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C. \u2014 MONDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER .!,  IM'l\nPIVE CKNTaa   t  I'mrV\nnMN^H\nSimon Forms M^Liberal Party\nPACIFIC HIDES FATE WUKlu .JEHS\nWeds Senator\nMOTOR HEARD\nOVER ALASKA\nEARLY SUNDAY\nFilm Actress\nif\nSuccessful    Should\nLand Early This\nMorning\nFOG, RAIN, WIND\nPREVALENT AT SEA\nPangbom  and  Herndon\nLeft Sunday; Seeking\nBig Cash Prize\nTORIO, Oct. S (Mond*;) (AP)\n\u2014Tb* east gray expanse of th*\nNorth Paclflo ocean, wltb Its\nlot, rain and wind, held th*\n<f*t\u00ab today of th* flyers Clyde\nPang-born aad Hum Demon,\non tMlr flight to the lulled\nElates. TMr had not been sighted . sine* yesterday when they\npassed over Nemuro, 250 mile*\nnortheast ot samushtro Beach,\nstarting point of their, attempt\nto span the Pacific In a single\nnicbt.\nBut th*. noise of an airplane\nmotor waa heard Sunday over\n(False. pass, Ut th*. Aleutian\nisland*, Alaska, possibility exists\nthey may be sighted by a ship.\nbut even thl* wa* considered\ndoubtful.. Their rout* Is north\nOf the frequently-travelled great-\n. circle route of steamship Une*\ntetween Seattle anil Yokohama.\nHad all (on. well, th* fliers\nUM* morning shmld m* I* the\n\u25a0MshMrtoMd mt Dutch Harbor,\nMM miles from the beach from\nwhich tbey roared away at 7:01\na. as. -yesterday (5:01 M. E. ST.\nSaturday). From Dutch Harbor\nthey Intend to strike out over\nth* Oolf of Alaska for th*\nCatted stales, but It was uncertain where they would first\nsl*ht tlw cout Une.\nFO-LOW VALLEYS\nShould this happen north of Vanoouver Island, depending largely on\ntha weather, It wag thought probable they would go Inland and\nfollow tbe -valley* Into central Washington. Otherwise they would follow\nth* shortest rout* to tbe United\nStates directly  to Seattle.\nShould a sufficient amount of\nfuel remain after reaching Seattle,\nthe flyer* expect to attempt to\nshatter the non-stop distance record of Mil miles set by Russell\nBoardman and John Polando on\ntheir flight from New York to Istanbul. Wenatchee, Washington, tbe\nhome of Pangborn's mother, Bolae,\nIdaho, or Salt Lake City hav* been\nmentioned as possible landing places.\nIf successful they are expected to\nland In the United' Stales som* time\nafter 5 a. m. tomorrow (3 p. m.\nT. s. T. Monday). Tbey would be\nth* first to apan tb* north Pacific\nla a single night and eligible for\na 131,000 prize offered by a Toklo\nnewspaper for a non-stop flight from\nJapan to th* States.\nTO INVESTIGATE\nPOLICE ACCOUNTS\nTwo Officers Temporal.!? Suspended\nFrom Police Headquarters\nIn Varirouver\nVANCOUVER, B. C., Oct, 4.~CMo\nauditors are conducting an invsstl\nistlon  Into  accounts  of ths  police\ncourt clerk's office at Cordova street\nheadquarter* relative to alleged discrepancies In records of fines paid\nby   nnnvlrt-er!    p-prwms\n. In the meantime, ths council's\nspecial reorganisation committee has\nordered temporary suspension of two\nofficials ot the department, Walter\nFirkins, assistant to tbe court clerk,\nsad C. J. Blddle, accountant. This\naction, It Is stated, ts taken merely\nla order that the'auditors may have\na free hand ln their work, awl does\nnot reflect ln any way on the of fl\nclals concerned.\nRIOT VICTIMS\nARE BURIED\nASSURED WORK,\nSHORTER TIE\nLABOR'S WISH\nFederation  Sees  Winter\nUnemployed at Seven\nMillion\nLEAVES   FOR   ENGLAND\nBliu Landl posed for this picture\nbefore departing for England to\nbring back to Bollywood ber mother\nand her stepfather, count Zahardl\nLandl. Tho film actress claims descent from Empress Blaabeth of\nAustria-Hungary.\nDOLE SYSTEM IS\nNOT SUITABLE\nOrganization   F o r s c c s\nModification of Volstead\nAct   in   the   U. S.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR\nHOLDS STEADY\nCAR HAS A DOUBLE\nDOSE OF BAD LUCK\nON BALFOUR ROAD\nTurns Out to Avoid One Car\nBut Hits-Another; Then\nOff Ferry Landing\nAfter colliding with a ear st\nWfllaw Fol*t whsn forced suddenly\nto turn out because the car in\nfront of him stopped, Saturday e?e-\nnlng, R. M. Hart, Calgary motorist.\nhad a further Instalment of bad\nluck when his weakened steering\ngear failed to function at the Nelton ferry, with ths result that he\ndrove through the rati and hla car\ntoppled  to. the beach below.\nTh\u00ab first sccldent happened\nabout 7 pjn.. Mr. Hart reporting\nto tbe provincial police that the\ndriver Just In front of him stopped\nsuddenly without giving any signal.\nTurning out suddenly to avoid\nhitting that car, be found himself\ncolliding head-on with a car from\nNelson driven by Oscar Holm. Tbe\nHolm car was put out of commission and required th\u00ab services of\na  \"wrecker\"   from  Nelaon.\nMr. Hart's car was apparently\nstill ln working order, and he cams\non for Nelson, his \"Jinx\" getting\nInto action again as be drove on\nths ferry approach.\nVAKCOjtTVER. B. C, Oct, 4.\u2014\nWags maintenance, shorter work\nhours and assured employment were\ndemanded today by the executive\noouncil of the American Federation\nof Labor to meet winter unemployment, which lt estimates at 7,000,-\n000.\nIn Its program, placed for approval before the federation convention\nhers, . the council said lt foresaw\nmodification of ths Volstead act. It\npromised to continue its fight for\n3.79 per osnt beer.\nFirst on Its legislative program\nfor the coming session, lt placed a\nmeasure to limit the use of court\nInjunctions  in  labor  disputes.\nOpposition to a sales tax was\nvoiced along with approval of high'\ner taxes on \"great wealth.\"\nPHILIPPINE INDEPENDENCE\n. Philippine independence wss. favored, as was a federal eosl com-\nmlsiion to regulate ths bituminous\ncoal Industry, Bankers wbo advocate wags cuts were sternly erltl\nclssd.\nWfcgr maintenance was described\nss a levee against further unemployment, but there wss no mention of\nrecent wage cuts among several\nleading Industries.\nIn Its program  for  those  out of\nwork   tbe   oouncil    recognised    the\nneed .for reflef, but made no reference to federal  funds ln  this con\nnectlon.\nIt ssld ample provision for the\nneedy should be made ln every\ncommunity \"both from private snd\nmunicipal  sources.\"\nFrom a summary of oomplusory\nunemployment insurance systems tn\nEngland and Oermany, the council\nconcluded   such   a    legislation    was\nOPTIMISM RULES\nABOUyUESNE\nDistrict Joyful Following Announcement   They   Will\nBuild P.G.E. Branch\nQUESNEL, Oct. t\u2014News ot the decision or renew construction of the\nP. O. K. between Quesnel and Prince\nGeorgo wu received with great Joy\nhere.\nFarmers welcome construction as\nIt wlll afford them a local market\nfor their produce. Hay, grain, and\nroot crops were exceptionally good\nhere thla year and there Is an\nabundanw  available.\nTie backers and timber men snd\nothers are anxiously awaiting word\nthst work will commence. It Is estimated that approximately, two million new ties wlll be needed as well\nas -a larg? quantity of bridge timbers.\nStruggling homesteaders hope to\nfind employment on construction\nwork.\nESTEVAN. Beak., Oct. 4\u2014In flowsr-\neovered caskets, borne shoulder high\nby 18 of their comrades, and followed by -a solemn procession . of 600\nmen, women and children, the three\nminers who were victims of police\nMillets la. the strife riot here Tuesday went to tbelr laat resting place\ntoday Ui a little' cemetery -tali a\nmile nflrth of Blenfalt.\nThe dead were: Julian Jryshko,\nBleniait; Nick Narwan. Taylorton,\nand Fate Warkual, Blenfelt. Jryshto\nUld Narwan were killed during the\nfr\u00bby.. Warkunl died of wounds ln\nWeyfcurn Oeneral hoepltal early Friday morning.\nGANDHI  GOES  TO  CBUECH\nOANT-ERBClt*, Eng., Act.- 4 (.\\P)\n\u2014Mabotoa - Oandhl attended the\nevening ' service '- In Canterbury cathedral, - mother church of the An-\ngltoan faith, today, 'and is', with\nbowed head.\nWheat and Cotton in\nU.S.A. Will Be Used for\nFood and Clothing\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 4 (API\u2014\nThe I. s. farm board's bulging\nstores of wheat and cotton were'\noffered Saturday to national relief agencies to dull the edge of\nwinter's unemployrwn distress.\nAa much as. la needed will be\nreleased, either for Aeah or deferred payments, to make bread\nand clothing >\u00abr the needy.\nB.   C.  riSHtRMEN   RITIRN\nTO THEI* BOATS TODAV\nVICTORIA. Oct. 4.\u2014Salmon flab\nermen of the west coast of 'Vancouver Island go back to tbelr\nboats tomorrow, ha vine reached an\nagreement  with   the   ealterles.\nThe fishermen, yrent on. strike*\nasking 10 cants a fish aa against\nfive cents which they were betne\npaid. Under an agreement reached\nthey will'get six cents.\n(Continued on  Page Three)\nFalls to Death\nPORT ARTHUR, Ont., Oct. 4 \u2014\nFalling 300 feat on to the railway\ntracks In s rock cut near port\nColdwell. east of here, secondo\nMoschetta, 31, was Instantly killed\nSaturday. Member of a roek-cut\ngang, he was running back to eee\nthe results of a blast, when hs lost\nhis balance and hurtled to his\ndesth.\n10 Alleged Rioters\nAsk Jury Trials\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. - C.. Oct.\n4.\u2014Committed for trial from Praser\nMills, 10 alleged rioters ln ths strike\nat the plant of tbe Canadian West\nera Lumber Co., Ltd., appeared In\ncounty court and elected for jury\ntrial at tbe fall assize court next\nmonth. BaU was fixed st |1000\neach.\nThs disturbances occurred some\ndays ago, Tbe strike is still in\nprogress.\nCharges Cheap Labor\nCanadian Factories\nWASHINGTON. D. C, Oct. 4.\u2014\nRepresentative J. W. Collier, Demo-\ncrst, Mississippi, todsy let fly at\nths suggestion United states industries were being sstbllsbed In Csnada because of a lower wage scale\nln ths Dominion.\nROBERTSON   GOES   TO  OTTAWA\nWINNIPEG, Man., Oct. 4. (CP)-\nSenator GWeon Robertson, Dominion minister of labor, and Hon. T.\nG. Murphy, minister of ths Interior,\nleft hers tonight for Ottawa. Agreements between the Dominion snd\ngovernments of sll four western\nprovinces for unemployment relief\nprojects were reached st a series of\nconferences attended by the two\nministers at Victoria, Bdmonton, Re<\ngins snd Winnipeg.\nHE-IDS   NATIVE   SONS\nNIW WMTMIN8T-BR, B. C., Oet.\n4.-\u2014Aid. John Bennett of Nsnatmo\nwu elected grsnd factor of ths\nNative Sons of British Columbia at\nthe closing session of the grand,\npost convention here*.\nPARACHUTE JUMPER KILLED\nLEXINOTON. Itan., Oct. 4\u2014 (AP) \u2014\nFreddy Lung, n.*tlqnally-known stunt\nnler. wss killed saturdsy when' hts\nparachute opened too late after a\ncrash with s_.otl.cx plSne,\nPound Sterling closes 5.\u00bb Below Friday's Final Figure;\nRites     During     Saturday\nNkw TORK, N- T-. Oct. 4.\u2014\n(8y ths csnsolan Press)\u2014The\nCanadian dollar held steady\non Saturday, closing st 07V.\ncenta on local foreign exchange markets, after losing\n>;2 cent at ths opening.\nDuring the week ending ssturdsy, ths dollar loet S'\u00ab\ncents In Unite* states funds,\nbut since Wednesdsy lsst had\nnot fluctuated from day to\nday mors than \\ cents, although for brief periods of\nseveral days Its movements\nhsd been somewhat wider.\n. The pound sterling closed\nat 93-K.i oh local foreign\nexchange markets, ,Vi cents\nbelow Friday's final figure,\nbut \\\\<. cents above Its opening quotation yeeterday.\nNATIONAL LIB\nPARTY LATEST\nMOVE, BRITAIN\nParty Would Give Whole-\nHearted Support to\nPremier MacDonald\nELOPED. BY   AIRPLANE\nAfter eloping by airplane snd firing through X blltzerd over the\nSlerrss. Benstor Tenant Tubbe of\nSen PranclMo his Just married\nOlivia Plllsbury, helreas daughter of\na Pacific coast telephone and telegraph  magnate.\nCONSERVATIVE IS\nBELIEVED ELECTED\nPRESIDENT, CHILE\nHu  Comfortable   Lead;   10\nAre Reported  Kilted\nIn Riots\n. SANTIAGO, Chile, Oct. 4. (AP)\nTen persons . wtre . unofririaiiy\nreported   killed   In    rioting   tn\nChile's   presidential   election  todsy.   Partial   returns  iste   todsy\nIndicated thst Dr. Juan Estebsn\nMontero,   Conservative,   hsd   re-\n<*lwd  st  least  60  per sent  of\nths votes   cast.   A   candidate   te\nrequired   \u00bb?  the  constitution   to\npoll   half  of   the  total  number\nof votes for electlsn.\nHesdquarters  of  former  President\nArturo  Allsssandrl,   radical,   refused,\nhowever, to conoede Montero's election.\nFifty persons were reported to\nhave been wounded and some 300\narrested ln tbe election disturbances. One man wss killed ln a\natreet riot ln Santiago snd another\ndied during sn attack on the Montero  headquarters here.\nOANO   MEMBERS  ARRESTED\nAVERUX PARK, N. Y., Oct. \u2666.\u2014\nThree members of ths Vincent Coll\ngang of New York, and two women\nwere arrested here tonight sfter a\nPitched battle between the gangsters and state troopers and. New\nYork City detectives ln which more\nthan 3.1 shots were fired.\nTHREE ARE KILLED\nSEMINOLE, okla., Oct. 4\u2014Palling\nfrom an undetermined cause soon\nafter it had taken off, a plane\ncrashed and burned here today, killing three men. The dead \u00abre Jack\nWhltten, pilot; Eddie Autrey snd\nHerry Moore, all  of  Bemlnole.\nBRITISH PREMIER\nWILL RUN AGAIN\nFOR SEAHAM SEAT\nLaborites Forget Differences\nand Ramsay Willing to\n, Run There\nSRAHAM HARBOR, Eng.', Oct.\n(AP)\u2014The Murton miner's lodge\nand Murton branch of the tabor\nparty, both of whtch are affiliated\nwith the Seaham division of the\nparty which repudiated premier\nRajBMy MacDonald laat week, todi_\ndreU-d to nominate the prime .mln\nlater ss Labor candidate for the\nSeaham   division.\nThe Murton organisations\nnounced they will sA the divisional\nexecutive of the party to call s\nspecial meeting of delegates to re\nconsld-r Jts whole position regarding\nths prime minister because of the\nnarrowness of the decision at the\nrecent Wheatley HUI conference,\nwhen a resolution calling on him to\nresign was carried by 40 to 30 votes.\nThomas Luke, secretiry of the\nMurton branch of the Labor party,\n\u25a0eald he asked Mr. MacDonald Friday\nIf they were free to nominate him\nand the prime minister answered\n\"yea.\"\nTha prime minister now represents the Seaham division ln parlla\nment.\nDIES    AT    VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER,, B. C, Oct. 4\u2014The\nfuneral was held Saturday sfter\nnoon of Angus E. McLesn, a resident of Vancouver since 1924, who\ndied  Wednesdsy.\nCRASH   CALSES   DEATH\nDUNCAN. Oct. 4.\u2014When the csr\nhe was driving skidded on the road\nearly Saturday, Reginald Thomas\nRidley, 34. of Cowichan Bay, re\noeived Injuries which resulted ln\nhis  death.\nAssociated Boards Secures Holiday\nFares for All Canadian Students;\nNelson Board Started Ball Rolling\nAs a direct result of representations by the Aasoeiaved Boards of\nTrade of Eastern British Columbia,\nteachers and students ln attendance\nst Canadian schools snd colleges\nbut with their home* in Canada\nwill enjoy special transportation\nrates for the Christmas and Easter\nholidays, a privilege that wa* cancelled during the war. Advices on\nthe mat.t#r have Juat been reoelved\nby J. R. Hunter, acting commissioner\nof the Associated Boards, from the\nCanadian Passenger association,\nwhich includes ail the Canadian\nrailways'. The special rate Is \"fare-\nand-a-4uarter for round trip.\nORIGINATED  IN   NELOON\nThe move to get the pre-wsr practice of students rates restored originated with the Nelaon board of\ntrade, Ven. Archdeacon Pred. H.\npraham bringing up the matter\nlast spring at a council luncheon,\npointing, out that ior want of this\nrate, Kootenay students attending\nthe norm il schools st the coast and\nBritish Columbia ur..verslty sometimes found tt imp* ecu cable to return to their homes for the luterlm\nholiday periodn. The board took up\nthe matter, and it was presented\nst the Associated boards convention at cranbrook in *_ay ln a Nelson resolution, and was adopted.\nIp due course ths \\-ta Commissioner Fred A. Starkey forwarded\nthe AstoclStad Boards resolution to\nV. R. DesBrisay. assistant passenger\ntraffic manager of tne csnadlan Pacific western lines, at Winnipeg, and\nto IL Creelman, passenger traffic\nmsnager' of ths Canadian NStlon\nweatern lines, also \u25a0\u00ab Winnipeg, snd\ntbe matter went to the Canadian\nPassenger' saaocistlon, with ths final result of action on, a national\nba*H.\nParticulars of the action decided\non J&y tjie Canadian Passenger association,- are contained ln * letter addressed to commissioner Star-\nkey, but received by Acting-Commissioner Hunter, from **t,retary Joseph B. Parker, secretiry of \"\nHOUSE MAY CLOSE\nDOORS WEDNESDAY\nElection May Be Before\nend of Month; Government Seeks Return\nCanada Will Retain\nGold Standard Says\nthe Prime Minister\nLONDON, Oct. 4. (AP)\u2014Premier Bar-assy MscDonsld ls expected to announce the dissolution of parliament Tuesday or\nWednMdav, uld a genersl election to take plsce before the\nend  or this  month.\nThe plsn, Is sss understood\nover the week-end. Is (or tbe\nnatlonal government to seek s\nnation-aide vote of confidence\nand the return, of Its supporters to the bouse of commons\non a platform of broad' powers\nto the prime minister to meet\nthe national emergencies.\nA   manifesto  Issued   oner  the\nweek-end   hy   81r   John   Simon,\nlesder    of    the    liberal    group,\nwhich  recently  hss' been  rebellious   toward   the   leadership   of\nRt.   Hon.   David   Uoyd   Geor\u00bbe,\ndeclared thst .he snd s number\nof   other   Liberal   members   of\nparliament   were   tired   of   the\nstarch   for   formulae   and   were\nforming    a    new    organisation\nwhtch . would give  whole-hearted\nsupport  to the. prime minister.\nMr. MacDonald  was understood to\nbe ldath that ths surrender be such\nas to allow,, them to remain in the\ncabinet, which might bs at the cost\nof   their   allegiance   to   Mr.   Uoyd\nGeorge.\nArrangements for the formation of\nthe new party were announced tonight to be welt advanced. It probably wlll be called tbe \"Natlonal\nUbersls'  party.\"\nThe regular Uberal headquarters\nIssued a statement tonight ssylng\ntbat the news was viewed there\nwith \"complete equanimity,\" and\nthat sir John waa regarded as\nConservative trying to keep one\nfoot in the Liberal camp for purposes best known to himself.'1\nFAIL 10 LOCATE\nSTRIKE LEADERS\nRegina Court Scene of Appearance of  Estevan\nPrisoners\nt,tern lines, division ot the Canadian\nPassenger   association,\nTHC    UtlUM'fMrNTS\nUnder date of Winnipeg-. Septem\nber 24. Secretary  Parker writes:\n\"Ycur, of June 11 last addressed\nto Mr. crcclraan ana Mr. DesBrisay.