrived at its\nculmination, lf such may prove to be\nthe case, others will carry on the\ntorch of progress.\" \"That ls the\nonly view of history that ls tenable,'\nhe contended,\nLFWARD   PUSH '\n- This view made the underlying assumption that mankind was seeking\nwhat was good. In the upward push\nlt used empirical or experimental methods. In the struggle for adjustment, various groups were organised\nfor   various  purposes.\nNo movement, he contended, had\nbeen the exclusive work of any one\nagency.\nKnowing all th various interpretations that had been placed upon history, one could be humble only by\nrejecting each aa the sore, and must\ncuinume tnem ail nito a wnoie umt\npresents a picture beyond one's com\nprehension.\nOne could be humble and happy\nll _ftH ___ii.e otl uti -ee-v uy e.\u00ab-y\nwind of doctrine, and lf realizing that\nwill resume ln sbout five days.\nOood pioercss is being made at\nTurner Basin where a bit is being sidetracked. New hole has been made past\nthe bit witn  Uttle difficulty.\nAnaconda was drilling at 1330 teat,\nPrday.\nRichflld, on tfhe Waits Valley Structure, was di tiling at 3770 feeet last\nnight. There ls encouraging gas show-\nng at 3760   feet\nRoyallte No. 4 which produced mote\nthan 1000 barrels of crude naptha List\nmonth, Is gradually coming to norms*\nproduction. The well made over 3QQ\nbarrels yesterday and appeared 19 be\nleaning   out   bridging.\nDirectors if A. P. Con. announced\nthat rights to holders of Nov. 15 to\nbuy at 91 one share for each five held\nmust be exercised before December 15-\nLastcrest No. 2 was drilling at 3000\nfeet Friday witfn the bit In the Pennies. It ls expected lime will be reached\nat 4900 feet. The well gives excellent\nprospect of proving up a largearea\ntn the south end of the field,\nWellington, east of Home, is said\nto have entered Dalhousle sands tn the\nmiddle of the Fernies at 4340 feet.\nLime  ls  expected  In 300  feeet.\nHome No. 1 is running 8U Inch casing to 6432 feet and ten feet in lime.\nIt will be drlled Into production with\n\u25a0x  diamond   drill.\nNordon Corporation and Mclntyre\nRanching Cc. of Magrath, south of this\nsl.y, 36 miles in the Milk River Ridge\narea, have made arrangements for exploring lands and mineral concessions\nheld by the ranch and this week saw\nsurface drilling campaign startled.\nDetaslls   of   the   agreement   have   not\necu disclosed by Nordon but the move\nIs Indicative of the general trend of\ninterest ln the south Abertafield by\n.\\i larger operating companies,\nGrtzzelle's   Bulbs   have  arrived   from\nHolland. (10989)\nFairview whist snd SOO postponed till\nfurther notice. (11021)\nIna M. Steed, pianoforte studio room\n9 Ollker block.   Phone 643.        (10923)\nPhone 176\nFcot of Stanley St.\nn\nMunicipal Voters' List\nNOTICE!\nHouseholders or Licensees wishing to have their names placed\n\u25a0 on tbe Municipal Voters' List must take and subscribe to a Declaration as such before a competent authority during the month\nof October, and hare same filed with the City Clerk.\nAll persons who are British subjects, of the full age of twenty-\none yeara, who have resided within the Municipality since the first\nof January, and have paid to tbe Municipality all rates and taxes\nnot chargeable or land due by them, and which amount to not less\nthan Two Dollars, are eligible to take a declaration as a HOUSEHOLDER\nAll persons who are British subjects, of the full age of twenty-\none years, who are carrying on business ln the Municipality, and\nhold a Trade License Issued by the Corporation, are eligible to take\na declaration as a LICENSEE.\nOnly the names of Householders and Licensees taking and filing\nsuch declaration each yesr, and the names of Registered Property\nOwners within the Municipality are placed on the Municipal Voters'\nList.\nW. E. Wasson, City Clerk\nThere will be a meeting of the\nschool board ln the city hall tonight\nat 6 o'clock. (11026)\nProtect yourself against damp weather by having your shoes repaired at\nWADES   SHOE   SHOP. (10999)\nPAST   PRUHIDENTS'-ffUIGHT\nSon* of England will meet this evening at 7:30, Memorial !:*_\u2022 ..Visiting\nHmthrrs   Invited. (11024)\nNICKEL, NORANDA\nREACT\/TORONTO\nMention in Oil Center Around\nAjax; lurner Valley Has\nBright Future\nSuits With\nExtra Trousers\n$35.00\nFor true economy buy a suit\nwith extra trousers.\nWe have a snappy line of young\nmens' models made with the peaked lapels and pleated vests and\npants. In dark worsteds and\nplain blue and grey perge.\nEMORYS Ltd.\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nDoukhobor Girls\nare Satisfied in\nIndustrial Home\nEating  Raw  Vegetables,   Pea-,,\nlints, Apples; Want to\nSee Parents\nHEAVY DEMAND\nAT VANCOUVE\nPrices  Moved Up;  ftane (\nCloses Up 70 Cent!! A. P.\nCon. Gains 12 Ctnto\nVANCOUVIR.. Oct. lt-A Wavy (\nmind .attributed to _hgrt oomrlnf\nseveral of the aoUw oU IMWH. W\nprloe* upward on Saturday.\nHome Oil with sales of TWO ah*\nstarted off at 113 75 and sold tig\nTORONTO, Oct. 20\u2014(By Hugh W-\n-Robertson, Ltd., leased wire)\u2014Trading\nthis morning was featured by \u00bbM-\ntlonary tendency In both International\nNickel and Noranda. The small priced\nissues were fairly firm near yesterdays\nclose  prices.\nInternational Nickel opened 961, yesterdays last Il-Jure, sold down to a low\nof HD90 and closed J90.25. Noranda\nopened at J4175. down S centa, end\nclosed MCI., net loss of M.M. The\nno religion was' always spiritual, that Lindsley Issues, reflecting the tone of\nthe people could be tyrannical, that no -trie two leaders ,wr< a Uttl soft during\nrevolution effected a complete change, th ssslon, but fluctuations were wlth-\nthat   saints   had   vices,   that   sinners   in   narrow   price   range.   Falconbridge\nVICTORIA, Oot. JO\u2014-The Doukhobor\ngirls at the provincial Industrial home\nfor glrla In Vancouver are well and\napparently contented with their pre-\nent home, -(he aterney-g-neral's department here has been advised.\nIR a report to Thomaa Menztes,\nsuperintendent of neglected children,\nUn. Annie sf. Watt-man, superintendent\nof the Industrial home, states that the\nseven Doukhobor glrla at the Institution on tbe mainland are \"sleeping ln\nthslr beds, keeping their quarters clean\nand thoroughly enjoyed the lujury of   m\nlots of hot water and soap.    They are ,,. _,\u201e _,f 10 _ntl ^ jjjj.\n-atimed   with   their  bill   of  fare  con-   -^ 15 OT_t, ,t |2-5 ,-4^* _,\nmtlng of raw vegetables, peanuts, ap-    1() _t (1 45\nMm. bananas and bread\/' oeorge' Ooi-per   and   ' \u00bb#    Mat*\nThey ttture us that there ls noth- werethe only active HilB-t smut m\nlng lacking In their happiness, except tlw tormK gaining 15 oentt at W.\nthe great desire to see their mothers,\" ,nd y,, _,twr a cent, # __; pfc\nMrs. Weatman writes. Oreille off 5 cento at ti.Tf el*-* So*\nWhile   the   seven   Doukhobor   girls flake 3 at 16c.\nranging  ln   ages  from   13   to   15.   are  1\nstaying at the provincial Industrial\nhome for glrla ln Vancouver, they are,\nhowever, being kept entirely -separate\nfrom the rest of the girl Inmates, and\ntre given separate care and tuition 1\napart from the other glrla.