\nenclosing resolution of tne Associated Boards of Trade of Eastern\nBritish Columbia, relative to reduced fares lor stuaen_ desiring to\n\u25a0pend Christmas and Eater holiday,\nat their homes, vras referred to this\noffice   for   attention. ,\n'.'This subject, has received our\nsympathetic consleeratlon and the\nfollowing arrangements wlll be made\nfor teachers and students between\npoint. In Canada, effective for next\nChristmas-New Vlir'i holidays\nnamely:\n\"Application\u2014Round trip tickets\nto be Issued between all points In\nCanada to non-realdent teachers\nand students attending schools and\ncolleges In Canada, wano desire to\nreturn to their homes during the\nEaster and Christmas\u2014New Tear*,\nholidays.\n\"Pare basts\u2014 plrst class one-way\nfare and one-qusrter for the round\ntrip with minimum of gl, except\nthat if the one-month round trip\nfare la lets than tl the latter wlll\napply.\n\"D*tu of sal, and return limits-\nSuitable dates or sale and return\nlimits to be designated by tbe Canadian Passenger assocntion. which\nwill be sufflcently wide ln scope to\ncoyer'the vacation perlpda of the\nprincipal cduntlonal institutions\nand  publlo schools.\n\"Scholars eertlflc\u00bbtes\u2014 Canadian\nPassenger association standard form\nof school certificates to be supplied\nto the various .'schools aad colleges,\nthe reduction to apply only on surrender of such certificates properly\nfilled ln and signed by principal of\nthe school or college.\n\"It jives me a great deal of pleasure to be able to comply with your\nrequest, and I trust you will pardon   the  delay   ln   replying,   which\nREGINA, Sask., Oct. 4-Appearance\nof the 13 miner, arrested during the\nEstevan riot In court here Saturday\nnjornlng. a atstement by H-n. M. A.\nMacPherson. attorney-general, that\nthe mine strike ims organized snd\ndirected by men affiliated with the\nred \"Internationale,\" and failure of\npolio- to yet discover the where,\nabouts of Martin Porkln, Sam Scar,\nlett and James Sloan, strike lea'ders\nwere developments over the week\nend arising from lsst Tuesday's riots\nit Estevan, when three miners were\nfatally Injured. The miner, who appeared In court here Saturdsy will\nnot be tried until the first week of\nMarch,    1832.\nWhen they cime befora His Honor\nJudge J. w, Hannon In the district\ncourt, nine were admitted to ball.\nH. E. Samwon, K. C. opposing the\nadmitting to ball or the other tu*\nSAVES $102^000\nVICTORIA, Oct. a). (API _ Mai\nt-elser, retired Victoria business ra,\u201e\nwas on his way home by train today, congratulating himself on his\nnsrrow escspe from losing \u00bb102,0O0\nIn securities to agents of sn international bunco ring. Ulscr left here\nwith Mrs. Lelscr and his secretary\nA.   J.   Carleton.\nMr. and Mrs. Lelser came here\nrrom Reno, where they were to\nhave given the securities to the\nbunco men Thursday. Sacrsmen\npolice snd tlie state bureau _\ncriminal identification warned them\nIn time to prevent the \"pay-off,'\nbut the bunco men escaped, evidently learning their plan bad failed\nSchool Boys Locate\nCache of Gold\nWINDSOR, ont., Oct. 4_A each,\nof partially-treated gold, valued at\nabout 14000, was discovered by row\naohool boys while playing ln tbe\nwoods near Sandwich and turned\norer to police today. \u2022___ g_i_ Wai\nIn small tin containers.\nNO BLAME ON GOVERNMENTS\nOSHAWA, Cat., Oct. 4 (CP)\u2014Two\nprominent Literals refuse, to critl-\ncl\u00bb the Conservative provincial government for th-\u00bb preeent depression\n'at a meeting here -sturday. Hon. w\nE. M. Sinclair, k. C.. house leader\nof the p-i-tl', and , W, H. Moore.\nLlberei m. P. for the riding\nOntario,   both   declined   to   lay\nOTTAWA. 6nt, Oct. 4 (CP)\u2014Canada retains the\nKold standard, and it ia not proposed to abandon it.\nThis in effect, waa the statement of Premier R. B.\nBennett last night. Persistent rumor that the Dominion proposed to abandon the gold\nstandard was drawn to the attention of\nthe prime minister. His answer was\nemphatic. The government had not\nchanged the position taken when news\nof Great Britain's departure from the\ngold standard was flashed across the\nocean.\n\"Canada has not altered the position taken when the announcement\nwaa made that England had departed\nfrom the gold standard, nor do we -\ncontemplate so doing,\" the prime minister declared.\n\"We have appealed, and not in vain, to Canadians\nto conserve our gold supply to meet whatever strain\nmay be placed upon our resources by reason of our\nforeign commitments, which are payable in gold and\nwill be honored accordingly.\nKing Charges Government\nHas Practically Wiped\nOut   British   Preference\nCalgary Contractor\nIs Shot Fatally\nOLDS, A1U., Oct. 4 (CP)\u2014\nOlvld C. Blow. S3. Cslgsry\nbuilding; contractor, wsi killed\nInstantly when'shot by t companion while dock-hunting Saturday near Besrberr.v. northwest\nof here. Mr. Blow was s_eom-\npsnled on Ute hunting trip hy\nhis two sons, Harry end Arthur,\nand Park OUver, nncher of the\nOld, district. Police said thM\nthe shot tint earned Mr. Blow's\ndeath wis _ccldent-l!r fired by\n\"Mr. Oliver. Dr. Hartmsnn, coroner, decided the death was an\naccident and no Inquest would\nbe necessary.\nALBERTA TOWN\nHAS BIG FIRE\n$30,000  Damage  Done;  Hotel A mom? Buildings Burned at Bellis\nEDMONTON, Alta., Oct. 4\u2014Patuwd\nby a itlfl breeze, fire *w\u00abpt through\nti> main business section of Brills,\nAlts., esrly this morning. The town\nhotel, a hardware store, general\nstore, sn Implement warehouse and\none dwelling were destroyed. Loss Is\nestimated about 930,000.\nThe cause of the blare, which\noriginated in the ImplemeaJ. warehouse, is unknown. Bellis tsniittutted\n94 miles nortr_:__st of Edmonton.\nLABOR COUNCIL\nHEAD ARRESTED\nTORONTO. Oct. 4\u2014Oeorge W. Mr\nCollum, preslttent of tlie Toronto\nnatlonal labor council and secretary-\ntreasurer of the Canadian Electric\nTrades union, was arrested here Saturday for the Montreal police on a\nbhargj of conspiracy. The charge\narises out of a aerlei ai rxplontons\nsome weeks ago which cau*ed heavy\ndstTwge to the Montreal Light, Heat\nand Power company.\nMoyle and Allen\nLand at Skagway\nSKAGWAT. A), ska. Oct. 4-Don\nMoyle and Cecil Allen, California\naviators, landed here today at & p.m.\n(6 p.m. P. 3 T.) sfter they had\nfailed to find a field at Juneau on\nwhich they could bring down their\nplane. The avlitors vert} on thrlr\nway from Fairbanks, Alaska, to Tacoma. Was t. Thry hopped off at\nFairbanks Saturday noon, on a 500-\nmlle trip to Whltehorse. Y. T.\nWould Have Canada\nPan-American  Body\nWASHINGTON,    Oct.    4    \u2014(AP)\nMexico believes U_t Canada should\nbe invited Into the Pan-American\nconferences, Jesus SUva Herseog.\nchairman of the Mexican del.gatlon\nto tne Pan-American commercial\nconference, said Saturday.\nCONFESSES  HAVIMi\nKKNOSHA. Wis, Oct. 4\u2014Frank\nOray, farm band, wu arrested here\ntonight by Detective inspector Chr-\nles Rock and Detective P;rr7 Tualer.\nTbe officer* aald be confessed slaying Herbert Boecbert, 30, Burlington\nfarm, and three others on tbe Boa-\nchert farm today.\nPIONEEft   LADY  PASSES\nVANCOUVER.  B.  C, Oct.  4.\u2014Mrs.\nAnn   Williams,   aged   67,   widow   of\nW.   L.   Williams,   pioneer   Nanaimo\nresident,  died  at noon  Saturday  at\n\u201es the   home   of   ber   daughter,   Mr*,\nblame  on   the  otiier   parly   for   uie \u2022\u2022   D.   !..v.von.   BtepSflni\nProtests at Decree Fixing\nRate of Exchange;\nChanges Serious\nOTTAWA, Oct. 4 (CP)\u2014Declu-\nln. thU the result Is \"a sun-\nling Increase In the tariff rat*\naislnst foods from oreat Britain.\" and that the Brltlih pref.\n\u2022reiice haa belt p_--i_t_y \"wlp-\ned out\" on products of a t-Jasa\nm kind made In (ansax. Bt.\nHop. Maekenile _1nj. opposition\nleader, haa Issued a statement\nrritirtsinu two recent decrae*\nor the government.\nThe   first   flies, the   rate   of\nexrjiante   In   computing   values\nfor duty on goods Imported from\n. Great Britain at \u00abJ8 2-3 to. tha\npound.   Tbe   second   applies   a\nspecial damping duty to Brltlah\nImports of a kind or class mada\nIn Canada purchased at leas than\nH.86 2-3 to the pound.\nThese changes by order-ln-councll,\nMr. King asserts, \"represent a greater    variation    ln    pinadlan    flaoal\npolicy  than has ever  b.-en adopted\nby  sdy  Canadian  government  wltlt\nthe consent of parliament.\" \u25a0\nTM Uberal leader predlcta that\nthey WUl aggravate the difficulties\nof the preeent situation both In\nGreat  Britain  and  Canada.\n\"The recent decision of the government, or Oreat Britain to go ott\nthe gold standard has been followed\nby marked changes In our own tariff,\nwhich have been brought about by\norder-ln-eouncll. These chsnges hsv.\nbeen so bewildering in the rapidity\nof their occurrence that I have felt\nconstrained, before offering comment, to await whst would appear\nto be the fin.il decision of th*\npresent Conservative sdmlnlstration.\n\"Tne chapgej are so serious that\nI leei no tims should be lost ia\ndrawing the attention of the publlo\nta) their nature and inevitable con-\nsequences.\nMILLJURNS\nTIMMINS. ont., Oct. 4\u2014pjre winch\ndestroys, the Rudolph and McChea-\nney lumber mljl.on the outskirt, of\nthe city over the week end caused\nloss estimated al MO.ooo. The mill\nsituated ou the aide ot ihe Metaganu river, was rased.\nBaby Killer Taken?\nNEW TOM, oet. t-vinee*! coll,\nsort-voiced Bronx _-ng leader, waa\n\u25a0dentllled positively tonight. Dollea\nsail! \u00abl oho of the killers or th.\nHarlem baby massacre. Frank Glo--\ndsno. one of his followers. a!aj was\nnamed by a witness to the shooting\nas   one   -\u2022   four   m n   who   .-.nrsjea\n?o.,h __2_f,,oM*en W\"\"* '\"\n107th   street   last   August.\nUNEMPLOYED MOVE\nFROM  LAKE  HEAD\nPORT ART-Him. a,,,, . ,,,., 4_\nWith 100 men rrom Port Arthur ,nd\nPort Wllllsm leaving Mondav night\nfor pine, loo mllcs rast or Kenora.\nand tlie passago through lhe lake-\nhead last night of 100 \u25a0eu from\nthe \"Jungle camps*' ol the Don valley, Toronto, cn route to Hawk lake,\nnesr Kenora, first detmlte movement of workers to the camps oh\nthe route of tbe transcanada highway   haa  started.\nSalo of the Bunion\nDerby Fame Killed\nby Baseball Blow\n\u2022PASSAIC, N. j, oet. .-struck on\nthe b' by a baseball Patrolman\nJohn ,   c.    t\u201e   !>\u201e,_,,,   p_11<:,\n<\"\"5ar '\u2022   formerly  a  professional\nlong _l_t nee runn.r, died tonight\n8alo won the second of C. C. Pyles\n\"Bunion\" derby races from Ne*\nTon to Lo, Angeles for whirl, he\nreceived g'.O.OOO. In t: e t,r-1\nr--om     I oa     An,\u00ables    1 ,    Nc  ,\n\u2022 ' - ;.__,_c_ -..j__.\n Guide for Travellers\nNelson. B. C., Hotels\nWWVWVWVVWVW\nNELSON. B. C.\nSPECIAL WINTER RATES\nNOW IN EFFECT\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nSOIOt-M. aad Mn- O- L. Dtxlle.\nRuby. Wn.; H. J. Levenqua, W. 3.\nToatee, Trail: Mr. and Mrs. W. B.\nJohnstone,  Sllverton:  Mr and Mra.\nA. B. Fleener. A. J. Curre, Kaalo: Mr.\nnnd Mrs. J. X. Hutchinson, South\nBlooan; B. F. Phillips. Windermere,\nEngland; Joyce wamer, Nottingham,\nEngland: L. Clerk, Gray Creek; H.\nIt. Hon,, Oordon Dundee. Lethhrldie:\nMr. and Mrs. H. L. D Martin, P.\nphlnney, P. M. Elliott, O. _ lewis.\nT. B. Wllaon, Klmberley; J. H. Johnaon. B S. oreenwood, J. R. Anstls,\nH. A. Berry Robert o. A. clarlte. H.\ntt. Olllird. N. Holland, c. P Ballan-\ntlne. J H. Haalewood. Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. McKay, Mr. and Mrs. p. o. a_m-\netrong. J. T. Oukm, W- H. Burgees,\nB. W. MUler, A. Oray Parker, C. C.\nTyran, J. M- Kerr, w. Allan Dam-men,\nMr.  justice  and  Mrs.  W.  A.   Ms--\ndonald. T. Dl Uul*. W. O Metcalfe.\nJ A. Frtte, A. P. MacUan. J. W.\nBrenner, Vancouver; at L. Beta, O\nKurla, M. Napier, Calgary; A- Dufour,\nT. Woodaon, O 8. Mclntoah, Cranbrook; r. cnwtont. w. T. a. ow-\nman. J. H Lewie. A, twl\u2014y Modi\ncine Hat; R. t. Kennedy, Junes\nWatt. T. T. Reld. Toronto; M- J.\nnanagan, Montreal; Mr. ttstS Mrs\nT. L. Oroea. BdmontoB; Mlaa C. _.\nMantel], Brighton Bngland. Mrs. H.\nA. olllle ud eon, sirdar; R. 0. Crosby, Kuskanook; T. J. Alnawortb.\nHowaer; J. Boothem, Venllene, ont.;\nMr. and Mrs. A. w. R. WUky. T. *.\nHarrlaon, Vlotoria: R. John, Nelson:\nI Teaaler, Winnipeg; Poster Bcott,\nW. o. Mien, Oalt. Ont.; Ptwd O.\nPerry. Pemle; I_ H. Cola. Ottawa.\nClara   Swerteon,  Sandosi.\n, ssseweweeeessiess-feeeewe.\nWhere (he Gueills Kin&\ncUhe Savo^\nmasoiTi jciwBrr and poubt HtfriL\nMART ROOMS WTTB PRTVATB\nBATHS OR BBOWBW\nJ. A. KERR, Prop,\n_____\nr_r\u00bb---_.\nsaaaaaasssssssa\n***\nBAVOTl It. a. walte O. H\nHadedfe, J. Coecealn. Jack Baton.\nA. Neleon. X. Senkow, A. Ward. L.\nOetnsn. a Ml 8. Chandler, R. P.\nJecqueu. D. 0. Rourke. N. Perry,\nV. H. Drteon. J. A. Mccargoe. H.\nR. Potter. Calgary: Mr. and Mra.\nW. Pepper. P. 0. Hoffman. Byron\nFairchild. J. Oriffltha. A. M. Howell.\nMr. sad Mra. Ralph Oreen, E. R.\nHaa, I_ B. MoCuUy. J. Hill. James\nStewart, J. I. Uwta, W. 0. Man\nvamp, W. D. Jones and bob. C\nB. Hufty. Orand rorks; P. Macu\nlet. cranbrook; O. B. McKlnnon\nKlmberley; J. Amglln. M\u00bb. J- Mor\nrls. Trail, B. 0. Treves, Edgewood:\nCapt. D. and Mm _>arleoua. Oliver:\nW. H Davis. Neleon: Mlu Mary\nJohnaon, Seattle; too J. Bernard,\nSpokane; s. Reld. Boswell; J. Backer\nVictoria;  J. MUler, Nakusp.\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapolnte,\nProp.\nIM and eold water tn at)\nsteam battel.\nQUEENS;   M.   De   Foe.   Cestelger;\n9. Sopum. B. N. Dyiart, P. Ben-\nehalrd, C. Reran, P. Stanford. Trail;\nV. Cochrane; J. Strachan, Corra\nLinn; P. Mellour, C. Mellour. Spokane; J. Hamson, J. Lenton. Idaho;\nW. J. Shukln. Tarrys; Mr. and Mrs.\nB. creamer. Mlaa Rolson. Lath-\nbridge; C. Augustine. Kaalo; Ken\nohnaon, Otis Kaden. H. W. Barnett,\nH. Halg. Nelson; H. I. Kelly. -\nMcKean, Vsncouver; P. H, rrleeon,\nRenata.\nNEW GRAND\nHOTEL\nP. U KAPAI, Prop.\nWeekly   or  Monthly   Ratae.   eta\nsingle lie up: Doable I1.7J up\nWeekly or monthly rates.\nHot and cold inter ta all rooms.\nFbant M3       p. o. Boi imi\nFREE BOS MEETS EVERY IRAK\nDERBY COUNTY IS\nBLANKED BY WEST\nBROMWICH ALBION\nGuna   of   Sheffield   Club.\nTld-Bits for the Soccer\nFans Saturday\nBURY DEFEATS THE\nBRADFORD PLAYERS\nGrimsby Town Defeats Ar-\nWolverhampton\nBeats Southampton\nMADDEN\nHOTEL\nIAS. B. MADDEN\nA   HOMELIKE   IIOIEL\nIn  the  HEART of the  Clly\nMADDEN\u2014 A. Boeetto, E- laaato,\nHlllcren, Alt*.,; C. Moeee, Cranbrook;\nH. Hughes. Spokane; F- c. McDonald, Vancouver; J. R. Murphy, Vern-\nnoo; Jack Moore, Calgary.\nNBW ORAND: R. Beath, 8. Tar-\nclan, Nelaon; John Sbepllack. Rano\nMlpe; N; aawchuk, Corra, Linn: p.\nJ. B-nmens. H. L. Vaughan. Trail;\nMra. R. A Rusel. K. Nicholson.\nOpal Acklna, Pentloton: Mr. and\nMrs. Shkwerok, Coykendahle. O.\nHadded, P. Maculak, Cranbrook;\nB. Faantr, Lethbrldge; J. o. Lindsay, A. Dubois, W. M. Sinclair.\nVancouver; Mrt. Vera Wayaluk and\nDora, \u25a0 Canal nets; O. Hurl. Cal\ngary;   L.  Flndlsnd.  Corra   Linn.\nLOUDON, Oet. 4. (CF cable)\u2014\nWert Bromwlch Albion, now heading\ntha championship table In English\nlint dlvlaion soccer, showed how\nwell they deeerve this poaltlon on\nSaturday when they defeated Derby\noounty by 4 to 0. Shaw soared In\nthe flrat minute froft a penalty.\nOlldden and Sanford netted to In-\ntbe Albion's lead before the\nhalf. W. O. Richardson had the\nfourth ln the Both minute of the\nmateh.\nTbe gamea of the Sheffield duba.\non account of their closeness in the\naverages, were tld-blte on Saturdsy.\nThe Wedneeday anatched victory by\ntha one goal acored. Burgess secured\nIt after nine minutes ot play following aome bright work by the\nSheffield forwards.\nGrimsby Town did the bulk of\ntbe attacking ln the flrat half\nagainst the Arsenal and Marshsll\nheaded In from a corner. Arsenal\nattacked fieroely in the second half\nbut could do nothing right. Grimsby won by \u00bb to 1.\nBI'RV WINS AGAIN\nIn tbe aeoond dlvlaion mateh.\nBury, the pace-setters, were subjected at the outset to pressure by\nBradford City, but after tbla Initial\nburst, which brought them a goal\nthrough Mitchell, the olty faded\naway. Eddleatone equalised and Lindsay put Bury ahead Juat before the\nInterval. Eddleeton made' tha game\nsafe for Bury by scoring on a oenter from Lindsay.\nFifteen thousand ww a sens.\ntlonal beginning ln tha match between Wolverhampton Wanderers\nand Southampton. The Wolvee won\nby S to 1. Phllllpa took a long paes\nand after a daa_lng run crowned\nhis fine individual effort with a\nbrilliant goal for the Wolves. Two\nminutes later Hartin gave the\nSouthampton goalkeeper no chance\nwith a fast, rising ahot. Buttery\ngoaled foe tha Wolves and Arnold,\nHampahlro cricketer, replied.\nLINCOLN  CITY  WINS\nSouthend, la tbelr third division,\nsouthern section match with Clapton Orient, ware lucky not to be\ndeem at tha interval. Shankly, for\nSouthend, soorsd m tbe first minute after tha eross-over and repeated ln the tenth minute. Barnett, Southend, Jack, Orient, and\nShankly scored In the order named\nIn three minutes o\u00a3 'beetle play.\nPowler got the Orient!* second.\nA flawless defence, which successfully resisted a penletent Barrow\nattack, helped Lincoln City retain\ntheir position at the head by a\nmishap to Baldwin, who had to go\nto outside life. Riley scored for\nLincoln after 91 minutes of exciting football, the ball striking a\nBarrow baok and deceiving the goalkeeper. Following heavy Barrow\npressure, Thuiaby broke away and\nscored a simple goal after good\nwork by Hall.\nNELSON ASSIZES\nTO OPEN TODAY\nMr.  Justice  Macdonald  and\nMrs. Macdonald Arrive\nFrom Vancouver\n\u2022IBE NELStJN DAILY NEWS, NELSON,  B.  C.  \u2014  MONDAY MOBNDaO, OCTOBER XL  UM\nWrestler's Bride\nHONEYMOONING   IN   HONOLULU\nThe former Marie Elliott of Boston\nwas photographed aa she sailed on\na belated honeymoon wtth ber husband, Oua Sonenburf, heavyweight\nwreetler. Tbey ara beading for\nHawaii and poealbly New Zealand.