\n114 50, the cose for, a an gam\ncenta. C. and (. CorpOr\u00bba_-i .\nheavy trade tinned 17 centa to at\nxt t33t. Mayland, the haatiast tm\nwus 30 centa stronger a* 11,15; ex.\nConsolidated, gained 12 ootta at M\non a big turnover, whit* CalflK\nslipped 3 conte at $1.75. HWaUte :_\nupWUO closing at W ttaet *\u00bb\nnat gain of IS; Southweat ttta t\nMill City were IS centa nrangtr.\n\u25a0 1 tinHIfc\nFall Sale of Work\nPlanned at Tra\nSincerity Lodffe U O. B. A. meet*\ntonight at K. P. Hall 7:15    Important\nusinesB. Court Whist at 8:30. Admission 35 centa. (11035)\nCITY   BAND   DANCE\nEagle Hall, Prlday, October as. 9 till\n2. Refreshments. Be % booster for\nnew music and instruments.       (11020)\nReserve Thursday, October 31st for\nthe big Hallowe'en dance at Pitners.\nThis dance will he the biggest affair\nof the season. Novelties and specialties\nsuch as you have never seen before in\nNelson.   Don't miss this treat.  (11000)\nCARD   OF   THANKH\nMr. Joseph J. Stein and family,\nmother and father, sisters and brothers,\nwish to express their thanks to the!'\nmany friends for their kind expressions\nof sympathy shown to them ln their\nrecent bereavement ln the less of a\nloving wife and Mother, also for the\nmany beautiful floral tributes.   (11023)\n:ierk\nHOW ABOUT THAT\nHEW HEATER?\nWe have a splendid assortment of\nHEATING STOVES\nIncluding the New McClary\nWRHACETTE'\nAnd will be pleased to have you look over our stock\nbefore you buy.\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWHOLESALE     Nelson, B.C.     RETAIL\nCARD   OF   THANKS\nWe   wish   to   thank  our  friends   fo*\ntheir   kindness   and   sympathy   during\nthe sickness and death of our husband,\nand  brother\u2014\nMrs. W.  A   Rockliff\nMrs. E. Austin,\nGordon    Bennett.\nW. Bennett.\n(11027)\nMercury\nCoal\nClean, Bootless Coal. Give lt\nt trial -and satisfy yourself of\nltt  value.\nAlso cord wood and slabs any\nlength.\nJust Phone 797\nFor Prompt Delivery.\nRENWICK'S\nTRANSFER\nhad virtues, and that there were Qualifications to most classes of seemingly absolute  facte.\nSerenity and happiness could be enjoyed from tiie relations or -affection\nAiia.ng i.-uin iitumaie uom&ci ot  i-uu-tn-\ner and pupil.\nU8E8   OF   HISTORY\nProf_ Harvey cautioned his hearers\nnot to go to the history class wlht a\nset and dry doctrine that they Intended to illustrate at the expense of the\ntruth.\nHistory, he said, had notable uses,\nIt was first an Introduction to citizenship. Xt was, and had been, a\nschool of political wisdom. One great\nwriter described it as \"philosophy\nteaching by example.\" Napoleon studied history  and geography  before re-\niutmu-\u00a3    -_.e   nuty   \u2022_<*    tue   wuw.\nI believe the greatest lesson to be\nlearned from history Is patience,\"\nstated the professor. \"No real student\nof history believes you can make c\nconstitution ln a day, or remake human nature  ln a generation.\"\nAH history came back to the people.\nIt  Illustrated cause  and  effect,  and\nwhenever there was need, some group\narose   to  give  leadership.\nIt taught, witnuuv u.tuj, lt was the\nbasis of the moral sciences, lt held\nup the torch of truth.\nOne didn't have to teach that one\nchuicn wus ngnt and another wrong,\nor that both were right or that both\nw<#e wrong The tragedy of history\nas bue writer remarked, was that lt\nwas not so often a contest between\nngnt and wrong as a contest oe._wt-t.-i\nright  and   right.\nMother use was that_.it lent appreciation   to   literature.\nIt also lent appreciation to travel.