\nORIGINALS CLUB\nHOLD GATHERING\nIN LEGION HALL\nDecorate Cenotaph and Major Rigby's Tablet at the\nCity Hall\nHOLLAND AGAIN\nCLUB PRESIDENT\nRossland to Be Next Meeting\nPlace; Plan Collection of\nWir Trophies\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vemon St. Phone\nH. ffuel-ck\nFifty Rooms of Solid  Comfort.\nHeadquarters (er Loggers and\nMioses.\nUse  The Nelson   Daily\nNews Classified Ads\nTraU. B. C., Hotels\nMr. Justice w. A. Kecdoneld. of\nVancouver, accompanied by Mra.\nMacdonald, arrived Sunday night\nfrom the ooast, registering at tbe\nHume.\nMr. Justice Macdonald will preside over the Nelson-Trail aasli.\nwhich open Mondsy morning et\n11 o'clock.\nThese cues for trial Include two\ndivorce actions, a petition to nullify a marriage, oar accident, and the\nother for rescission of a contract\nrespecting a house purchase.\nOther oeaea that are not down\nfor trial -will be the basis for motions.\nThere are no crlmlnsl esses for\ntrial.\nNELSON ATHLETES\nMAKE 65 POINTS\nIN TRAIL SPORTS\nJos Wallach, Pat Daffy Tak*\nHalf Mile and Quarter\nMile Races\nGIRLS ARE FIRST\nIN RELAY EVENT\nDenis Webster wins 880 Run\nand   Shot   Put,   Koski\nWins Pole Vault\nTOLD IN RIME\nWHEN THE DEPRESSION WILL END\nfill\nJNGTON\nCentrally Located\nTRAIL. B. C.\nA P. LEVESQUE. Prop.\nDOUGLAC\nHOTEL   9\nRooms and Bath\nE.   L.  Slid   A.  GROUTAGE,   Propi.\n\u25a0tram Heatrd\nThroughout\nHot ind Cold\nWater\nTRAIL, B. C.\nTht Royal Cat*\nCLASSIC RESTAURANT\nRefinement   and   Deileeey   PrevaU\nOPEN DAT AND NIOBT\nSpecial Dinner, 11:10 to \u2022 p.m.. tte\nSpecial Sunday Chicken Dinner SOc\nspecializing in Chop flaey and Noodles\nPRONE   IM\nUse The Nelson Daily\nNews Classified Ads\nAbsolute knowledge, I bave none\nBut my aunt'a washer woman's son\nHesrd a policeman on hla best\nSsy to a laborer on the street,\nThat he had a letter Just last week,\nWritten  In  the  finest  Greek.\nBy a Chinee*! ooolle In Tlmbur.tnn\nWho said that the negroes ln Cuba\nknew\nOf a colored men In a Texas town,\nWho got It straight from a circus\nclown\nThat a man In the Klendyke heard\nthe  now.\nrrom   a   gang   of   South   American\njews\nAbout somebody In Bamboo,\nWho saw  a  man who  claimed  he\nknew\nA  swell   srcVrty  female  rake\nWhose mother-in-law would under\nUke\nTo prove that her husband's sister's\nniece\nHsd ,\u00abw\u00bb.d ln a printed piece\nThat  aba  had  a  son  who had   a\nfriend\nWho could tell\nWhen the ctspreaalon Is going to end\n\u2014OONTOIBUTTD\nCelebrating the day which t_e\nfirst contingent of th* Canadian\nexpeditionary forces sailed from\nOaape Bay for Prance, the Nelson\nOriginals club on Saturday decorated the cenotaph on Vernon\nstroet, and the tablet to Major\nPercy Rigby at the city hall.\nIn the evening a meeting and\nbanquet were held ln the Canadian\nLegion at which vlslton from Trail,\nRossland, Oray creek. Bonnlngton\nGrand Forke, Salmo, Kaslo, Procter\nand Vancouver were preeent.\nPresident J. Holland and Sec-\nreary-tressurer G. K. Ashby. were\nreelected to offloe. Mayor Turner\nof Roaaland waa elected first vice-\npresident, and A. W. Anderson ol\nKaalo. second vice-president. Sir\nArthur Currie waa elected honorary\npresident, and Father Prench and\nArchdeacon Scott, honorary vice-\npresidents.\nAfter the Ijuelnese a largs gath\nerlng sat down to a nicely arranged\nbanquets when telegrams of best\nwishes were read from Sir Arthur\nurrle, Father French of Renfrew,\nOnt.. and Archdeacon Scott ot Qua\nbee. Father French waa the Roman\nCathollo chaplain and Archdeaoon\nSoott, Protestant chaplain. The latter -waa known aa 'Dear Old Can-\non Bcott.*'\nIt wu decided to adopt the red\nchevron ae the badge of the club,\nelmller to that of a Vancouver\nclub. Plana were also endorsed for\nthe placing of a wreath on the\ngrave of any member who might\ndie. A vote of thanks wu moved\nto Mr*. O. K. Aohby who made\nthe two wwathe which were placed\nIn the afternoon.\nRoesland will be tbe next meeting   place   and   plana   ara   under\nway   to  start   a   collection   of   war\ntrophies  at   that   city.\nOld  time   war   songs  were   sung\nwith A- J- Cleetosi \u00ab R\u00bb\u00bb1\u00bb'\"1 *\"*\u2022\nlng    a    prominent    part    ln    solo\nselections, for which FrM Hartwig\nacted   u   accompanist.\nWERE   PRESENT\nThose who were present were B\nT OOrady, Candadlan engineers.\nH. oerrlsh 10th hettellon; *>\nHow\u00bb. RCHAlH ECoop\u00ab. CFA\nc. W. Peas*. CASCMT-, R. *\u25a0\nioulton. \u00bb th battalion: J- Hollan<l.\nOK  Aahby. J  Hurst, A. W. Andet-\nB. Sbsrp. A. H Hugh... E. Strud-\nwlck. A. E. Deltas and V St T\u00abv\nlor.   7th   battalion:   P.  W.  Holmes.\nMr. Holraee wu a visitor from\nVanoouver.\nWATERS LANDS A\n211-2 POUND FISH\nTRAIL. B. C, Oct. 4.\u2014Piling up\na total of SI point*, IS Nelson\nhigh school boys and glrla came\nback from the 1981 TraU field and\ntrack aporta at Butler park Saturday wltb a total of six firsts. 11\nseconds and nine thirds to their\ncredit. Totals for tha other schools\nware unavailable tonight.\nFlnt plaoe posiuona were taken\nby the Nelson group In the shot\nput, pole vault, and the 880-yards\nduh in the Junior event*. In the\nsenior events, flnt* wen won In\nthe SSO aa* 440 duh. Nslson girls\ntook flrat plsoe ln the high school\ngirls' relay.\nFollowing are the results:\nBoys'  event.,   12   to   16:\n100-yard race\u2014Carl Haley, Trail\nCentral, tint: Roy Anderson, Nelson\nsecond: Denis Webster. Neleon, third.\nHlgb jump\u2014Orlando Pattlstella.\nlint, Carl Haley, Trail Central.\naecond; Roy Anderson, Nelson, third.\nShot put\u2014Denla Webster, Nelson,\nfirst: Andy Honchar, Trail Central,\naecond:  C. Koekl, Nelaon, third.\nBroad lump\u2014Carl Balllle. Trail\nCentral, first: O. Koekl, Nelson, second: Sidney Slncock, Rossland, third.\nPale vault\u2014-*. Koski. Nelson,first:\nJohn Ponha, aeoond: Albert Hey-\nwood, Trail Central, third.\nSSO yard*\u2014Denla Webster, Nelson,\nflnt: Donald HUI, Trail high school,\nsecond:  Harold Long, Nelson, third.\nOlrls' events, 14 to II:\n60 -yarda\u2014Irene Moorcroft, Trail\nCentral, first; Martha Crapeka, Trail\nCentral, -a*)\u00bb.nd; Dorothy Gibbons,\nNelson, third.\n100 yards\u2014Irene Moorcroft, Tnll\nCentral, flnt; Dorothy Gibbons, Nelson, aecond; Beatrice Matthews, Nel-.\neon, third.\nHlgb Jump\u2014Margant Crapeka.\nflnt; Irene Moorcroft, Tnll Central, second; Nellie Trueello, Rossland, third.\nBroad lump\u2014Martha Crapeka,\ntint: Sheila Forbes, Trail Central,\nsecond; Nellie Wright, Roesland,\nthird.\nBuketball throe- Dixie Edwards,\nflnt: Olive MIUs, second; Helen\nPenney,  Roesland, third.\nHigh lump, senior\u2014Margaret era-\npake, tint; Man Hudson. Tnll, seoond.\n78 yarda\u2014Tlna Toung. TraU Central, tint; Joan Hudson, Trail high,\naecond: Yvonne Oulllaume, TraU\nhlgb, third.\nBuketball throw\u2014Elizabeth Ed-\nwar-da, Roaaland, first; Yvonne Oulllaume, Trail, aecond; Delpbena Ce-\ntere, Roaaland.  third.\naecond; Georgle Read. Nelson. HUM.\n100 yarda, senior\u2014Tlna Toung,\ncentral, flnt: Jean Hudson, aecond; Margant Crapeka. TraU high,\nthird.\nRelay\u2014Nelaon, tint; TraU, -*-\u00bb*>\nend: Roaaland, third.\nBoys' senior events:\n100 yarda\u2014Leonard Richardson,\nTrail, flnt; Douglu Read, aecond;\nAlan McLean, Nelson, third.\nShot put\u2014Carl Balllle, Trail, tint;\nAlao McLean, Nelaon, aeoond.\nSSO yarda\u2014Jae Waillch, flnt; Pat\nDuffy, Neleon, aeoond: Wllfrled Christie, Rossland. third.\nBroad Jump-Carl Balllle, TraU.\nflnt; Dewltt McQualg, Nelson, second; Mtlsn Prusello, Rossland, third.\n330 yards\u2014Leonard Richardson.\nTrail, flnt: Douglu Read,, second;\nAlsn   McLean.  Nslson.   third.\n440 yarda\u2014Pat Duffy, flnt; Joe\nWallach.   Nelaon,  aecond.\nPole vault\u2014Carl Balllle, flnt; Arthur Forreet, Trail, _land; B.\nHontaad. Nelson, third.\nHigh lump-Joe Haley, first; Arthur, Forrest,  second.\nOlrls, 11 to IS, 76 yerde\u2014jcen\nDownie, flnt; bene San-.poon. aeoond;\nCatherine Mandevtl_, third; TraU\noentnl.\nHigh Jump\u2014Jean Downie. Trail\nCentral. fJret; Catherine Mandevllle,\nTfrall Central, aeoond; Florence Palm-\nquiet, Roesland, third.\nBroad Jump\u2014Jean Downie, first;\nCatherine Mandevllle, Second, Alma\nRommerdahl,   third.   Central   school.\nBasketball   throw\u2014Florence   Pslmqulst,   Rossland,   flnt;   Peggy   Mc\nGovern,    second;    Edith\nttilrd, TraU Central.\nBoya' events,  13  to 18\u2014\n76 yards\u2014Pat Holey, tint, Mike\nGeorgettl, eroond, Trail Central;\nBarry   Mathews,   Eut   TraU,   third\nHlgb Jump-^-Pst Haley, Tnll Central, flnt: Harry Kethewi, East\nTnll, aecond; Mike Georgetti, TraU\nCentral, third.\nBroad Jump\u2014 Norman Baldwin,\nBut Tnll, flnt; Robert Herman,\nTnll Central, second: John Hoodl-\nkoff. Eut TraU, third.\n440 race\u2014Michael Hroofcin, first,\nMike Oeorsettl, seoond, TraU Central;  Leonard Una,  Rosslsnd,  third.\nOlrls, 8-0\u2014\n38 yarda\u2014Dorothy Learz, flnt:\nDoreen Mlnton, aecond; Corinne\nBailey, third. AU eg Central school.\nHlgb Jump\u2014Mildred Slmms, Eut\nTraU, flnt; Mafslda Presarlo. Central, aecond; Connie Wiley, But\nTrail, third.\nBroad Jump\u2014Dorothy I_ai_\u2014g ft.\n0 ln\u2014Central flrat; Nbna winter-\nbottom, Central, aecond; Owen Herman. Eaat Tnll, third.\nBoya, t-t\u2014\n86 yarda, boya\u2014Ronald Simpson,\nflnt; Lome Tognota second; Burt\nAdan_on, third. AU from Central\nachool.\nHigh Jump, Lorn* T-ognottl, Central, flrat. Nick Turlk, Central,\naeoond; Oordon Ellis, Eut Trail,\nthird.\nBroad Jump\u2014Ronald Simpson. B\nft. 7 in., Central, flrat: Alec Llkten,\nEut TraU, seoond: wuiiam Smith\nBut   Tnll,   turd.\nBoya 10-11\u2014\n60 yarda\u2014Harold Covwdal*. flnt;\nAlbert Morel, second;- Nina Forte\nand Stanley Leyton, tl* for third.\nAll, of Central achool.\nBroad Jump\u2014Lome Kerr. It ft.\n6 In., flnt; mm Forte, second;\nEric  Douglu, third.\nBroad Jump \u2014 Hs\u00abl Dawdsley, t\n11 Inches, first; PatrlcH young,\nsecond: MUdred McKay, third. AU\nof   Central   school.\nHigh Jump\u2014David Oroves, |  fe_\nIO   REVIEW  GUIDES\nMlu Agnu Baden-PoweU, slater ol\nLord Baden-Powell, wbo hu arrived\nIn Canada to nvlew the Olrl Guides,\nwhich ahe founded In 1009. She wlU\ntak* up headquarters In Kitchener.\nOnt.\nCONCERT GIVEN\nIN AID CRIPPLED\nCHILDREN FUND\nRotarians   Commence   Drive\nWith Musical Evening;\nIs WeU Attended\nTo (liable them to oarry on wltb\ntha can for tbe crippl*4 chUdrrn\nof the district, the Neleon Rotarians\n\u2022opened a campaign for funda Sun*,\nday night, with a mualoil concert\nIn the capitol Tbaeee, aad reoalv-\ned a hearty raapoaae In the open\nlng of tbelr endeavor, as en-met\nable audience heard the fla* pro.\ngram, which Included. Instunaatsf\ntrio selections, vocal numbers vWIn\nnumbers and recitations.\nEric P. Dawson, prior to tbe pro*\ngram, gave an outline ot tba crippled\nchlldnn work which wu betas earned on by the dub. Tbe Nelaon\nRotations commenced th*lr activities\nIn tb* lnt*reat of tne crippled chlldnn In 1838. he aald, when tb*\nmemben voluntarily assessed Onm\nsecond; Lome Kerr, third. AU oflaelwa to aid a cau which wai\nCentral school. fbrought to their sttention.    Since\nBroad jump\u2014Lorne Kerr, 11 feet,, '\u25a0*.} tins they had apent 13604 on\nthe work. This rum wu apart\nfrom doctor's expensee whloh wen\ndonated. Mr. Dawsm alao paid\ntribute tn the medio profession\nfor Ite part ln helping to oan Set\nt Inches, flnt; Nina Forte, seoond;\nEric  Douglu,  third.  All of  Orntral\nKennedy, school.\nAU of  Central achool.\n-0 yards: Olrls 10-11\u2014MoUy Sutherland,  Eut Trail, flnt; - May McOovern, Central, second; Faith Honchar,  Central,  third.\nJUNIOR   RELAY   RACES\nOrade III. boys, Eut Trail achool\n\u2014Lewie Jones, James McLuckle, Tennis Ellis, Bob Edmonstone, Gerald\nBurch, Joe Bsko, oeorge Vaneveld,\nBUly  Maitland.\nOlrls. Orade II\u00bb. Eut TraU school\n\u2014Margaret Smart, Phyllis Downie,\nIsabel Watson, Violet Fletcher, Patricia Cady, Jean Loughery, Chrtata-\nbel  PoweU,  Wllma  Oraham.\nOrade IV., boya, Eut TraU achool\n\u2014John Bukovec. WiUle Smith, Alex\nCunningham, Jim Dolg, Steve Zuk,\nOordon Ellis, Nel* Meteor, Buster\nSmart.\nOrade V. glrla, Eut TraU achool\n\u2014Mildred falmms, Eva Yunker, Ruby\nCoee, Molly Sutherland, Bruce WU-\nHam*. Eileen O'Dell, Nellie Skub-\nway,   Dorothy   Wilkinson.\nOrade v., boys, Central scho__-\nElslo Batlatella, Lorne Mack, All-\nstair McKenzle, Paclflco Buna, Richard Holmes. Mlchul Wolfs. Donald\nMlchaely, Maurice Mawdsley.\nS. HORSWILL IS\nTO HEAD LEGION\nBADMINTON TLllB\nBroad    Jump\u2014Margant    Cnpaka.\nTrail,   flnt;   Lois   Boomer,   Nelson, \u00bb\".,  Inches, first;  Harold Coverdsle,\nAt ths Legion badminton meeting Friday night ofllosn for both\n\"A\" and \"B\" sections wen appointed. Stanley Horswlll wu elected to the presidency of the Joint\nclub. Miss Palethorpe wu appointed seentery-treuurer for \"A\" club\nwith Mr. crowther, H. McTier and\nMn- Faulkner u tbe floor committee.\nMiss Irene Laughton tuee ths\ndultes of aecretary-treaserer for \"B\"\nclub and Miss Grace Laughton and\nMr. Moon will be the floor committee.\nthe disabled chlldnn.\nBach Rotarlan hu pledged a das\nto  tha  drive  which  concluded\nOotober 34.\nThe program opened with nun-then\nby an Instrumental trio oompoaed\nof Mlaa Owen Lowery, piano R,\nStratton, ceUo and A. B. Ollker,\nclarinet. Their numbers, \"Lexts-a\"\nLouis Galne, and \"Mlnlatun Tr'i\nwen both well reoelved. A* a eloe<\nlm number to the sertae th*\nrendered \"Jagger \"bachl*d\" by Weld-\nman.\nArthur Stringer wu wall received on his vocal solo, \"Tbe Call.\nHe wu acoompanled by Mn. C. W\nTyler. Mn p. Paddon netted \"IT\nby Rudyard Kipling, and u an\ncore.' \"A uttle Quaker\n\"The Poor Man's osrdan,\" and\nLove Your Truly.\" wen rendered b|\nMiss Tieadora Rhodw ss vocal num.\nben. \"Scene de Ballet\" by D. Bar-\nriot a violin solo, wu wait nnder-\ned and gained much applauu foi\nIta artist. Mra. Gladys Webb fbtter\nMise Gwen Lowery accompanied Mn\nFoster.\nMn. 0. W. Tyler nndend\nthe Heart la Young,\" aad aa en-\ncore \"After All,\" both receiving mer\ntted applauu.\nThe ushers wen P, F. Payne, W\nE. Wesson, C W. Tyler, T. I. Le.\nvaaaeur, A. O. Gellnu, J. T. Andrews and I O. Nelaon. M. |. Sarn-\ner acted ss door beeper.\nT. R. PICKARD WINS\nGOLF CUP AT TRAH\nTRAIL, B- C, Oet. 4\u2014T. R\nPlckard defeated W. Davison to win\nthe Directors' oup golf competition\nhen today. In -the seml-ftnals T\nR. Plckard beat w. P. Dunbar and\nW. Davison beat j. J. Flngland.\nOLASQOW, Scotland. Oot.\n(API\u2014Olaagow wu quiet again Sat\nurday night after tbe wont rtotlni\nin years, polios restored order Sat\nurday.\nBiggest  Kamloops Trout  of\nthe Season Taken at Procter  on  Pearl  Spoon\nWeak Men\nAND ALL DISEASES OF MEN.\nTake em Remedies\nPamphlet* \"Ms Know Iby-\nulf.\" and Dlsuau of Men.\"\n'Ills of Women,\" also ..kin\nsnd Blood Dl**s*<a witn Dl-\naxncala Form and Advte* ln\nplain envelope Free by mall.\nMau order and Tablet Bern*\nENGLISH HERBAL\nDISPENSARY LTD.\nIS9S  Devi. St.. Vaecoover. B.C.\nE*Ub||abei_M_Y\u00abOT.\nbUehi\nW J waten ot Nelaon landed\nthe largest Kamloops trout of the\nseason at Procter Sunday afternoon,\na giant weighing 31 1-3 pounds.\nJohn Wallsch  ot  Nelson wss with\nThe big fish, which struck Just\nu the snglen wen about tb quit\nafter being thoroughly soaked and\nchilled, stsrted by going straight\ndown 300 feet, and then by a rush\ntaking out more line, till he had\n300 feet out from the rod. He wu\nfinally brought to host after about\n10 iplnutes' battling.\nHe wu caught on a large pearl\nspoon.\nMRS. GRAHAM OF\nTRAIL GOES OFF\nROAD, CASTLEGAR\nTHAU*. B- C . Ort. 4\u2014Drt^Bf hw\near toward the ferry it cuttefir\nMri Anfly Orfchua of TraU, went\novar tba bank. th. car turning completely over, Saturday night about\nIfl o'clock. Un. oraham vu brula-\n\u00ab4 badly, while b\u00abr son, Clark, had\n\u00bb bad cut on his head, her daughter, Helen, austelned a broken arm\nand Pearl Callen reoelred minor\nface cute.\nThe party were picked up by Mr.\nShield*, of Roaaland,' who drove\nthem to TraU where Clark and Helen were immediately eent to the\nhoepltal.     Mm.   Oraham   and   Mlsa\nSHOP\nFIRST\nAmong the Ads!\nWO matter what YOU intend buying-^ new frock\nl\" \u2014a new car or your dailv provisions from the\ngrocer-SHOP FOR THEM FIRST -in the advertising columns of the Nelsn Daily News - learn what\nthe day's markets afford and where the various offerings may be had at the most economical of prices\n. . . Read these announcements consistently, they\npresent the day's \"market news\" ln the most convenient possible manner and the infornnuon, 'hen\nacted upon, will materially reduce your household\nexpenses.\nIhe merchants of Nelson plaoe this store\nnews In the columns of Th* Dally News because they KNOW that It ts the moet convenient means of giving TOU all tha nam\nebo-j.' their Tailed offerings . . . They\nKKnu too,-thai I'- this war they mak*\nyou uopplng fu mor* pleasant and profitable.\nThe Nelson Daily News\nem\n TBE NELSON  3_O.Y NEWS. NELSON. B.  C.  \u2014 MONDAV  MOEN1NO,  OCTOBER i.  MM*\nWINNIPEG MAN\nRECALLS GOOD\nOLD 1DAYS HERE\nScrib on Power Plant Rains\ni  and   Cottonwood   Falls\nBring Memories\nRECALLS SPORTS OF\nYEARS  '87 OR\n'98\nRecalls    Election    of    John\nHouston;   Winnipegger\nHopes Visit Again\n,    Te the Editor of the Nelson Daily\nHews:\nMy Dear Mr. Editor: In the Nel-\n.eon Dally News of April St. under\nthe   \"Seen   and   Heard   In   Nelson\"\n. column by J.B.C., I noticed that he\nreferred   ln   his   wanderings   around\n, town to the old power plant ruins\non the. banks oaf Cottonwood Pslls\n| creek Also he refers to the dilapidated Chinese shacks In the dsys\nof the old Kail Mines smelter.\nThla article was sent to me by\nan old friend of mine. This friend\nend I lived In Nelson ln 1807. He\ncame across this eopy of the Nei-\n. eon Dally News ln his eastern home\nBABYS\nwhere he tt wrw IMnf end tut\nIt to me. It has broufht beek\nto me many memorise of the oM\ndayt. end io Mr. Sdttor, Uke \u25a0\nsecond Rip Van Winkle I am golni\nto ermve a ben Item on yow time end\nlook Into %faa poet fer a few moments when I was young and Melton wee young end hummed with\nill the activity of a mining camp\nIn a mining boom, end the Joys\nand sorrows Ot humanity that ln\nthoee den wondered around the\nhills turroundlng Neleon.