\nPROBLEMS    OF   DEMOCRACY\nBefore teaching history, said Prof.\nHarvey, one should take a look at the\nsociety In which he lived, and the educational system ln which he worked\nThis was supposed to be a democracy\nBut sometimes demands were inconsistent with one another. Education\nand propoganda were not consistent\nwith one another, nor were liberty and\nequality.\nCould one express In dollars and\notnts what he got from- history? \u25a0\n\"How does the beef-stesJc become\nthe pupil In your eye?\" ho asked ln\nreply.\nAdmitting a development In history\nfrom god to greater good, a people\nwere arrived at democracy. But unless they believed that they had arrived at the greatest good, they must\nadmit there should be further change.\nHELPS  IN. TEACH1NO\nProf. Harvey gave numerous sugges-\nlons as to teaching history, soma, of\nthese being, to know one's subject, to\nknow what one wanted to teach, to\nknow what the children didn't know,\nto get a common denominator between\ni-ieoo two gtuunda anu use every e_-\nfort   to   get   this   adjustment.\nHe said biography and romance\ncoiiid bt; U83CI ixt mutnlznH\u00ab toe sud-\nJect and create a vivid Interest. One\nshould emphasize those characters that\nwere good, and those incidents that\nware Important ln the upward climb.\nGLANDS  DID ITf\nNickel opened 18.26 and clofcd S8.Q0,\noff 25 cents and Sherritt Oordon was\noff 15 cents at 96.70. Sudbury Basin\nclosed off 16 and $6.25 Ventures was\noff ten and minor changes were had In.\nother  issue*  at  the close.\nAttention in oils centered around\nAJax. It opened at 11.33, went to $1.45\nhigh and cloeed at (1.42. Under leadership of Mayland weakness developed\nin other oilr, with closing figures 5\nto 15 below Prlday, A. P. Con, closed\nunchanged at #2.66. Southwest Pet*\nclosed unchanged at tl 25 with Utoe\nrest of the l>st uninteresting.\nTurner alley has bright future.\nThe following statement was made\nby Thornton Edwards, vice-president of\nthe new Standard Oil Trust, while\nmaking a personal investigation of the\noil industry ln Alberta\n\"Turner   Valley   ls   one   of   tho   few\nfields ln the world which ls producing\nthe high  test crude gasoline which ls\nin  very  few years going  to be a very\nmportant aitlcle ln the new prooessea\nof manufacturing  gasoline motor  fuel\nurner Valleyr product will be shipped\n} all parts of the world to be blended\n:1th   lower  grades  of  refined  gasoline\no   bring   the   product   toth-e   standard\nc-manded by aeroplane motors and so\nforth.\nSpuds are $2.66\nPer Barrel Down\nin the Maritimes\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 20\u2014Tha W<WMI\nauxiliary of Bast Trail KtMton\nat the' home of Mrs. O. O. Chi\nSecond, avenue when final arrant\nmenta' were completed lor tha ti\nsale of work\nCaptain W. O. Richard* d\u00abUt\u00ab\na short, interesting talk during %\nafternoon.\nRefreshments    were    aeiTed    Rt\no'clock by the hostess.\nFREDICTON, N. B_, Oot. 20\u2014A price\nIncrease of about 10 cents per barrel\nfor potatoes Is being offered at points\nof loadine In the province, lt was\nstated yesterday. This brings the price\nto t2.ee por barrel, the highest of the\nseason. The increase took place during\nttte past two or three days. The New\nBrunswlofc price Is about one dollar\nless than that now being offered In\nMaine.\nDespatches from Maine state that a\nnew high mark for the year has been\nreached also in that state, wltSu the\nAroostook product selling as high as\nt3.85 per barrel ln many localities.