\nMy old friend says ln hie note\nthat he would like to be eittlng on\ntbe edge ot my bunk again smoking hli first pip* ln the onot so-\ncalled dilapidated shacks which were\nnot in thoe daya all occupied by\nChinamen hy any means, and I\nwonder If J. B- C. tn his wanderings\nwandered Into my old shack where\nI spent many happy daya and Incidentally earned good money by\nworking at the smelter weighing ore\nand dipping copper out of the rev-\nerbratory furnaces. What a wealth\nof memoriae come baok m I id\nwriting.\nSPORTS ON BAKER STREET\nLord Aberdeen wae governor- general of Canada and on July 1 we\nbad af great celebration, either '97 or\n'98\u2014hone races up and down Baker\nstreet, rock drilling contests by tht\nminert, and logging chopping contents by tbe lumbermen, and believe\nm# tho \"double\" and \"single\" work\nof the rock drilling men wae an\neye-opener to the eastern visiters.\nThe boot races and the regatta end\nthe bare end Jessie and Betty and\nAlice Tlmberllnes, et el- A lot of\npeople have paseed now and are\nprobably prospecting somewhere In\nthe celestial regions, and yet I can\n_ee some of the old-timers walking\n.long Baker atreet with a bunch of\nlilacs to some lady love, both long\nsince sleeping.\nThen old Mr. Bliss, end hie dear\nold bald heed, tb# machines were\nold Edison bl-polar machines, Jlmmle McPherson the dynamic, hard\ndriving middle man that could run\nthe plant well and the old switchboard where a fellow could have\na Uttle sleep while the machines\nwere droning away during the beautiful moonlight spring nlghte.\nSMELTER  SUSPECTED\nI remember one night someone\nshut off the valve at the top of\nth* hill and the big pipe remnant which J. B, C. noticed, collapsed. The smelter people were\n.uspected ei they were taking water\nfrom the eame creek and needed\nwater for the tleg flumes. There\nwae a shortage of water tbat year\nI remember the red fish that\nuaed to run up Cottonwood creek,\nt used to stand on the little wooden\nbridge and spear them. They were\nlike giant goldfish. And old C\u00bbP-\ntaln Fit* Stubbs, the old gold com'\nmlstloner, end I remember a bull\nrunning into hie log eagln one day\nand I remember that he, ln his old\nWar bt the Air\nON THE Alii TONIGHT\nMODERN   riaHTIM-   PLANE  IN  SHAM BATTLE\nA vivid impression of tbe deys of war Is given ln the above picture\nwhich wee taken during maneuvers at the air pageant held recently st\nOramllngton, near Newcastle, England.\nIn Agony from Sheer Weakness\nWrs. Sp_.f\u00abm Dawson firmly before, sta w\u00abM not ba lmt\ntoday if slit had mt taken DwWffians' Pink Pis (tonic)\n\"When my cbudrca were man, writes\nMn. Sputgeon Dawson, Woherton,ObL,\n\"I wm so weak and run down I could\nnot walk across tbe floor wiftoot fabt-\nrag. Even the slightest eaertkm was toe\njftneh. Days were spent ra agony from\n-heer weakness, and nights\nfearful thro_gh\nhours.\n| It seemed is if nothing\nwhatever woold help me .. .\nDr. Wafiams' Pink ___h were\n' recommended, and aftrr taking\ntwdvc botes I found strength\nreturning and my stomach ahfc to handle\nfood again. I had not known wbat a\naeal wis for months.\"\nWhat would you give to be able to cast\naside your weakness and substitute vigorous physical strength? That is exactly\nwhat many ___n and women have been\nenabled to do by the uk of Dr. WiNmu'\nPink Pffls (took).\nThe iron and other elements In these\ntome pills increase tbe amount of haemoglobin or oxygen-carrying agent in the\nblood. The increased -supply of oxygen\nkindles We in all yonr tissues\njust as a draft of fresh air\nkindles a fire. The result is a\nbetter appetite, a feeing of\nwell-being, restful sleep, and\nability to do your work\nhappily.\nGet a supply of Dr. WHliams'\nPtnk Fifls. Take them faithfully. Don't\nlook for immediate remits. Sometimes\nthe beneficial results come almost at once\n\u2014but not always. Give this tonic a fair\ntrial and you will be rewarded\u2014 just as\nother Canadian men and women have\nbeen rewarded. 50 cents a package,    tt\naristocratic voloe demanding that\nthe bull be ordered out of his office\nattd John Houston ot count, president of the Nelson Electric company and mayor of the town, editor\nof the Nelson Miner, and frontiers\nman par excellence, a picturesque\nfigure indeed and whin hi was\nelected mayor of Nelaon I remember\nthe torchlight procession down Baker\natreet and finally John wta tender.\nly put to bed. And then the poet\noffice of Ollker's store where we\nall waited for the English mall\nto eome tn and what stories one\ncould tell of the different people\nthat waited for their mall.\nEXPECT HAND OCT\nWeU some day my old friends and\nI will corns to Neleon again, and\nwhen we do we shall expect the\n\"damn reporter*\" and the town\nbend down to meet us. We hop* that\nwt will be able to walk, but I\nam sunt tbat the sight of Nelson\nthe eight of Nelson, Ite beautiful\nmountatna and lovely lake will bring\nback the wine of youth to our\nveins and will again enjoy ourselves, and when the council gives\nui a binquet we will try and give\nthem some history of old times\nand when everything is quiet my\nfriend and I ttk* two ghoeti will\nonce more walk the hillsides around\nNelson together. We will visit old\nhomes, we will crow the old bridge\ndown on the flats, and we will see\nmy old shack whether it la there\nstill or not, we will heer our dogs\nbark again and we will look up\nthe hill and aee t.h\u00ab smelter and\nhear the old crusher thumping\naway below the sample room and\nwo wlll hear the cars dashing from\n.the ore bins to the blast furnaces,\nand hear Paul Johnson, and H. C.\nCroasdalt, and the little Welshman,\nboai of the blast furnaces and Andy\nthe giant blacksmith hammering\naway at his anlval, and then Mr.\nEditor, ws will go down, to Gray's\nsaw mill and watch that for a\nwhile, and tben we will take our\nold boat up the lake and camp\nalong those lovely shores.\nWe will see old Porcupine Bill\nrolling up the ttreet and Scbol.y\ncoming off night shift at the\nsmelter and a host of other names\nfimlllar only to old timers.\nDear old Nelson, Venice of the\nNorth, long may she prosper and\ngive creation and Its bleeslngt to\nthousands  yet  unborn.\nWell, Mr. Editor, you must forgive thla literary effort, but J. B. C'b\nlittle article stirred up brain cells\nlong since almost petrified.\nYour very truly\n\"OU) TIMER\"\nWinnipeg, Man., Sept. SS, 1931.\nFOCH   DEAD\nMONTREAL, Oct. 4\u2014 Aocidente\nclaimed the lives of four Montreal\nwomen today. Dead in auto cwehee\nwere Mrs. Annie Brar.ler, 51, and\nMrs.  Mercelln  Pabre,  40.\nSANDON LABOR\nMEN ASK MORE\nRELIEF PLANS\nIncreased  Relief to Married\nMen  on  Per  Capita\nRatio\nASK RELIEF ORDERS\nON BASIS OF CASH\nInsisit That Wages Be Put\nBack at $4 Per Day;\nCut Present Hours\n(Standard Tlaas) <\nNN   FBOOBAMS\n6;00-_robestra\u2014KOO, KHQ. KOMO,\nKOW, KOA. Direction Stat enttj-\n(Trsns.  from   Ch_ag_>-\nC 30\u2014Program\u2014KOO, KHQ, KOMO,\nKOW. KFI, KBL, KOA. Mete\nquartet: orchestna. direction\nRsnk Black.  (Trena.)\n7:00\u2014Express\u2014 KOO. KHQ. KOMO,\nKOW, 171. KSL. KOA- PUno\nduo; Phil Otanen tnd Victor\nAntes; novelty orchestra en-ens)\n7 3C-Ct_setaough Real Folia\u2014KOO\nKHQ. KOMO. KOW. tfl, KBU\nKOA. Bursl bend.  (Trsns.)\nS-oo-.Togre-m\u2014Amos 'n' Andy\u2014KOO\nEBQ, KOMO. KOW, KBL, KOA.\n(Trans,  from  Chtcsgo.)\n8:15\u2014Vermont Lumber>s<*s\u2014 KOO.\nKHK.   KOMO,   KOW,  KPI-\n8:30\u2014Demi Tassi Rarue\u2014KOO, KHQ\nKOMO, KOW, KPI, KBL, KOA\nOus Amraelm'e orobeetra; Loy<_\nWhiteman, soprano; Donald No-\nTla, tenor; Dive Marshall, baritone\n00\u2014Bouquet of Melodlea\u2014 KOO,\nKHQ, Orchestra direction Joseph Hprntk.\n9:1*\u2014Adventures of Sherlock Holme,\n\u2014KOO, KHQ. KOMO. KOW\nKFI. KSL. KOA Richard Oordon\nLeigh  Lovell.   (Trans.)\n9 45\u2014Melody Land, KOO.\n10:00\u2014Tlu Road Show\u2014KOO, (KHQ\n10:80) 30-plece orchestra direction Mahlon Merrick; John and\nNed,  masters  of  ceremonies.\n10.00\u2014Hen flaehee\u2014KHQ. KOMO.\nKOW.   KPO.   KPI.   Sam   Hayes\n11:00\u2014Lofner-IIarrls dance orchestra\n-KOO. KPI.\n1J:00\u2014NBC   organ   recital\u2014KOO.\nKrac ian rBAN-cisco slo l\nMl m; 81 c: 1000 w\n8:00\u2014 Concert   ensemble\n8:18\u2014Edns.   Fischer,   Piano   Moods\n8:30\u2014fltudlo   program\n7:00\u2014Program\n7:30\u2014Ginger   band\n7:46\u2014Musical Crosswod Purzle\n8:00\u2014Blue Monday Jamboree\n10.00\u2014On.   Time's   16   Men.\n10:20\u2014Anson  Weeks'  orchestra\n11 *.0O\u2014KOIN   dsnoe   orol-ieefire\n1130\u2014KOIN   Slumber   Boat\n13 no\u2014vagabond of the Air\n9*00\u2014Bouquet of Melodies\n\u00ab:l\u00bb\u20146b\u00abIoek    Holmes   adventures\n\u00bb.-4\u00bb\u2014eylv\u00bb leboes\n10:0O\u2014The Boad Snow\n11 \u00ab>___ner-Harris  dance   orch.\n13:00\u2014NBO   organ   recital\nKVI TACOMA 7M k\nSM.I m; 78 e; 1000 w\n10:00\u2014Studio prognm\n10:18\u2014Aneon Weeks'  orcheetra\n11:00\u2014The White wiaard\n11:16\u2014MUl   Hogsn's   orchestra\nASSURED WORK,\nSHORTER HOURS\nLABORS DEMAND\n(Continued  from  pafe  One)\nunsulted\" to the American wags-\nearner.\nCoupled with this, however, went\nblasts at owners and employers of\nindustry for falling to \"offer either\na plan or a remedy, for the evil of\nunemployment\"\nWORK  OR THE DOLE?\nThey would be to blame, the\ncouncil said.. If compulsory unemployment laws were enacted.\n\"It must ,be work or unemployment insurance,\" the council eald,\nsesertlng much of the trouble tn\ntbe nation's industrial mechanism\nwae due to the \"unequal distribution of the nation's Income \"\nOnly 1,000,000 persons would remain to be taken care of thla winter, lt was concluded, If the 3,000,-\n000 employers, excluding farmers,\nwould only employ on an average of\ntwo additional workers each.\nExtension of the public buildinc\nprogram, the strengthening of unemployment agencies, preferences for\nworkers with dependents and keeping\nyoung perwms ln school were additional steps suggested to help alleviate  the  unemployment  \"crisis.\"\nROCHESTER HAS\nBIG LEAD IN THE\nUTTLE SERIES\nBeat St. Paul 2-1; Redwings\nHave Three Wins to\nSt. Paul's One\nST. FAUL. Minn., Oct. 4\u2014Bo-\nchester. international league champ-\nlone, took a commanding Wad In\nthe little world series br defeating St. Paul, 1 to 1. today. TM\nRedwings hold an advantage of\nthree games to one.\nOeorge pucctnelll's heme run In\nthe ninth Inning with one out and\nthe ecore tied at one-all, proved\nthe  margin  of victory.\nSt. Paul scored first In the fifth\nsnd Rochester tied lt up In the\nmth.\nRochester    J   \u00bb   0\nSt.   Paul     17   1\nSmith and Florence; Setts end\nFenner.\nJudge Stewart of\nHanna Passes\n\u25a0ANNA. Alta. Oet  4\na weak of .-run. _ -Ll _________\u25a0\nbecause of 111 heilth, Judge .'\nStewart died ken thle evening fol\nlowing a heart attack.\nJudge Stewart was born Is PilM>\nid-ward  island ann ee tint tMmM\nweet   nrsetlaan   leer   Is   ,______\u25a0\nweat   oversees   __   _   ____________\nHlnth   Battalion,   ts.   \u25a0    \u25a0>.. M^MM\npromoted to ilttteiiarrt oolo-sil duf-\n!_r entire service. He wee _____\u25a0\na  district  court  Judgs  following  hie\nreturn from overseas.\nGettwgji\nNights Lowers VMaiRy\nIf you feel old and run-down from\nGetting Up Klghts. Ksrvousfteia,\nNeuralgia. Lumbago, Leg Palna, \u00a3\u00bb-\nzlnees. Burning Bladder or Kidney\nAcidity, use quick-acting Cystex\n(Slae-ieg). Often stope trouble in tt\nhours. Guaranteed to work satisfactorily or return empty box end get\nmoney back. Only 76c at drufctuti,\nSANDON. B. O., Oct. *\u2014The Ban-\ndon brunch of the Independent\nLabor party recently held, a well attended public meeting and two\nresolutions were unanimously adopted and ordered to be sent to Premier\nR. B. Bennett, Premier 6. F. Tolmie,\nRt, Hon. Gideon Roberteou, Wm.\nK. Baling, M. P., Captain J. Fits-\nslmmons, M. P. P., snd Dr. Lyle\nTelford.\nAa the unemployment situation\nIn Sandon haa become more acute,\nand as the direct relief furnished\nby the government to msrrled men\nle not sufficient to meet their every\nday needs, and as msrrled couples\nwith large families receive no more\nasslstanoe than a m\u00abn and wife with\nno family to support:\nTherefore w* the cltieens of Sandon,\nIn meeting assembled request that\nImmediate attention be given to\nthe urgent need of Increasing the\nrelief to married people on a per\ncapita ratio per family, and the\nrelief la Issued by order on merch-\nante for goods, instead of ln currency, thereby hampering the economical purchasing of goods, be lt\nfurther resolved thst the relief be\npaid in oash.\nRKNOIXTtON No. 2\n.As the wagee for work have been\ncut from 14 per day to $2 per day,\nnotwithstanding the assurance given\nby both premiers, Dominion and\nprovincial governments that there\nwould be no reduction fn wages.\nand ae this reduction in wages will\nonly intensify the more fundamental causes of the economic conditions that exist therefore be it resolved tbat the relief work be given\nout at the rate of *4 per day, and\nthat the houra per day be cut ln\naccordance with the present remuneration.\nNo Fuss or Bother\nTelephoning long-dittante it ttuier\ntoday thaa ever before. Yost get yoxtr\nnumber with almost at little delay\nat with a keel call. All-Canadian\nlines carry your vtict directly tt persons in British Columbia, Alberta,\nSaskatchewan and Manitoba.\nAsk thc Long Distance Rate Clerk\nfar rotes aad iaftrmaim.\nLONESOME?\nG7\u00b0a }HEN you get homesick for old\n^-^ voices and old places, a call back\nhome over the long-distance telephone\nwill put your heart at rest again.\nTalking by telephone is the next best\nthing to being together. A voice from\nfar away is as clear and unmistakable as\nwhen it comes from a neighbor's home.\nKPO   BAN   FRXCIKCO   gM   k\n440.D  m;  M c; MOO w\n11:00\u2014Melody-   Men\n\u20228:15\u2014Community  cheat  pla;\n(1:48\u2014Henry Starr, U-40 Boy\n7:00\u2014Boh Klelr'a flyncopatori.\n7:_\u2014Cecil end Sally\n8:0O\u2014KPO   Salon   orcheatra;    Alice\nOentle, soprano\n8:4B\u2014Program\n9 00\u2014Looking  Olass   program\n10:00\u2014News   flashes\n10:18\u2014Program\n10:20\u2014KPO  Drama  ouild\n10:8o\u2014Tom snd Dudd\n11:00\u2014Norman's San Franciscans\nKNX HOLLYWOOD 10*1 k\nSSSA m; 105 c; 5000 w\n6.0O\u2014Newe\n6:18\u2014\"Tom and Waah\"\n0:48\u2014Cheetcr Mark-art, organist\n7:00\u2014Frank   Wa-btnafae   and   Hon\nArchie\n7:1--The Ad Lib Man\n7:30\u2014\"The    B-altor    Californians\"\n8:00\u2014Davis Treasure  Ship\n8:30\u2014Violin choir; clslre Mellonlno,\npianist;   Calmon   Lubovlskl,   director\n9:00\u2014Rev. Ethel Duncan\n9:15\u2014Ail-Year   Club   program\n9 .30\u2014KNX   dance   ensemble\n9:43\u2014Newa\n10:00\u2014orchestra\n11:00\u2014New Inn\nHeadquarters for\nWinter Fuel\nWe carry Gait, Imperial Lump, Kleenburn, Amis,\nDrumheller, Crow's N\u00abrt and Mleha) Coals. Alto\nBriquettes, Petroleum Coke, and Wood of all kinds\nand lengths at all prices.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nSpecial Prices given on quantities.\nPHONE 33\nCould\nD. W. SUTHERLAND\nPASSEUROWNA\nEx-Mayor   111   Some   Time;\nLived  in  Kelowna  for\n25 Years\nKELOWNA, B. 0, Oct. 4\u2014Daniel\nW. Sutherland, president of Kelowna\nFurniture compeny, and K-elowns\nMotors, Ltd.. prominent In civic life\nhere nearly 25 years, died at his\nhome at noon today sfter a long\nIllness. He ls survived by his wife,\ntwo daughters snd a son.\nMr. Sutherland entered \u2022 civic life\nshortly after coming to Kelowna\nmore than a quarter century ago.\nHe served on the council for 34\nyeans, is of which he hsd beau\nmayor by scclsmatlon, He wee\nknown in all parte of British Columbia and had a wide circle of\nfriends in tee Mssonlc order, of\nwhloh he was a prominent member.\nHis retirement from civic politics\ncame ln 1980 when he withdrew\nfrom -_e mayoralty cont-fat ln Pebruary of that year, when Ws \"heeltb\nbegsn to fall him. About sli months\nsgo he suffered a stroke from which\nhe never fully recovered.\nIn the provincial geneml elactlon\nof 1928 he opposed the Hon. J. w.\nJones, preeent minister of flnsnce.\nIn south Okanagan, hut was defeated. He was s. Libers! ln politics,\nWHITE SOX WIN\nffiOMTHE CUBS\nPound Three Cub Stars for\n13-6 Wta; Sox Have\nSeries Edge\nCNRV   VANCOUVER   1080   k\n291.1 mi 103 Ci 800 w\n600\u2014Dinner   hour\n7:00\u2014Wiiteh\n7:30-__ety Topics-Percy Abtll\n7:45\u2014Instrumentsl   trio\n8:30\u2014Orohestre\n9:00\u2014Weather forecast\nKOA  SPOKANE  1470 k\n::<il  m: 147 c; 8000 w\n6:30\u2014Knights of Notes\n7:30\u2014Northwest Salon orchestra\n8:00\u2014Dream Melodies\n8:Ifi\u2014Eighteen Peet of Harmony\n8:30\u2014Homespun Melodies\n8:45\u2014Tlie  Esey   Chair\n9:00\u2014Knlghta of the Rosd\n9:15\u2014Wlnnlfred  Lundberg\n9:30\u2014Wrestling  matches\n10:30\u2014Moonlight Melodies\n11:00\u2014Vic    Meyers'   orchestra\nKOMO   SEATTLE   920   k\n335.9 ra; to c; looo w\n8:00\u2014Crcbeetra\n8 30\u2014Program\n7:00\u2014Express\n7:30\u2014J_\u00bb]   Folks\nsoo\u2014Atnns 'n' Andy\n8:15\u2014Vermont Lumberjacks\n8:30\u2014Denu Tssao Re-rue\n9:00\u2014Program\n9:15\u2014Adventures ol S. Holmes\n9:45\u2014Tuneful  Two\n10:00\u2014News  flashes\n10:16\u2014Lite   Savers\n10:30\u2014Little Symphony Hajur\n11:20\u2014Globe  Trotter\n11:30\u2014Dsnoe orchastre\n12 :<_\u2014Organ recital\nKIR  SEATTLE  flo k\n309.1 m; 97 ai 5000 w\n6:00\u2014Norlfcwest   Concert   _lo\n6:30\u2014Knlghta o\u00bb Notee\n7:30\u2014Norfchy_et Salon orcheetrs\n8 00\u2014Dream Melodies\n8.15\u2014Eighteen Feet ot Harmon-,\n8 30\u2014Homeai-un   Melodies\n8:45\u2014The Easy Chair\n0:00\u2014Knights of the Rotd\n0:15\u2014 \"Conoco Bill''\n\u00bb;30\u2014Wrestling matches\n10:30\u2014Moonlight   Melodies\n11:00\u2014Vic Meyers' orcheatra\n12:00\u2014Mldnlglt Bwellere\nKSL SALT LAKE CITY  1130 k\n266J m; 118 c; 5000 w\n6:00\u2014Orebeel-ca; Roy Bargy\n6:30\u2014Family Party\n7:00\u2014EJtprses\n7*30\u2014Concert Hour\n8:00\u2014Amoa 'n' And*.\n8:18\u2014\"The   Jewel   Box\"\n8:30\u2014Demi   Tssse   Review\n9:00\u2014Federation    of    Labor\n9:15\u2014Sherlock   Holmes   Adventures\n10:00\u2014-Inlormat  music\nB.C. TELEPHONE OOMPANY\nIT*\nOHICAOO, Bl., Oct 4\u2014Hitting\nnational league pitching as tbey seldom hit American lesgue pitching.\nChicago mUlte, sen took the edie\nln the city series three games to\ntwo by pounding three Cub stars\ntor a 13 lo 6 win Sunday. Root,\nMalone and Smith were treated\nroughly hy the Sox aockere. who\npiled up a total of 15 safeties.\nCubs \u201e   g 10   1\nWhite soz _.... 13 15   1\nMalone. Smlt_, May and Hema-\nl\u00bby. Faber, Lions and Orube\nEDISON  WEAKED\nWEST ORANOI, N. i., Oct. 4\nFUckertag steadily lower like\na pulse of some tlme-wprn dynamo, the current of Thomas A.\nEdison's Ufa continued to grow\nweaker tonight.\nKHQ SPOKANE 690 k\n\u00ab08.> m; N c; 1000 w.\nfl 00\u2014Orchestra\n6:80\u2014Family Party\n7:00\u2014Express\n7:30\u2014Cheeeborough Real Folks\n8:00\u2014Amoa 'n' Andy\n8:15\u2014Vermont Lumberjacks\n8:30\u2014Dend  Tssse  Rente\n9 00-_ouquet of Melodies\n9:15\u2014aSheriock   Holmes   Mma\\*ts***w,\n9 45\u2014Sylvan  Echoes\n19'00-Kews flsshes\t\n10:15\u2014Nor. Thus, piano melodlea\n10:30\u2014The Road Show.\n11.00\u2014iLaey On at th* Mike\nKOO OAKLAND  IM k\n379.5  m;  79 c:  10.000  w\n6:00\u2014Orchestra\n6:30\u2014-Program\n7.00\u2014Express\n7:80\u2014Cheeeborough Real Folks\n8:00\u2014Amos 'n* Andy\n8 15\u2014Vermont Lumberjacks\n8.80\u2014Demi  Taase  Revitt\nY\"0U hope yonr wife yilll -ttyct ned to \u00bbeeS\nemployment.\nBut many otKer men Have Had similar Hopes \u2022 \u2022 anil\ntheir widow* know the heartache* of job-honting.\nFortunately you can make certain that yonr wffe\nand children will never want for food, clothing\nand shelter. Yon can make them forever Independent of charity.\nSimply invert ta Life Insurance and arrange for a\npermanent monthly Income which wfll be payable\neither to your family or to yourself. Then, whether\nor not yon live to old age, the future ii safeguarded.\nTomorrow may be too late. See a life Insurance\nrepresentative today and make sure your wife\nwill never be forced to look for employment.\nLife I\nnsurance oervice\nOne of a series of messages spentored by\nlife Insurance Companies.\n \u2022m units* \u00bb_-_,_ xrwi. xelsox. b. c. \u2014 mowd-ay ihmin, octobbb i, un*\nWW Wi\nll\nm\nWOMANS PAGE\nBy Ruby M. Ayres\nUBAT HA0 QOm BKPOXLB\nOllea Chlttenham arts out to\nBake Julie Farrow lore bin. Intending to throw her ower in\ntevenge for the eulcide of hla\nbrother Rodney, whom Julie had\ngfeet ott. Ba .luooeeda. but flnda\ntt_et he haa fallen dssperetsly\nte leva with ber hiraeelf. Then\nlev dsscowers that tt wee not\nIhla Julie Farrow, but her cousin of the aame name, who had\ndriven hla. brother to death. But\nGiles le married to an American\ngirl named Sadie Barrow, with\nwhom he has not lived for a\nSong time. Sadie unexpectedly\nturn* up In London, at a party\n\u2022ft Ollea' mother'! home, but\nwith   keep   allent   about   tbelr\n\u25a0v\nyou? However, you>e eaved dm tte\ntrouble of fending it to you. Tea\ncan have your two hundred.\"\nLombard amlled\u2014an unpleasant\nemile.\n\"I want five hundred.\"\n\"Tou ae\/eed fer two.\"\n\"The price hae gone up aiact\nlaet nlgbt.\"\nThere wae an eloquent alienee\nand Lombard aald calmly:\n\"Five hundred la not a high price\nto pay, surely\u2014I cannot Imagine\nthat Schofield would crap et It tn\nreturn for the tt*or you received\nlaet night.\" He ahrugged hla ehould*\ner\u00ab u he aaw the passionate rage\nIn Chlttenham'* face.\n\"It ww you outaide Idea Farrow'* flat laat nlgbt?\"\nSpirit Bride\nmarriage.\nJulie, disillusioned, enters Into\nthe wild night life af London to\ntry to drown her anguish. Law-\nfence . Sohofleld wants to marry\nhar. Lombard, who had first Introduced her to Chlttenham, de-\n\/_sands money from Olles with\nthe threat that If he u not paid\nha wlll tell Schofield that Chlttenham snd Julie spent the\nnlgbt together on the St. Bernard Pau. Later Julie coaleases\nta Chlttenham that aha loves\nhlm. '\nHOW   OO  OM   WTTH   IBB   STORY\nINSTALLMENT   THTSLTB\nThe two men made no attempt at\n. greeting. Chlttenham merely said:\n\"lou're   ln  rather  a  hurry,  aren't\n\"I waited thru home sen patiently, you will admit.\"\nwith an effort Chlttenham controlled himself.\n\"I give you Juat- five seconds to\nget out of here.\" ha aald.\n\"Very well. Vou know what I Intend to do. I shall tell Schofield\nwhat happened ln Switzerland and\nagain laat nlgbt\u2014\"\n\"Tell him. and HI break every\nbone ln your body.\"\nLombard went on *v*nly, not\nheeding  the violent outburat.\n\"And I shall tell Mlu Farrow that\nthe woman she hu bun' making\nber friend le your wife.\"\nChlttenham wu white to the llpa,\nbut he laughed.\n\"You can spat* yourself the\ntrouble.   I have told her mywlt.\"\nFor a moment the two men glared\nIO Bt  MABBMD\nION Muriel McCormick, of Chicago, grand-daughter of John D.\nRockefeller, whose engagement to\nwed Blish* D. Hubbard of Middle\ntown. Conn.. Is announced. A few\nyeara ago Mlu McCormick announced that ahe wu \"bride\" ln a spiritual wedding with her fiance, who\nhad been killed In the war. She\nwore bridal gow* at th* \"ceremony\"\nand a wedding ring.\nWho-o-o\nWants an  A\nApartment\u00ab\n\"... and the NEXT apartment I\nrant la going to hay* this 'n' that\n\u2022n\" that. . . \"How many times have\nyou promised youfself a BETTER\napartment valaef\nHaw about It . . now that your\npresent lease Is up? There are many\nsuch Ideal apartments ta be h*d . .\nIf you know where to find them.\nTurn ta the \"Apartments ta Bent'\nsection ot the Want Af pages.\nThere youll find a comprehensive\nlisting ot the better renting values.\nIt's the modern way to better living!\nMmm la% Nruta\nWANT AD DEPARTMENT\nPHONE 143 or 144\nL_j.\nat one another, tnd It took all\nChlttenham'i will-power to maln-\ntaln hi* .elf-control, then Lombard\neald hoarsely;\nTil make you eorry for thla be-\nfare I've done!\"\n\"Oet out, or XU make you eorry\nlor It now.\"\nThe door cloeed between them\nFor eome momenta after Lombard\nhad gone. Chlttenham \u00a7tood .taring\nat tbe cloeed door.\nHe would see Julie at onoa and\ntell her the whole truth. But Fate\nwa* agalnat blm. He went to Julie?\nflat only to find that ahe had gone\nout to lunch. He went to aeveral\nrestaurants where be thought ehe\nmight be but could not find her.\nThere waa nothing for lt. but to\nwait till the arternoon when they\nwould meet at hie mother'* house,\nHe purposely arrived rather late,\nMra. Ardron. who vu near tbe door,\ncrept to him and whlapered that he\nmuat be very quiet.\n\"lt'a *o wonderfulI\" ehe breathed;\nshe squeezed hie hand excitedly.\nOllea stood betide her, angry and\nallent.\nNow he waa more accustomed\nthe darkness he could see that\nthere were about a doeen people ln\nthe room sitting in a rwg. and apparently holding handa. There waa\na queer aromatic aoent In the air,\nand a curious feeling of nervous\ntension.\nHe saw now that the light from\nthe shaded lamp ws* falling on the\nrace and figure of a nun whom he\nsupposed muat be the great Chryer.\nA strange-looking man with a pale\nasoetlo face and long, dark hair,\nwho lay back in the chair, Ma eyes\nclosed and his hand* clasped agalnat\nhis breast.\nPresently he began to apeak in a\nsing-song dreamy *ort of voice.\n\"Two women and one man\u2014one\nman and two women \u2022 * \u2022 they stand\nbefore me ln the darkness, not\nknowing of the tragedy that dl'\nTides their lives. ...\" He drew i\nquick breath and there followed a\nlittle alienee, broken again almoat\nat once by the same sing-song\nToloe\u2014\"Two women snd one man-\nIn the darknsss all et them, and\ntwo of them will come out Into the\nlight, but the third wlll never see\nthe sunshine again- Darkness\u2014\nblindnessl The blindness of ths\neyes. . . -here, close beside me. . .\nHis clasped handa released one\nanother, and moved forward ln a\ncuriously groping fsshlon sa lf\nseeking to find something. Olles\ndid not know whether to be amused\nor angry. What fool* women were,\nto be taken ln by auch a charlatan 1\nHe had moved back a step to find\nthe switch of. tbe light when suddenly those groping handa swooped\ndown with a curious pouncing movement and fastened on something or\nsome one tn the silent ring of\nlisteners.\nA pierolng scream rang through\nthe silence of tbe zoom, a scream\nln the frightened voice of a woman,\nand then the cry of hla own mmel\n\"Ollesl   Ollea, . , .\"\nXt seemed an eternity until his\nfingers same Into contact with the\nswitch, and still tbat cry went on:\n-Ollesl   Olles!\"\nIt was Sadle'a voioe, he knew, and\nwben at last tbe room was flooded\nwith light he sew thst she wss\nstanding up, her bands covering her\nface, her childish body swaying to\nand fro as lf in grest petn or terror,\nwhile the welling repetition of his\nname came from her llpa monotonously again aad again.\nIt wss like a scene In a dream\u2014\nthe rl\u00abg of half frightened women-\nend tbe strange figure of the man\nChryer a* he roee slowly to his\n{set, * shocked, awakened look ln\nhia somnolent eyes. Tben Mra. Ardron began to cry hysterically and\nthe whimpering sound aeemed to\nbreak the spell which waa upon\nevery one.\nOllea took a quick stride forward:\n\"Sadie!\"\nShe turned swiftly at the sound\nof her name, her hsnd* 0ut*tretched\nsnd when bs took tbem in his, she\nclung to htm, sobbing and shaking\nlike s frightened child.\nHe kept protecting srms around\nhis wife's slim figure.sa he glsred\nround the room wit furious eyes.\nHis mother. Doris snd half a\ndoeen other whom hs knew slightly\nsnd.. . .Juliej\nJulie was standing up.- very stiff\nsnd straight, looking st him screes\nthe room, s pitiful, wondering question ln her pretty eyes, her fsce\nquite colorless, ber hands gripping\na, rhstr back.\nAnd then for s moment nobody\nmoved or spoke, but Chlttenham'a\nanna fell from his wtfe snd he\ntook sn lnvolutsry step sway from\nhsr.\nShe looked up, ber face whits snd\ndistorted.\n'XHleal. - . \u2022\" end then before\nany one could mere to help her\nahe fell fainting st his feet.\nChlttenham wae very pale and hit\nvoice   was   rough   end   uneven   ss\nkind hspds carried Settle from the\nroom.\nHe   wu   conscious   of   Impending\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nSSI LAW-, A. SBKMAN\nTOMOBBOIPI  WirD\nBreakfaet\nBanana.\nCereal\npoached   \u00abgg\u00bb\nToast Ceitll*\nLuncheon\nBam  Souffl*\nUttuoe French Prigging\nWholewheat Bread\nJelly Olngarale\nDinner\nRoast of Beef\nCelery\nPotatoea Onlona\nAppleaauce Tapioca\nNIW  DliHEl  IBM WEU\nHam Souffle\u2014Put two cups of\nsweat milk Into a saucepan and\nheat to th* boiling point, than\nthicken by el____n_ several mlnutea with tiro tablespoon* of flour\nmixed with on* teaspoon of melted\nbutter; season with one-half teaspoon of chopped raw onion* and\nstir In tha beaten yolks of two raw\neggs. Cook, stirring steadily, till very\nthick, then add two cupa of chopped\ncooked ham and let the mixture\ncool. When almoat oold, fold ln\nthe \u2022tlftly whipped whits* ot two\negga and *crap* Into a buttered\ndlah. Bak* 30 minutes In a moderate oven, ar till firm and high,\ntben serve at onee.\nApplesauce Tapioca\u2014Book aix table\nspoona of p*arl tapioca overnight In\none cup of oold -water. Next day add\none aad one-half cupa of boiling\nwater, one-third teaspoon of aalt,\nthree tebleapoona ot auger, and let\nthe mixture cook over boiling water\nfor as hour, or until th* tapioca 1*\nsoft and transparent. Then add on*\ncup of previously cooked applesauce\nand flavor wtt_ one-half teaepoon\nof vanilla extract, serve cold, with\nsweet cream or top-milk.\nCheesed Tout\u2014Spread slices of\nbread with cream cheese which you\nhave seasoned well with salt, to\nsuit Individual taste, then dip theae\nslices Into raw egg and fry till\nbrown. Serve with thtn sweet cream.\nAnswer to \"Invalid Reader\"\u2014To\nmake the egg-orange drink, simply\nbeat one egg and stir Into It the\nJuice of one or two oranges, som*\nlike lt with cracked loe, others Juat\nmoderately eold. Sweeten to taste\nwith augar, and serve at once. It la\na good thing to havs one of thoee\ncocktail shakers on hand to mix\nsuch drinks -a* these.\nTomorrow\u2014Anawcrs  to Inquiries.\nOne Too Many\nWHAT TO DO?\nJun* CDee, musical comedy prima\ndonna became engaged tbe other day\nto Vernon cornea. New Tork Yankee\npitcher. Then th* ball club'* secretary. Edgar Barrow, _ alleged to\nhave put a fast ona over the plate\nby stating tbe pitcher already haa a\nwife in California. Oame* denies It.\nThe Beauty Box\nby Helen Fottett\n\"We've sent for a doctor,\" hia\nmother said. \"Julie 1* staying with\nher.\"\n\"lt'a    only    an    ordinary    faint,\nDoris   said   contemptuously.      \"I'm\nsurprised   at   Sadie   being   such   a\nfool.\"\nThe others had all gone end\nChlttenham stood with an elbow\non the mantel-shelf staring down\nat the grate which was filled with\nflowers snd ferns. He could think\nof nothing but thst pitiful, won-\ndering  question   in  Julie's eyea.\nWhat was *he thinking? What\nhad ahe guessed?\n\u2022   \u2022   e\nWhat a fool he had been not to\ntell her the truth laat night; she\nwould have understood end forgiven\nhim then. Would ahe understand or\nforgive him now?\nXt aeemed aa eternity until the\ndoor opened behind htm and Julie\ncams ln,\nChlttenham turned. He made s\nswift movsment towards ber sa If to\ntake her in his srms, thsn stopped\nThis was not tbe woman who had\nclung to him only last night snd\nwhispered how much she loved him\n\u2014this wes not even the wild, broken\nJulie who bad hurt him with utter\nrecklessness during ths psst unhappy weeks\u2014thla wae s woman\nwhom he had never aeen before, with\ncold eyea that accused him harshly\neven before ahe apoke.\n\"Sadie is no better. The doctor\nhss Just come. Would you like to go\nto her now?\"\nGiles flushed scarlet. It ws* such\nsn unexpected challenge.\n\"Why should I go to her? Whst\ndo you mean?\" hs asked roughly.\nThey were the Isat words be meant\nto ssy and yet for tbe lite of him\nhe could not hsve controlled tbelr\nutterance.\nJulie shrugged her shoulders.\n\"I only thought , , ln the circumstances , ,\"\nHe covered ths ground between\nthem ln s stride snd caught hsr by\nths shoulders.\n\"Julie . . hsve you fogrotten lut\nnight? How csn you speak to me\nlike this? How csn you look at me\nln auch a way?\"\nHe felt her alim body stiffen beneath hla graspf snd her eyes met\nhis unflinchingly.\n\"How long hava you J\"HOWB Sadie?\nWhy did she call out to you and\nrun to you like that? What la she\nto you?\"\nThere wu sn agonised question ln\nher voice though she tried desperately to keep It unconcerned.\nShe moved back s step when he\nwould hsve touched ber end both\ntheir feces were whits.\nThere's no need to pretend any\nlonger,\" she said with a harsh breath.\n\"Jrille\u2014\" Chlttenham broke out\nagain desperstsly then stopped u\nthe door opened beneath bta mother's agitated hand.\n\"Ollea\u2014they want you st once\u2014\ntbe doctor aent me for you\u2014oh,\nGlleal\"' ahe caught hla arm with ineffectual hsnds. \"I don't understand! I feel u If 1 am going mad,\nor u lf every one else ls\u2014whst do\nthey sll mssn? And lf it's the truth\nwhy didn't you tell me? Sadie la\nsaying awful thlnga, too\u2014ebe muat\nbe light-heeded! She saya she's your\nwifs? How csn ahs be your wjle\nwhsn you are not married?\"\nOllea turned on bla heel and etrode\nout of the room- Mra. Ardron\nturned to Julie, both white, useleu\nhsnds outstretched.\n\"Is It true?\" she appsalsd hslp-\nIsssly. Bhe forgot bar dislike for\nJ-tlie. In her present distress sbs\nuld hsve turned to her wont\nv _emy for consolstlon. \"Tou heard\nwhst I ssld.    Sadie dsclsrej sbs Is\nv son'* wife. Hew een she be\nen he Is not married. He never\n..ed women\u2014he hu ssld so scores\nof  times?\"\nIt should be en important pert\nof the art of living end the occupation of making oneself attractive\nto hsvo some healthy, wholesome\nfun now and then. To play! Oet\nall hot and b\u00bbPpy \u00bbnd !\u2022* your hair\nfall down I The mother who plays\nfos end leeee with her \"young\" is\na heap eight better mother than tbe\ndour-faced parent wbo can't unbend. Ths plsyful one will retain\nher youthful spirits until she's -a\nspecial entertainer for hsr grest-\ngrsndchlldren. The world can dispense with criticism, nagging, serious conversation, but it oent get\nalong comfortably without nonsense\nand laughter.\nWhen large pimples form on the\nfsce, neck or cheat, thsy should be\ntreated to moiat hot applications.\nWhen tbe yellow point hu fully developed, open with a needle which\nhaa been sterilised by holding In a\nflame, press out tbe pus with extreme gentleness, keeping the finger\ntlpe covered with clean game. Care-\nleea treatment will spread germs,\ncause mors pimples to form. Touch\nwounds with a solution of boric\nacid.\nIt may be two or three months\nafter a fever before hair will take\non a despondent air and fall out.\nTherefore, it la advisable to have\nacalp treatments before the havoc\nbegins. Ambrosial locks respond to\nfriction of the scalp, thorough, vigorous shampoos every ten days,\ntonic applications, brushing with a\nbrush that la kept clean. When\nshampooing use hot wster, but finish with en ice cold rinse.\nUttl* dollies are doing tricks\nwith thow smooth rolls they wear\nst the beck of the long bob. In\nsteed of one, stretching demurely\nfrom esr to esr, they uss three snd\naet them on the bias. Or there is\na small roll sctng u a buffer state\nbetween clusters of curls placed\nback on ths can.\nWltb   hate   piquant,   aasay    and\nemail, the coiffure with smooth\ncrown\u2014ho waves at all\u2014la convent\nent. One doesn't hsve to find i\nmirror when tbe hat is removed, tbe\nsmooth halrdreaa having a facility\nfor staying put.\nPLAIN CAKE-\nHOW TO MAKE\nVamps May Turn Domestic\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nAn Authority on Probbn* or Loas and Mania**\nMl* I* going la b* mass-lad ln*w_*h way tlw wind blows. Ass un\ntwo weeka and her chief concern 1* \"\nwMtbsr th* hat, ehe s *el*ot*d to go\naway in, aulte her profile or not.\nah* ha* other worrlee, too. Wlll ahe\nUke living la a four room flat after\nth* roomy house her p-erenta have\nla tha charming aubinti?\nAnd how about getting Tom'*\nbreaWsat? A part am* maid will\nie ln lo get the dinners. Julie\nwelly haa her anxtoua mosne-ta. Her\nmother ha, them, too, but they are\nquite apart from hate, flat, and\nbreakfaet*. It I* ah* wbo hu written\nto me about thla 30-year-old gin\nwho la to be married In two weeka.