\nDueto a shortage of frost proof storage facilities, the producers there are\nnow offering thousands of barrels In\ntheir anxietv to get the tubers off\nUieir hands before oold weather sets\ntn. Operations were affected by & fall\nof from 3 tc 4 Inches of snow yesterday, flurries of which were experienced\nIn New Brunswick the same day following a heavy rain.\nHarvesting of late varieties will finish everywhere by next week, and there\nwill be the usual slackening off with\nthe producer* holding for. higher prices.\nPOTATOES DROP\n25c Per 100\nSell at $3.75 on Local Market\nRabbits and Chickens in\nGood Supply\nB.'C. Plumbing &\u2022\nHeating Co.\nAgent* for\nALBKBTA    CLAY   PRODUCTS\nSEWER  PIP?  6 DRAIN  TILE\nMM Baker Street Nelson, B.O.\nA large quantity of rabbits and\nchickens, as well as beef and pork,\nwas for sale at the Nelson market\nheld on Vernon street on Saturday.\nQuantities of grapes, Swiss char\nand scarlet runner beans were also\non   the  market.\nOrapes sold for 15 cents per pound.\nPotatoes dropped to $3.75 per 100 lbs.\nPrices were:\nTomatoes,   per  4  lbs i  .25\nRadishes,   per   bunch     4)6\nBeets,   per  lb  .06\nBoans,   per   2  lbs  .25\nLettuce,   per heed    .05\nOreen  Peppeis. per 2  lbs  .85\nPotatoes,    ptr    100   lbs 3.78\nApples,   per   nox   $1.00   and    1.25\nGravenstein apples, per 0 lbs. \t\nGrapes per lb  \\\\%\nPlums,   ptr   basket    *\t\nPeaches,   per  3   lbs\t\nCarrots, per 6 lbs ,\u201e\nOnions,  per  bunch\t\nPickling Onions, per 2  lbs\t\nCelery,   per   bunch    )i..\nEgg   Plant,   each 10\nSquash, each  15 and .%%\nCorn,  perdoz  ,g|\nLeeks, per head  \u201e .05\nEndives, per bunch  \\\\\\\\\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 20\u2014Touring car\nowned by James McClure of Trail was\nconsumed by flames about a mile out\nof Trail \"om the Columbia Gardens\nroad between 5 and 0:60 p.m. today.\nThe cause of the fire was not known\nby Mr.  McClure.\nOn Chilly\nFall\nMornings\nServe hot coffee, toast,\ncereal and jam on top of\nthe toast It makes a delicious breakfafct.\nNelson Brand Jam\nMcDonald\nJam Co.\nWanted\u2014Plums,\nGreen Gages    i\nW1NMPEU   IIUKKM   WIN   CITY\nWIHNIPEC, Oct. JO\u2014Winnipeg TH-\n-re von the mythical senior city rugby\nIn\u2122____J_i_y,' Prof. Harvaf made' \"'\"\"If1\u2122\"1''. S\u00abtutday . lum with \u00bb\nlight ot the p.ycI_o-analy\u00bbt\u00bb *ho are ;tart'ln\u00bb,i8\u201et0J victory over UnlvtW-\nre-rtalng hUtory, and made liberal quo- \u00bb^ \"an,t\"?a'* A bur L \"i.\" \"*\"'.\ntatlon. (rom a recent work that at- '?ncet_'r'?\"' u\u00bb \u00bbVP,5or\"d by \"\"\".P\ntrtbuted the achlevementa of many X^t^JT*\"!'1\" to \"\"i H_!\nof the world-a great to pituitary and b_'lcl[ *Bd. -eltow m team, charged\nother aland. ' .through   the  young   varsity  aquad   al-\nHarry' Ch.rle.\u201eorth, *cr.Ury of th.  f^e^^^J* \u00bb\u00a3__\nTeacher,  federation, .poke   atietlr on  Ih\u2122i^ndpi_^t ,_lrf\"_! JSl'^!,\nproblem, of tt. teacher.  \u00abJ\u00bb a\" sSZ^T^tT'o^t\nbattering Bengals.\nThe World's Most Thrilling\nVillains\u2014\nAlive\/        Talking!\nFthe mysterious\nDR. FU\nMANCHIT\ndQtiramount\nQidure\n\u00a7ax Rohmers famous character!    Alive!\nWorking his fearful   mystifying plots.\nAll Talking Comedy.\nTalking.\nowu weita-ts.\n'Kisses'\n\u2022sessaet\n\t\n_______\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1929_10_21","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0404906","@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":"1929-10-21 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1929-10-21 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\/1.0404906"}