\nIt aoeme that Julie, from the\ntime aha wa* la high achool. ha*\nbeen oontlnuaUy in love, that Ufa\nwithout * love affali*\u2014cnlld. violent,\nJuat mlddUa*>-waa unthlnkeWe.\nJulie ha* oonteeeed If eh* were not\nIn love, practically all the time,\nebe'd think sh* were getting old or\nsomething. Thst Is what worries\nhar mother.\nHow eaa I feel aura ahe wlll not\ntire of Tom aa she haa aa th* rest?\nAnd Tota la such a fine chap\u2014clean,\nhonest, ambitious; but .he's so\nfoolishly susceptible I've no confidence that marriage with her will\nbe any more permanent than lysr\ninnumerable Jlirtsuogs. Tom knows\nall about her vamping; I tall him\nhis must be the 'perfect love (which)\ncaatcth out fear'.\"\nTom la not- marrying the girl\nunder gates pretenses, he's walking\nInto tha altuatlon with wide open\ni which la better than if he\nimagined he waa marrying a aweet,\ninexperienced young thing who had\nnever oared much about anyone else.\nAnd through one ot thoee mlneles\nwhloh sometimes happen, all may\nturn out for tbe beet. But I wish\nJulie* mother had told me a little\nahout her daughter's taate*\u2014no, not\nla men. But what sort ot ttilnga ap\npealed to hsr ln that big house ln\nthe pretty euburb?\nDid ahe like her surroundings to\nbe attractive? Did ah* like flowers\non the table, and a few narcissus\nblooming in a bowl on tba mantel\npiece? Tl^ei charming touch may\nbe had for tb* sum ot 10 oents. Wee\nJulia's room sweet and dainty'\nTheae thlnga are all straws teillc;\ntidy gin at home, lstereatsd In\nnothing but pretty dotbas, good\ntimes and making whoop** generally (Peaking, will aoon be bond getting bar buabaad's breeUsete, and\nyou're likely to find them parched\non stool* breakfasting at tlw neanef\ndrug store after a f*w weeka.\nBut, belters It or not, Vt. aaaa\ngirls Just aa Impressionable aa Julie\nconverted by a little flat with a\nDelft blue kltoaen. Much ot their\nsusceptibility wsa Juat so muoh do-\nmastlctty pent up stream. After tbey\nhad a home of tbelr own, and a\nman who underatood how to keep a\nkind nut flru hand on the rune\u2014\nespecially K that greatest of blowings, a baby, arrived\u2014the fluttery,\nbutterfly gin became th* most conscientious of mothers.      a\nBut the etrewa should be watched\n\u2014If the Jullee \u2022\"\u25a0ean't bear el-Wren.\" |\nlf tbey have aheolutely no resources,\nwithin themaelvee, If they pitch I\nthings on th* tebl*. and haatlly\npick up a broom when company ts\ncoming\u2014If they n*v\u00bbr res_y live\nunless whoopee I* brewing\u2014a young\nman who llkea a horn* bad batter\ncrank up his trusty car and move on.\nFUR-TRIMMED\nSUIT STYLl\nOet. 4.\u2014fbablon adds a\u00bb-|\nother leal to her laurels with\nadvent of tho fur trimmed ault tt*\nwinter. All the Pane couturtera\nshowing these models.\nMaggy ltouff haa a ault of\ntype made cf duvetyne, \u00ab\ncloth, and trimmed with eeal- Bass\ndaily   done   tn   dark   green\n-with raven, collar and euffa of i\nIt le highly coveted. Worn wtth if\nla   a   pink   taffeta   baaque   Mot\ntrimmed with Valenelennee laoe.\nlaebat and skirt ara  gored  ts\nwithout a wrinkle, and tbe akirt\nflared   aver   ao   slightly   I\nknee,   to   give   room   for   waikln\ncomfortably.\nPainful Backache,,\nQukkty Relieved)!\nVICTORIA, B. O.. Oat. ..-Severe earthquakes, taking place approximately d.aoo mile* from here\nwaa recorded at the local observatory at 11.36 Saturday morning. The\nfirst tremor lasted four hours and\nwas followed by a -second which\nlasted nearly three  hours.\n\"My back a-aeawfulir ease,\" writes\nMr. Clifford Whtttom, Paspebiae\nWeat,P.O. \"I teak theae boieeaf\nDo3_. Kidney Pill, asd they \u25a0*\u2022\u2022\nme gnat rawf. If I *v*r ttwet\nKidney Pills again I will carta--.\nuas Dodd's. I race mas snd Dadd'e\nKidaer PHI' to all my ftiende and I\nther now say that they am the |\nbest Kidney mad-ins,\"\nDa_d'\u00ab __-rPnUt_i\u00abr\nb_sl_a.dM_aa-._a\nwoman. Gi*. _\u00ab\u2014\u00ab___ ,\nem te obMlasd a aU atim, j\nDodds Kidney PM\nMAIL ORDERS A SPECIALTY\nUNIFORMS of DISTINCTION\nBOWMAN'S\nAPRON SHOP\n\u00ab10 GRANVILLE ST.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nWrite for Illustrations and Samples\nA good plain cake rule that eaa be\nvaried in aeveral ways wlll be found\nIn the following recipe:\nOne cup granulated sugar, '\u25a0, eup\nalwrtenlng, 1 a-3 cupa flour, S tea\nspoons baking powder, *\/. cup sweet\nmilk, 3 eggs, Vt teaspoon vanilla,\nteaspoon wit.\nBs sure tbe shortening Is abou*\nroom temperature. Cream thorough\nand elowly best In sugsr. Best In\nfour tablespoon* sifted flour. Ml::\nand sift remaining .lour with baking\npowder and salt. Add well-beaten\neggs to flrat mixture and beat bard\nwith dover beater. Stir sbout one-\nlrslf tbe milk snd itlr until smooth.\nThen sdd half ot remaining flour\nmlrture and wben smooth sdd remaining milk end vaniu*. Wheij\nblended, sdd rest of flour snd stir\nuntil smooth. Pour into sn oiled\nsnd floured cake pan. pur hJng batter\nup against tbe edgea of pan, and\nbake 40 mlnutea In a moderate oven.\nIf baked ln layers bake 30 minutes.\nThe oven thermometer should register 360 degrees F. when cake is put\nin, rising to 375 degrees P. to complete the bsking period.\nWHEN   IN   A   HURRY\nNow for the Tsrlatlona:\nTo make en acceptable emergency\ncboooUte cake, sdd two or three\ntahlespoonTula of cocoa to the dry ingredient* snd reduce the flour to\ntwo tablespoonf ula.\nThs addition at apioes results In\na tender cate delicious with apple\neauoe snd requiring no icing.\nOr e lsysr cake wltb a custard\nfilling, using the yolks for the custard snd putting the whites in the\ncske. can be concocted to furnish the\nwhole deeaert.\nHalt the rule een be used to\nmake a Washington atom pie, cup\ncakes, or \"upalde down cake.\" ln\nthe osss of ths \"pie\" tbe egg white\nla saved for the top froaUng aud\nths pte ls filled with jelly, jam or\nfresh flult. Butter Is used in cskes\nfor ths sake of the fuse flavor\nlt la supposed to fire. But In snyj\ncske ln which the flavor U made\ndlatinctlve by spices or ehoooiatc\nsome ksa expensive shortening can\nbs substituted  with  perfectly satis-\nYou Can't Go Wrong\nIf yoa\nSELECT YOUR PRIVATE\nGREETING CARDS\nFROM THE LARGEST STOCK IN THE INTERIOR EXQUISITE DESIGNS TO SUIT EVERY INDIVIDUAL TASTE\n,... AT PRICES THAT WILL APPEAL. ... L00K1\nTWO DOZEN CARDS\nPriced at\n$1.50, $1.75. $2.00, $2.50 Up to $8.00\nPrinted with your name and address.\nNO TWO SAMPLES ALIKE .. .SELECT YOUR PERSONAL\nGREETING CARDS WHILE OUR EXCLUSIVE STOCK IS AT\nIT'S BEST.\nSEHD FOR SAMPLES.\nSamples mailed to out-of-town customers upon request, but we ask that they\nreturn them a_ f-oon as they make their choice, as w<*. only have on of each\nsamfilc.If in town and unable to call at the office, PHONE 144 and we will\nhave samples sent to your home.   Order early.\n::\u25a0-- _*-\nJfetatt Bath} Newa Sob Separfmlmi\nBaker St.\nPhone 144\nNelson, B. C.\n.__.__\n ASTORIA\nThe Best Good Shoe\nfor Men.\nMake your next pair\nASTORIA\nR. Andrew\n&Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\n\u2014 -: _\u25a0   :-.   \u25a0\u25a0-\u2122.1.\nSociety\nSCHARMSCHM1DT\nDIRECT JOBLESS\nSCHEME FOR B.C.\nVICTORIA, Oct. 4\u2014Colonel P.\nBchannschmldt, M D, of Vancouver,\nto to be entrusted with the enarm-\no*m task of directing the machinety\nOf tbe provincial governments unemployment scheme, the main part\nof whloh will be the sorting out of\nVarious classes of rt.ltef cues from\nthe province's 53,000-odd registered\n[unemployed.        - ,\nDr. Scharn_sc hmidt will cooperate\nWith both tbe federal snd provincial\ngovernment departanents to se. that\n0very man seeking relief will be\nManfully Investigated before he Is\nput to work.\nMajor Schannscbmldt was well\n-known In tlie Klondyke aa superintendent of tbe river dlvlaion. White\nrase and Yukon river.' He served ln\nMesopotamia  during  the   war.\na IBB  NELSON DAILY SEWS, NELSON, B. C. \u2014 MONDAY  MORNING.  OCTOB1R \u00bb,  lWr^W\n[Unreality Subject\nScience Churches\n'Unreality\" waa the subject of\n[ths Lesson-Sermon In the Christian\npclenoe church on Sunday.\nOne of tbe Scriptural texts con-\nJtelned ln the I\/eson -Sermon was,\n'But of the tree of the knowledge of\nkood and evil, thou shalt not eat\npf lt: for In the day that thou\n[latest thereof thou shalt surely\nPie\"   (Genesis 2:17).\nfallowing tbe reading of tbe Bible\ntorts, passages were also read from\n'Science and Health with Key to the\nScriptures\" by Mary Bak.r Eddy, one\npassage being the following from\npage 300: \"Jesus' demonstrations\nlift the chaff from the wheat, and\nunfold the unity and the reality of\n(Cod, the unreality, tbe nothingness,\nM eni.\"\nAnnouncement\nH. C. Dimock\nM. D.\nPhysician and Surgeon\nhas opened an  office  in\ntthe Medical Arts Building.\nPhone 204\nSuite. 101\n: n m n i n. i n 11: i ii n i\nThla column la connected by\nMrt. M. te Vigneux. AU news\nof a -octal nature, Including receptions, private cntertalnmenta,\npersonal Items, n_err___ges, etc.,\nwill appear ln this column. Tele-\nplum* Mn. vigneux tt her\nhome, M9 Silica street.\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Pollard, MUl\nstreet, said their Infant eon Deret\nVane, have returned from Victoria,\nwhere they have been for tbe peat\nthree months.\na  w   e\nMr. aud Mrs. George McKay of\nTrail apent the week-end ln town,\nguests at the bome of Mrs. McKay's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Gregolre Choquette, Latimer atreet.\n^__B \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nMrs. Fred W. Conway, Kerr apartments, has returned from a couple\nof months' visit to relatives ln\nPortland, Ore.\n\u2022 e   e\nW. J. Meagher spent yeeterday in\nTrail, the gueat of his son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Prank\nMeagher,\ns   \u2022   *\nJ. H. Graham motored to Spokane\nyeaterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nJ. A. Iiebbard, mining Man of\nYmir, wu a visitor to the city during the week-end.\na   a   s\nL. K. Larsen and party motored\nto  TraU  and   Roaaland   yeaterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. F. Oulmont left yesterday for\nMontreal as a delegate to the convention of the Order of Railroad\nTelegraphers at a meeting to be held\nthere this week.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. Doeenberger and hts son Nick\nof Sunshine Bay, and Abe Doeenberger of Chemalnui, V. I., were\nshoppers to Nelson  Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Belle McOauley of the staff\nof the Nelson high school spent the\nweek-end at the home of her parents at Castlegar. She was accompanied by Mlsa Carol Wright, Stanley  street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. H. Walker and family\nhave taken up residence ln their\nrecently renovated home, 912 Vernon street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. Sewell of Sunshine Bay\npaid a visit to town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHarvey Wallace of tbe staff of the\nCanadlsn Bank of Commerce, who\nleft last week for Vancouver, where\nbe bas been transferred to the\nbank's main office, waa prior to his\ndeparture presented by George Lee\nWarner, on behalf of the .members\nof tbe Young People's association, of\nwhich, he was president, with a\nhandsome  pair of   gold   cuff  links.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. S. Ritchie of Procter spent\nSaturday in the city.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. M. L. Bruce of Band Point,\nIdaho, and her mother motored to\nNelson yesterday and were guests at\nthe home on the north shore of\nMr. end Mrs. 8. N. Rose.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nMrs.   Bcott  Wardle  of   Longbeecb\nspent Saturday In Nelson.\nw \u2022 \u2022\nA marriage of considerable Interest to Nelsonites occurred ln Vancouver, the bride's mother having\nou several occasions visited friends\nln  Nelson.\nMasses of white chrysanthemums\nand shaded pink gladioli banked\naround the chancel formed the setting at Holy Trinity church on Wedneeday evening for tbe marriage of\nMuriel Gertrude, only daughter of\nCapt. and Mrs- John Barberle, 8707\nWest Thirty-fifth, *h Albert Edward\nOsborougb, son of Mr. and Mrs. A.\nOsborough, Holywood, County Down,\nIreland. Rev. Charles B. Clarke officiated at the service, which was\nfully choral, while A. Sloan supported the groom, and tbe ushers were\nHarry Mantle and Sidney Wiggles-\nworth.\nTbe bride, given ln marriage by\nber father, was lovely ln a gown of\nwhite georgette and net. The bodice\nof tbe dress, reaching to the knees,\nwas of hand-made rouleaux of georgette with a brilliant dlmantc belt,\nand tbe skirt was of very full\nflounced   net   over   white   chiffon.\nHer sltpj>*rs were of white brocade\nand ber veil of whit* French net\nand laoe waa arranged from a e*jr-\nooet embroidered lh seed pearls\ncaught at tb* back of th* bead wtth\ndusters of orange blossoms aad\nfalling to the floor where It formed\na train. Bhe carried a ahower bouquet of whit* rosebuds and Illy of\ntho valley.\n, Ipse Dorothy Oibeon, the bride's\n4nly attendant, was charming in a\ngown of eprtoot satin mad* tm long\nlines wltb a close-fitting bodice and\nsoftly flaring skirt. A Japquatt* of\ndark brown velvet, a bat of the\nsame abad* trimmed wltb brown\nsatin ribbon, apricot aatlh slippers\nand long beige gloves completed ber\ncostume, and sbs carried a bouquet\nof   bronse   and   yellow   chrysantbe-\nMrs. Barber chose a gown of black\nand gold old lace over black chiffon, tbe bodice fashioned with a\nyoke of pale beige chiffon and the\nsleeves having tiny beige chiffon\ncuffs. Her hat was of black felt\nand Ber corsage bouquet wu of\nyellow roses. Hrs. R. Adams, aVit\nof tbe groom, wore becoming black\nsatin with a black hat and wore a\ncorsage bouquet of deep pink roses.\nA reception wu held following\nthe ceremony at tbe bome of tbe\nbride's parents, where quantities of\nautumn flowers and bright colored\nleaves were used to decorate tbe\nrooms. The bride's table, which wu\ncentered with a three-tier wedding\ncake embedded ln yellow tulle, was\ndecorated with silver vssss of yellow rosebuds and lighted with tall\nyellow tapers, Mrs. T. H. Burgess\nsnd ' Mrs. W. O. Rowan presided.\nwfille Mrs. J. A. McDonald cut tbs\nices. Assisting in serving were Miss\nMarlon MatUx. Mlas Lillian Goddard,\nMiss Bertha Goddard, Miss Mary\nGardener, Miss Ida McNeill and Miss\nAlma  Stewart.\nMr. and Mrs. Osborough left later\nfor Portland, the bride travelling ln\ntailored Burgundy red flecked\nwool dress with a hat of the ume\nmaterial. Her coat wu of black\nchunga cloth wltb deep squirrel\ncollar and cuffs and . her accessories\nwere brown. On their return they\nwlll reside on Weet Fortieth.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHis honor Judge Nlsbet snd bis\neldest daughter, Miss Nancy, are\nleaving on Thursday for Toronto,\ngoing by way of Spokane and Chicago, and expect to be away for\nabout two months. Judge Thompson of Cranbrook wlll act ln Judge\nNlsbet's  plsoe  during  bis  absence.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nR. O. Oscarson and hts brothers,\nWilliam and E. Oscarson, all of\nErie, were recent choppers in town,\n\u2022 *   *\nJohn Fraser, Carbonate street, left\nSaturday morning via the C. P. R.\nfor  a Visit to  the  coast  cities.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJames Anderson and Mrs. Anderson of Vancouver, former residents\nof Kaslo, were la town Saturday,\nand left via the C. P. R- for Creaton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMri. William Gray of Salmo was\na city shopper Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. K. Ore of Wynndel spent\nSaturday in town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022     .\nH. L. Rawllngs, former contractor\nof Nakusp and now of Victoria, la\na  city  visitor.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. George Helbecque ct\nBonnington have returned from\nmotor trip to Banff, Lake Louise\nand Calgary. In tbe latter plaoe\ntbey visited their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. 8. D. Fleteh'\ner. They wer$ accompanied on the\ntrip by Mr. and Mrs. .Alfred Legault of Greenwood, who hare slnoe\nreturned  to thetr home.      '\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. John MUross of Vsncouver, a\nformer resident of Trail, waa In\ntown Saturday on her way to visit\nber parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. McLeod,\nIn Klmberley.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. R. W. Diamond of Trait wu\na recent shopper in  the  city.\nROTH BLENDED TO PERFECTION\nN.6\nBADMINTON RACQUETS\nBENTLEY'S AND ATLAS RACQUETS\nHigh Class Racquets for Fast Play\nATLAS\nChampion  $ 5.00\nBENTLEY'S\nWinner $3.50\nRoyal     5.50\nFlash     6.50\nAce    7.50\nSpeed King  _ 9.00\nAero Flight .... 16.00\nRoyal\nEclipse\nStar ....\nAmco ..\nBini  ..:.\nSilver Fern\n6.00\n8.00\n8.00\n9.00\n14,00\n15.00\nRacquet Presses ! $ .75 !j\nNo. 1 James Badminton Shuttles, doz    4.00\nHlpperson Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nLook for the Red Hardware Store     '\nPhone 497 Box 414\nC. B. Garland,\nlut night on a\nVictoria.\nMill  street,  left\nbusiness   trip   to\nMiss Sybil Archibald, Stanley\natreet, apent yeaterday In Grand\nForks, tbe guest of Miss Helen\nArcher, matron of the Grand Forks\nhospital.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr.   and   Mrs.   Harold   Clark   and\ntheir son Bob, who havs spent tbe\nput week in Nelson u guests at\nthe bome of Mr. Clark's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Oeorge M. Clark, Cedar\nstreet, left for their home In Clay-\nburn . Saturday night.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nSaturday afternoon Miss Sybil McLean, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. D.\nMcLean, entertained a number of\nher young friends at a theater\nparty, which was followed by supper and games at.her home on Carbonate atreet. Rose and white asters\nwere used to decorate the rooms.\nMrs. McLean was assisted ln serving\nby Mrs. Alex Sutherland and Miss\nBertha Sutherland. Sybil's Invited\nguests were Misa Mary McDougaU,\nMlu Laura McEwan, Mlu Margaret\nOulmont, Mlu Jerry Mann, Mlu\nJessie Lutes, Mlu Joy Ferguson, Mlu\nDoris Tralnor, Mlu Katbleen Tralnor, Mln, Daisy Norrls, Miss Lorraine\nFerguson, Miss Kathleen Manahan,\nMlu Jeannette Leriger, Satnlg Pa-\npaslan, Mlu Lois Mansfield, Jackie\nMcDougall, Mlu Jessie Richardson,\nMlu Margaret Merkley snd Mlu\nMargaret  Sutherland.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRecently    Mrs.    Joseph    Sturgeon\nand Mrs. M. J. Vigneux entertained\nat an Informal tea in compliment\nto Mrs. Harold Clark of Clayburn.\nB. C, who, with her husband and\nson, wu the house guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. George M. Clark, Cedar\nstreet.\nARCHDEACON GRAHAM TELLS OF THE\nGREAT DECISION MADE BY RECENT\nGENERAL SYNOD OF THE ANGLICANS\nOffice of Primate  Enlarged  and  Primate  Chosen   From\nWWer Field; Provincial Synods Retain Powers;\nNational Commission Reports\nTbat ln Its action to reduce tbe ^neighbor diminished the foroe of the\nIsolation ot clergy ln ears of spersgf^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nsettlement, by making arrangements\nfor occasions! meetings and conferences, tbe general synod of the .Anglican Church of Canada acted on\nlines long ago developed by the rurl-\ndacinal chapter of Nelson, with its\nsystem of quarterly meetings, and\nannual retreats, wu brought out\nSunday by Ven. Archdeaoon Fred H.\nG?abam. wbo twice addressed his\ncongregation of St. Saviour's on topics connected wtth the recent Anglican national gathering. The Nelson\ndeanery Wu now cloee to its 300th\nmeeting, he pointed out.\nTaking u his text the proverb.\n\"Where no counsel is the people\nfall, but ln the multitude of coun-\nKllors there ls safety,\" the arch-\ntfetcon pointed out that the general\neynod, \"developed ln tbe wisdom of\nOo0 out of own autonomous church,\"\nnot only protected*'the Anglican\nbody from hasty or undigested action, but wu largely responsible for\nIte *lee and consistent and' steady\nprogress.\n. At the recent gathering U out of\n_S archbishops and bfehopP in actios office were in attendance, tile\ntwo not ln attendance being ill,\nwhile two bishoprics were vacant,\nthough since filled. The senior metropolitan. Archbishop Worrell of\nNavo Scotia, presided over joint\nsessions of the upper and lower\nhousea with a commanding ability\nand a vigor that belled hla advanced\nyeara Over 300 clerical and lay\ndelegates composed the lower house.\nFILLY   REPRESENTATIVE     *\nAmong outstanding characteristics\nof the recent general synod, Archdeacon Oraham first emphasized Its\nrepresentative character, pointing\nout tbat the grwt cities, smaller\ncities, small villages, sparse settlements, missionary dioceses, and Indian fields were all well represented.\nIt wu also representative, be stated, of sll achcools of thought In the\nCanadian church. Among the delegates were outstanding exponents of\ntbe high church school of thought,\nand also outstanding men In the\nlow church movement. Yet never\na word wu spoken In a party spirit,\nIt bad been uld with truth thst\nbefon \"our church\" could consider\nunion with other churches lt should\nconsider unity within Itself. Tbe\nrecent gathering, he stated, wu marvellously united.\nRECORD .MADE\nAnother characteristic of the gen\neral synod, uld the archdeacon, wu\nthat lt was Intensely In earnest. One\nreeult of this wu that, while all\nwere prepared to listen to any\nspeaker making a concise and logical submission, it held down any\nwho were Inclined to prepared .oratorical effort, and u -one man insisted on speakers keeping to the\npoint. Because It was tn earnest\nand insisted on minding Its business, a vol up.\" of business such u\nno other general synod had ever\naccomplished wu done, and very few\nloose ends were left to be dealt with\nafterward.\nA dominant fact wu the submission of tbe report ot tbe Anglican\nnational commission, which for three\nyears wu engaged In a survey of\nthe whole Anglican church ln Canada, Its three members, tbe bishop\nof Niagara, Canon Gould, secretary\nof the Mtwlonary Society of tbe\nChurch of England ln Canada, and\nChancellor Gisborne, chancellor of\nthe diocese of Ottawa, freed of all\nother duties, giving their times and\nefforts exclusively to this work. The\ncomplete report wu published ln\nbook form, but a condensed report\ngiving the main findings and recommendations of the commission.\nwas what wu before the general synod. These recommendations gave\nrise to the great bulk of the general\nsynod's outstanding deliberations.\nTEN  COMMANDMENTS\nBefore dealing with the action of\ntbe general synod on the recommendations of the national commission, Archdeacon Graham said he\nwished to explain a matter clouly\nrelated to Kootenay. diocese, and ln\nregard to which be wu misquoted,\nrather amusingly, on the wires, that\nof the form of the ran Commsnd-\nmente. When the revised prayer-\nbook wu brought out, It was widely\naccepted by tbe mother church, but\nwu rejected by the house of commons, which, as the mother church\nwu the state church, had the final\nword, this rejection being most disappointing to the archbishop of\nCanterbury, Dr. Davidson, who had\nlabored   prodigiously   In   connection\nA.   stlmmel   of\no  town  yeeter\nMr.  and   Mrs.   B.\nTrail  were  visitors\nday.\nMiss Lois Sheffield, SUlca street,\nspent yesterday  In Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH. H. Harper of Gray  Creek  left\nyesterday for Montreal, where lie\nwill join bis two children, wbo sre\narriving from England.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022 ^H^\nMrs. Oeorge Murray wu a recent\nvisitor to Nelson from Trail,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr.  and  Mrs.  Oeorge  Slmms,  018\nLatimer street, have taken up residence at T14 Silica street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong recent visitors to town wu\nMre. I. W. Haulwood of Trail.\ness\nMlu   Irene   Edmondson,   Victoria\nstrut, spent the week-end tn Trail,\nwhere she attended tbe first of a\nseries of Cinderella dances.\na  e   a\nTbe manse of St. Paul's United\nchurch wu the scegie of a very\nsuccessful tea and bake sale Satur-\ncommand ^^^^^^^^^^^^m\nJEWISH   ELABORATION\nAnother instance of obvious addition wu in tbe commandment\nagainst coveting, tbe essential part\nOf which was \"Thou shalt not\ncovet.\" But tbe Jews elaborated\ntbls, Archdeacon Graham aald, spect-\nfylng a list of prohibited property\nln tbe order of its importance ln\ntbelr eyea, making It le u expanded\nalmost amusing. First In the list\nwu a man's houae\u2014comparatively\nfew having houses\u2014while next wu\na nun's wife, the wife coming second because not so rare, every man\nhaving one. Thsn came the means\nof work, the ox, and the means of\ntransportation,   the   -\u00bb..\nAnd so down the ages the commandment came la this form, and\nhi a day wben autos speeded on\ntbe roads and airplanes dotted the\naky there wu still the Jewish prohibition against coveting the ox and\nau, which belonged only to a primitive  state of society.\n.Archdeacon Graham uld be did\ndot in his comment at the sessions\nuy tbe Ten Commend men t# were\nout of date\u2014u reported on the wire\n\u2014but that their utting wu out of\ndate.\nThe situation wm that certain\nbishops had given permission to\ntbelr clergy to uw tbe shortened\nform. As the clergy had the option\nof reading the Lord's summary instead of the Commandments II they\nwished, the result wu that some\nceased to reed the Commandments.\nTbe situation was discussed et the\ndiocesan synod of Kootenay the paet\nsummer, and it esme before the\ngeneral synod. Archdeacon Oraham\nspeaking to the question.\nSHORTENED FQRM\nFAVORED\nAs a result of the discussion,\nArchdeaoon Graham said, the proposal to adopt the shortened form\npassed the lower house of the general synod by a large majority. Ke\nuld he was told that when It\nwent later before tbe upper house,\ncomposed of bishops, it also passed\nwith a large majority, but wu not\nconsidered when it wu realized\nthis would mean a revised prayer-\nbook. Now tbe bishops, he uld,\ndid not object to the prayerbook\nbeing revised, but did not want It\nto be revised piecemeal, or untll\nthere wu a general revision. So tbe\nfinal action of the bishops, sitting\nu the u\/per house, wu to refer\nthe question to themselves, u the\nhouse of bishops, for future consideration.\nBut there was no question, Archdeacon Graham pointed out, aa to\nthe feeling of both branches of the\ngeneral synod on the matter, or as\nto tbe feeling of the Anglican\nchurch generally, that the Ten\nCommandments, for the purpose of\nbeing read In the services of the\nchurch, should be freed from the\naccretions of the old rabbinical\ntraditions.\nA   WIDER  PRIMACY\nOutstanding among tbe recommendations pf the national commission. Archdeacon Graham uld, were\nthou relating to the primacy. The\nput system had been that tbe four\narchbishops elected a primate from\ntheir own number, and that the\nprimate had a life tenure of office.\nTbe natlonal commission felt.\nfirst, tbat there should be a greater\nrange of choice for the primate;\nsecond, that the electing body should\nbe larger; third, that there should\nbe opportunity to make a change In\nprimate. It also recommended that\ntbe office of primate be enlarged,\nso u to have more influence ln\nthe   church.\nThe bishops themselves, the archdeacon uld, changed tbe mode of\nelecting the primate, so u to have\nthe primate chosen by an electoral\ncollege composed of the bishops and\nrepresentatives of the clergy and\nlaity. Future primates also would\nbe chosen not from the archbishops\nalone, but from all tbe bishops of\nthe church. Some time the field\nmight be still further enlarged, the\narchdeacon Intimated, but it was\nconsidered wise at this time to\natop  with  this extension.\nThere wu also .assent to the view\ntbat tbe primate should be relieved\nfrom the ordinary epfscopal duties\narising from the charge of a diocese, so u to enable him to give\nsuperylelon to the church. To accomplish this. It wu felt there\nshould be a prlmatlal see, the work\nof which would be light, comparatively   speaking,   that   tbe   primate\nj.-.-\u2014\u2014\u2014,-\u2014\u2014\u2014   i\ncJVfeagher'sSc>\n607 Baker St. Phone 200\nSTORE NEWS\nLodel Coats\nLuxuriously\nFurred\nA wonderul showing of all that is new and smart\nin the better class coats. Coats with a continent-wide\nreputation such as De! Monte Hickey, Shagmoor and\nIanbourne makes. Imported cloths with the new pebbly finish, also novelty French mixed cloths that are\nexclusive with us. Large collars of such furs as Beaver, Fox, Wolf, Ringtail Opossum, Chinese Weasel,\nKolinsky, Squirrel and Alaska Sable. Rich .bilk linings\nand the finest quality tailoring. The prices, too, are\nreasonable for such fine coats.\nEACH   f59.50, $69.50, to f97.50\nn connection j could give the moet of his time to\nwith the revision. In Cknada. how- oversight of toe church ln general,\never, the Anglican cuhrch was under j Archdeacon   Graham  uld   tbe  mat\nno such handicap, and wu able, to\naccept and utilize the great wealth\nof new liturgical material la tbe\nnew   prayerbook.\nAs published In 1928, the new\nprayerbook contained a shortened\nform of the Ten Commandments\nwithout the allusions that Were local and tbat bad in tbe course of\ntime become archaic. For Instance,\n\"Thou ahalt not bear falu wltneu,\"\ntbe proposed form of tbe commandment against bearing false witness.\nwas no doubt the form employed by\nMoses. But the Jews ln the course\nof time came to believe that no one\noutside their own racial limits wu\nentitled to consideration, and so\nthey limited the application of this\ncommandment to \"thy neighbor.\"\nNow In a broad sense a man's neighbor wu anyone at all, but in the\nnarrow sense meant by the Jews It\nwu applicable to themselves alone.\nRestricting this application to one's\nday afternoon which wu given by\nthe members' of the Excelsior club.\nThe- tea arrangements wers under\nthe convenershlp of Miss Eileen Mackenzie and Miss Constance Martin.\nDahlias, with pink predominating,\ngraced tbe living rooma, while the\ntea table wu centered wltb a bowl\nqf mauve and pink sweet peu and\npink tapers. Mrs. A. T. Richard\npresided and the urvlteurs Included\nMrs. Louis Choquette, Mlu Grace\nLaughton, Miss Nellie McKenzle and\nMrs- W. Anderson. Tbe bake table\nwu la charge of Mrs. W. M Cameron, while Mlu Margaret Arthur\ndlspoud of fancy-work articles. Mrs.\nE, Boyes acted as cuhler.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nGeorge Moines of Wynndel spent\ntbe week-end in town.\n* \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nO. L. Thompson of Bonnlngton\nand hU daughter Elizabeth were\ncity vlslton Saturday,\nter of the prlmatlal  ue  was  being\nconsidered,   and   many    places   had\nbeen suggested for It,  but one  had\nnot  yet  been  chosen.\nSANCTION   OF   BINHOPS\nIn connection with the election of\nbishops, also, some change was\nmade. Hitherto tbe clergyman chosen\nfor this office by a dloceee was\nsubject to sanction to by bouse of\nbishops of the ecclesiastical province ooncerned. In future the choice\nmust also be sanctioned by tbe\nhouse of bishops of all Canada before It would be effective.\nAnother recommendation of the\nnational commission, the archdeacon\nstated, was that the rights and\npowers of the general synod should\nbis enlarged. This departure, however, was not accepted,' It \u25a0 being\nfelt that the provincial synods\nknew better bow to deal with diocesan boundaries ahd with other\nproblems now coming under the\nprovincial synods, as they were\nnearer to  them.\nIn tbe matter of salaries of the\nclergy, it was felt tbat any clergyman who had been five years In\norders ln cbarge of a parish ought\nto have a minimum stipend of\n$1500. It wu pointed out tbat there\nwere clergy who received only $800\nsnd #900 a year. In most dioceses\nthere has been an effort to bave a\nminimum of $1000, and ln the Kootenay dlocue, tbe archdeacon said,\nthla wm being gradually accomplished. Along with this subject\nwae considered tbat of providing\ntransportation expenses for the\nclergy, tbls evoking a sympathetic\ndiscussion.\nrUTURE PENSION\nSCHEME\nThe question of a general pension\nscheme for the clergy also eame up.\nThla wu clearly a scheme for tbe\nfuture. Archdeacon Graham reported. The first principle wu that It\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL,    B.    C.    Oct.    4.-Mrs.    N.\nWllmea entertained st a charmingly appointed tea yesterday. Mlu\nMay Stewart attended the door and\nMlu Viola Stewart assisted in receiving tb* guests. Mrs. 8. C. Stewart and Mrs. N. Ruelle aulsted\nMrs. Wllmea in serving.\ne   \u00bb* a\nMr. and Mra. Thomas Patterson\nahd two sons, who left Trail about\nthree month! ago for the east, re\nturned this week from Montreal\nand have taken up residence on\nThird avenue, Trail Eut.\nMr. and Mrs. Cecil H. Burgess\nare apendlng tbe week-end at tbelr\nsummer home at Willow Point.\nThey will have u Uieir guests Mr.\nand  Mrs.  F.  W. Jackson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nF. Bergestrom of tbe Oranite\nroad, Nelson, wu visiting tn tbe\ncity Friday. He was accompanied\non his return by his daughter,\nMiss Mildred Bergestrom. wbo hu\nbeen the guest of Mrs. John Beck-\nman, Hendry street, for the put\ntwo weeks.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs- A. R. McCarthy returned after a few days' visit In\nNelson Friday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. James Coupland motored to\nNelson Saturday on. Community\nChest business.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr.   and    Mrs.    Dan    McKee    are\napendlng a short holiday at Greenwood. Mr. McKee is on % hunting\ntrip.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Charles L. Foster\nand Mr. and Mrs. Bert Davles of\nVancouver are Trail visitors tbls\nweek-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. M. Lang, Mrs. W. E. E\nMonypenny, Mrs. C. o. Bowden ot\nVancouver, Mlu Catherine Lang and\nDouglu .Lang motored to Nelson\nyesterday Mrs. Lang will spend a\nfew days u the guest of Mrs. John\nStobo of Nelson. Miss Lang and\nDouglas Lang left yesterday afternoon for Kamloops for a vacation.\nWhile there they will visit Miss\nLaura   McCormack.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. James dimming of Syringa\nCreek   ls   the   guest   of   her  son-in-\nlaw   and   daughter,   Mr.   and   Mrs.\nLawrence   L.   Lawner,   Government\nroad.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWilliam Robinson and Richard\nRansome of Spokane, wbo arc recent resident* of Trail arrived here\nPrlday for a week-end vlalt with\nfrienda. They were accompanied by\nWilliam Jones also of Spokane. Tomorrow they wlll be guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. Arthur Ransome of Frultvale before returning to Chewelah\nwhere they  are   employed.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022.\nMlu Janet Aitken wu guest at\na surprise party lut evening after\nchoir practise at First Presbyterian\nchurch hall, wben John Allison\non behalf of the choir members\nmade a presentation. .Songs featured the evening's program and\ndelightful refreshments were aerved.\nMrs. J. B. Doig and Mrs. D. 21c\nCabe presided at the table. Tbe\ngueets attending were Mrs. James\nThompson, Mrs. Robert Livingstone,\nMrs. J. B. Doig, Mrs. William Robertson Mrs. D. McCabe. Mrs. A\nPearson, Mr. and Mrs. John Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. John Allison, Mlu Carrie Millar, Mlsa Janet\nAitkin, David Benton and Roy\nHayman.\nMlu Mabel MacKay wss a charming hostess to a number of Trail's\nyounger set when sbe entertained\nat . a party at tbe bome of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. MacKay lut nlgbt. The rooms and supper table were attractively decorated with a profusion of autumn\n(lowers. Games and dancing were\nenjoyed. Mrs. MacKay, aulsted by\nMrs. J. R. Gray, Mlu Annie Hall\nand Mlu Jean Davidson, served\nrefreshments. Invited guests were\nMlu Kathleen Tyson, Mlu Margaret\nBurton, Mlu Lilllth McLeod, MIm\nvllle. Mlu Lorraine Flynn,' Mlu\nBlanche Hall, Mlu Mildred Mac-\nGladys Alty, Mlu Marian Sommer-\nKey and Messrs. Arthur Kelly,\nJames Donohue, Ralph Temple,\nBoddte Stuart, Raymond McLeod,\nGordon Balfour, Cbarlu Lundie Jack\nMcDiarmid, Walter Weir and Wll\nfred  McDonald.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr, and Mrs. John Whltelow and\nfamily of Comox arrived In Trail\nThursday and are the guests of\nMra. Whltelow-a sister, Mrs. Jamu\nKldd- They are house guests today\ncf Mrs. Alex McLuckle.\nmust be on an actuarial basis, so\nas to be fully sustaining. When it\ncame in it must be a scheme without a loophole, and lt must aba be\nfair to those whom it was intended\nto benefit. The scheme, after being\nonce Inaugurated, would be applicable only to those under 30 years,\nbut aa ths clergy Included men of\nall ages,' a sum must be raised to\ntake care of the older clergy, who\nwere \"accrued liabilities,\" or for\ntheir  widows  or   other   dependents.\nIt wu estimated that a capital\nsum of $4,000,000 was needed to\nstart the scheme, of which about\n$1,000,000 wu in hand. The general\nsynod spent some time considering\nthe best way to raise this sum, snd\nIt wu conceded this matter lay\nchiefly in the hands of the lalt:\nThe laymen, however, were intensely\nIn earnest in thla matter.\nAID   YOl'NG   INCUMBENTS\nConditions In the life of the\nclergy were also examined ln a sympathetic way. In tbe cue of young\nclergy, pitched out ou to the frontier, to find tbelr own parishioners,\nlt wu found tbat special problems\narose, and sometlmea mistaken\n[\u25a0ourse5 were followed. It wu decided that in future these young\nmen should hawe five years competent  supervision.\n-Another angle wu tbe case of tbe\nclergy wbo were isolated, and were\noften for long periods without in-\ntereouree with other clergy, sometimes growisa morbid under thetr\nresponsibilities.\nIn this connection was tbe decision of tbe general conference, re\nferred to above, by which meettn'\nand conferences will be held fro:\ntime to time, with the clash of\n.mind on mind, this providing both\nmental and spiritual refreshment.\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL HOUSES AND LOTS. IN-\nsurance. Notary. .J. D. Anderson. Trail. (7092)\nCABINET   COUNCIL   MEETS\nOTTAWA,   Ont.,  Oct.   4\u2014 (By   tho\nCanadian Press i \u2014 Cabinet council\nhad a thru hours' sitting Saturday. At the conclusion of the, meeting, it wu announced there wu\nno statement to make. No appointments were made at the sitting.\nPOPE CALLS ON\nPEOPLE TO WORK\nTO AID JOBLESS\nEncyclical   Issued  Calls  for\nNew Crusade Mercy\nand Relief\nVATICAN crTY, Oct. 4. AF) \u2014\nPope Plus XI. lut nlgbt Issued an\nencyclical ln which be called qn\nthe world to Join la a new erunde\nof mercy for tbe relief of unemployed millions who, be said, are\nthe victims of economic distress\ncaused ln part by tbe \"unbridled\nrace   for  armaments.\"\nThe encyclical, called \"Nora Impendent\"\u2014new things are upon us\u2014\nwu written by tbe pope Friday, tba\nday on which tbe church celebrates\nthe feast of guardian angels. Hunger, want and the menacing \"plague'*\nof idleness, tbe holy father said,\nare caused largely by tbe armament\nraoe Inspired by natlonal rivalries\nsnd resulting ln the dissipation of\nenormous wealth.\nHe instructed tba bishops and\nother church authorities to organise\nrelief and directed all men to contribute to the support of thla charitable endeavor.\nFive Teams Will Play\nin American League\nCHICAOO, Dl., Oct. 4\u2014William F.\nGrant, of Kansas City, yutsrday\nwu re-elected president and secretary-treuurer of tbe American\nHockey league, Thomu J. Shaugh-\nnessey of Chicago again wu named\nvice-president.\nIt wu indicated the league would\noperate thla season u a five-club\ncircuit with Chicago, Kansas City,\nBuffalo, St. Louls-Mlnneapolis snd\nTulsa.\nA plan is being worked out to\ncombine the Minneapolis and St.\nLouis   Clubs.\nPlumbing \u2022 Heating\nPhons 160 for prompt and experienced work on your plumbing    and    beating    requirements.\nNELSON  PLUMBING\nft    HEATING   CO.\nGEO. BRANT\n\"It's Safe Because It's Pasteurized\"\nYou Should Drink\nA PINT A DAY\nMilk is the most perfect\nfood known to mankind.\nIt contains every food element necessary to keep\nthe body in repair. In milk\nare the five vitamins imperative to health. They\n^^^^^^^^^^^ promote vitality and ward\noff disease\u2014Calcium to maintain sound, white teeth\nis contained in milk\u2014Protein to repair worn-out tissue\u2014Mineral salts to enrich the blood stream.\nYou should drink at least a pint of Curlew Milk\neach day. It is purest and most healthful because it\nis Pasteurized.\nCURLEW CREAMERY\nPALM DAISIES, Ud.\nICE CREAM BUTTER tflUK\nALL  PERFECTLY  PASTEURIZED   PRODUCTS\n G% Sfolaon BatUj Nema\nI ,._- mcr-alng eicapt Sunday Dy Haaa Publishing Oam-\npanir.  Limited. Neleon. \u25a0   0.\nMember ol Canadian Ram leaned wtre tarn, all WW.\nAdvarttalag  nla earda  and A. B. C. statetaente ot elgaitttoa\nmalled oa isgusas, or me.  be aean at tha effloe of an amrtlslas\n'     t tba Oanadlaa Dally Newspapers' \u00abaeodatlo_.\nBy mall (oountry). pac\nfar  rate\nSUBSCBIFTION RATES\nBr mall tout), par jaar \u2014\nOutelde Canada, par month\nDelivered, par weak\nHr roar    . ,, .,,\nParable la advance.\nMember Audit Bureau oJ Circulation.\ntoo\n1S.0O\n. .Tl\n. 7J0\n.     M\nMAO\nMONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1981\nKeeping Wages High As Possible\nThere an two school* of thought cm the wage question, and the division between them it so sharp thtt\nthey can scarcely be reconciled.\nOne school holds that wages must come down, because commodities have come down. The other declares that to bring down wages would only result in\nreduced purchasing power and consequently would accentuate the depression.\nTheories are not of much value in matters of thia\ntort.   Facts have to be faced.\nThe only solution actually ia to do the best we can.\nWhere wages can be maintained on a prosperity scale\nthen they should not be reduced. In every case they\nshould be kept as high at possible.\nBut if an industry cannot continue to operate on the\nexisting scale of wages then it is obviously far better\nto make a redaction in wages, keep the industry going\nand keep its employees at work than to close down and\nthrow employees into the bread line or into relief\ncamps.\nWith wheat at 50 cents it is beyond argument thtt\na farmer cannot pay as high wages to farm help as if\nwheat were atx$l. And it is better for the farmer to\nhire men at a reduced scale of pay and harvest hit crop\nthan to leave the men unemployed and the crop to\nperish.\nIf canned fish will only bring half of its normal price\nin the world market, then it's better for a fisherman to\nget a lower price for his fish than to have the canneries\nclose down and take away his source of employment.\nEach cate mutt be dealt with on its merits. Employers who can do so owe it to their employees and the\ncountry to maintain wage scales; thoee who are forced\nto make a cut or to close down, or go out of business,\nthould keep wages as high as possible. Quite apart\nfrom any sentimental considerations, it is in the interest\nef the country as a whole that wages, purchasing power\nand the standard of living should be kept at high as is\npracticable.\nBut wage-earners have their duties to perform, alao.\nReasonableness and common sense make it evident that\nindustry cannot pay out for materials, overhead and\n-wages more than it takes in for its product And it is\nbetter to work for $3 or $4 a day than to walk the\nstreets becauae someone can't pay $6 or $6.\nEmployees can assist in bringing about a return to\nprosperity in other ways. They can reduce waste, in\nsupplies, in materials and in time.\nIncreased efficiency in operations reduces costs and\nmakes it easier for concerns to sell their products or\nservices at prevailing prices and makes it possible to\npay out more in wages.\nIt is a time of all times for cooperation and goodwill\nbetween employers and employees.\nImprovements\u2014Not New Roods\nRelief work is to be concentrated upon the improvement of existing highways rather than upon building\nnew roads.\nHon. Rolf Bruhn's decision in this respect is sound.\nThere is need of a tremendous amount of modernization\nof roads now in use throughout the rpovinee and relief work, which is now getting under way, will result\nin widening, improvements of grade and reductions of\ncurvatures.\nSuch improvements will be immediately beneficial\nand will get many miles of highway into condition for\naome form of hard surfacing which must be don as\nsoon as possible, in order both to provide for better\ntravel conditions and alto to cut down maintenance\ncosts.\nA Chance for Canada\nSir Thomas Lipton, gallant sportsman, and one of the\nworld's most prominent of merchant princes has passed\nbeyond. Aside from the prominence attained in amassing millions of dollars from an humble beginning Sir\nThomas will go down in history as the man who spent\nmillions to lift a yachting mug and in 20 years of effort failed to reach his goal.\nHis last attempt to lift the historic yachting trophy\nwas a heart breaker. He built a wonderful boat, sailed\nit across the Atlantic, and then taw it defeated by the\nAmerican speeder. But Sir Thomas had lost the race\nfor so many times that sportsmen in the United States\nwere backing him to win. They wanted to see his effort* rewarded.\nAnd so Lipton passed on and tt is almost unlikely\nthat a challenge will come again from across the ocean.\nThe cup is held by an American yacht built by an American syndicate. The great handicap against Sir\nThomas was the fact that the rules made competition\npossible for Britain only as she Bailed ber entry across\nthe sea.\nHere is a chance for Canada now. Canada has a lot\nef wealthy sportsmen. Canada has sailors of yachts\nand fishing boats equal to any in the world. Canada\nhas ship builders as good as can be found anywhere.\nWhy not a Canadian syndicate? Why not a Canadian\nyacht? The barrier of having to sail the Atlantic to\nenter the race could thusly be hurdled and the American\nships given closer competition. Because Lipton has\ndied international yacht raring for the historic mug\nehould not be forgotten.\nOhmy, a circus star of 80 yeart ago, who took his\nname from the exclamations of his audience whan he\nperformed his trapeze feats, has just died at Blackpool,\nEngland. His real name wat Joseph Smith, and he was\n77 years of age. He appeared before Queen Victoria\nin 1877 and later before the present Ring and Queen\nof England.\nBin WLtOK BAU.  KIWI. -SHOW. B.  C - MOWAT MOWO**.  UI1IMB 5, WI*\nSeen and Heard\nIn If ELSON\n\"O. J.\n(Br t. B c.)\n8.\" sang hla ea\u00bb<\nK taturdar'a laeue. He\nbaa earned an admirably, ao waH In\ntan* tbat It la wltb moctaaoa that\n\"On -Mta tpot\" la thrown Into Ma\ndieoarda tor tbe tana being. _ow-\never, \"On ttie Spot\" haa baaa \"taken\nfor a ride\" ao we are baok again In\nBelaon. Bert ot a reincarnation ot\n\"J. B. a\"\n...\nIt ww Hick Mamer the taaned\nSpokane air pilot, who aald at Vernon: \"Anyone who thlnka ha la It\npar cant better than any Canadian\nla a a  liar.\" Aad It made i\ngreat Ut wtth  tha crowd.\n...\nTiiwuilHj lata hgrneje af\u00aber a hail*\nam is x hard Job. Bin a tellow eaa\nalwata talk about hla holldaya atft\nhi.   adventures.\n...\nBar l-rteaoe, I learned while away\nthat Oeorge floury and Oeorge Dill\not Neleon oould go back to Vernon\nand run for aldermen aad ba as-\naured ot election. Tbey wen on\nhuntlnc trip la th. okanagan elty\n(I should aay oountry) but hunting\nwaa ao good la Vernon they .tared\nthere.\n...\nAad thaaa two boya proved good\n\"grouaeaa? They ahot several while\ntravelling bete aaa Edgewood and\nVernon. Toura truly helped eat tbem\non the roadaide beside a babbling\nbrook. It waa lucky we did oo. I\nlearned afterward that certain grouae\nwere out of aaaaon In the okanagan.\nOf courae tha onea the boya ahot\nwen la aaaaon.\n...\nIf yon ever Imagined you were\ngoing through a anowatorm oa a\nwarm, aunny September afternoon\nall you had to do wae to follow tbe\nDin oar along the Okanagan hlfhway near Lumby. Oeorge Fleury\nwa. plucking the grouee. The faater\nbarrage waa a \"plucky\" dembnetra-\nUOB.\n...\nKen Fish, formerly of Nelaon, waa\nenjoying a haircut in a Vernon\nbarber ahop. Art Oodfny, formerly\nof Nelaon, aaya hla telephone service\nle tke beat la the world. At Pentlcton Oeorg-e Kemmerling, formerly of\nNelion, wae a buey nun during the\n\"main line\" traffic rata. And William Myera of Nelaon waa there trying to And a gnvel pile.\n...\nKelowna waa a busy place. Did not\nmaet a Ndaontte there. Down Oliver\nwar every fanner sella ointeloupee\nand tomatoee from a little atall ln\nfront of hla acreage. In fact the\nfruit waa going to waete on aome\nfarme.\n...\nAt Vernon 1 paid 33 centa for\nthree large loupe. At Oliver J\nthought I ahould do well. But I\nlooked like a tourist. They wanted\n25 oents for two canteloupes then.\nBut after I protested the fanner offered ma about 109 pounda for 60\ncate.\n... i\nAt Osoyooa the customs man did\nnot search my baggage for liquor.\nBut he waa curious about a bottle\nof ginger-ale. It waa Okanagan ginger\nair and I offered to give him the\nbottle. But he aald they made better\nstuff at home.\n...\nIn Spokane Harry Ooe_ waa Interested la the beer vote ln Nelaon.\nRe waa alao Intonated ln Canadian\ncurrency. And Oonatable Moss of\nthe Spokane police force wsa Inquiring about provincial ottleeta la hla\ndlatrtct, eepeclally Mr. Dunwoody,\nnow at the roast, and Oonatable\nHenly, formerly of Salmo. Motorcycle Patrolman Anderaon waa keen\nupon a hunting expedition he waa\ntaking into the Cariboo. When theae\nSpokane fallows go hunting they do\nIt right. They planned to travel In a\ncar and trailer. The trailer waa ln\nshape of a house. They juat lived ln\nthe contraption which waa fitted\nwith everything but a bathtub.\n...\nAad ln Spokane I learned that\nGeorge Oady of Trail knows aa many\npeople there ee he does ln Trail.\nAnd how he oan talk to a policeman when In difficulties! But let\nOeorge tell tbat one. And If be does\nnot tell lt all Billy MOllaky wtll\nput tke anxious inquirer right.\n...\nDon Manly of Orand Forks, secretary ot tha board of trade therein\nllkea etrplenrag. He la going to fat\na machine soma day ... \"If i\ncan find something to use for money,\" ao he remarks.\n...\nBut of what interest to the reading\n.public I. all this chatter? WeU you\nwMl have to put up with lt that's\nall. And down In Vemon I met the\nchief of police. Chief eletke. He\nboasts that he la the oldest chief of\npolice In any police servloe In Brltlah Oelumbla. And Chief Clerke\nknowa hla horsea. He rode on. all\nthrough tkt air pageant. He bed\neome nice things to aay about Nelson. He recently visited hen to pick\nup a couple prlaonera. With the\nmountles, provincials and city police\nofficers Vernon without Doukhobon\nto contend with haa almoat aa many\npolice olficera as we have ln Nelaon\nSong  Writer\u2014\"Vine\u2014twine\u2014moon\u2014croon\u2014pent  house\n\u2014rent house.\"\nScottish Place Namea In Canada\nAnd wall be eeein' you . ..\nAUNT HET\nThen li an lntereaUuf study In\nthii subject, for it implies history\nit well ss feofrapfcy. Tbeie Is s\ntendency In ths ttaroeiend to tfctnk\nthst people ot Scottish Mood form\na large part of Canada 6 population.\nThis Is hardly true, especially during recent years. In soms pqits the\npercentage 1* very small, owing to\nthe hssvy immigration from other,\ncountries for a period of several'\nBut it ta stUl a fact, that,\n.Scottish place-names sre numerous\ntn every province, with ths exception of Quebec which wss settled\nalmost entirely by tbe French.\nThere are historical reasons for\ntheae facts. In the early years of\nthe nineteenth century, the Highland clearances forced many of the\ncrofters to see* new homes. Lord\nSelkirk led a band of these by wsy\nof Hudson Bay to what, ln 1812,\nwss unknown land. There Is plentiful evidence of their arrival, snd\ncommunities bearing familiar names\nappear along the Bed river near\nwhst Is now Winnipeg. Selkirk, St.\nAndrews, KUdonan, Balmoral ere s\nfew of these.\nBut the evidence Is even stronger\nwhen we examine the east, embracing Nova Scotia, Prince Id-\nward Wand snd Cape Breton. Owing to the failure of the potato\ncrop, hundreds of families migrated\nfrom Lewie, Bkye, snd other parts\nof the Hebrtdea snd Highlands. So\nwe find such names ss these occurring with frequency: Inverness,\nGlencoe, New Olaagow, Argyle, Caledonia, Dalhousle, Glengarry, Lorne,\nTorryhurn, Athol, Alton. Dundee,\nPerth, Clyde, New Annan.\nAbout tbe middle of the century\nthere wss another migration. This\nwss before Confederation ln 1887.\nsnd people ln the maritime provisoes spoke of \"going to Canad*\"\nThe inducement was rich crown\nland almost free, and thousands\navailed themaelvee of the offer. It\nwas before the dsys when rail'\nroads hsd penetrated the newer\nsettlements. What arrests our attention la the extent to which these\nsettlers again reproduced tbe names\ntaken from Scotland, virtually all\nthe above names are found In the\nprovince of Ontario, and many more.\nTbe county of Bruce, on the shore\nof Lake Huron, about 150 mllea\nnorthwest of Toronto. If a case ln\npoint. Of the 18 townships we note\nLindsay, Albemsrle, Annabel, Arran,\nElderalle, Carrick, Kincardine, Bruce,\nKlnlaaa. Greenock.\nSo also with the towns and villages of that county. We find\nHolyrood, Bervle, Glamls, Dukeld,\nCargtl, Paisley, Tobermory within s\nsmall area. With the village of\nLucknow as a oenter there ls a settlement which to this dsy retains a\nstrong Highland element, and Gaelic\nis understood by many of ttie\nyounger people. Lochalsh, Landalde.\nKlnlough are some of the names.\nThere are few finer settlements\nthan those ln the county of Oxford.\nCertain townships where Murreys\nand Mackay* prevailed sent out\nfamous men. Bttrlck, Klppen, Blair,\nDoon, St, Morgs are ln this district.\nIn a few cases tbe offsprings\nHave surpassed the parents ln\ngrowth. This ls true of such flourishing cities sa Hamilton, sometimes\ncalled the \"ambitious city\" as a\nrival of Toronto. Fort William hu\na large foreign population. Calgary\nIs outliving Its cowboy days wben\n\"remittance\" men were too numerous. Banff has a reputation for its\nhotel, scenery, and Highland games;\nOban and Braemar need to look to\ntheir laurels if they hope to be In\nthe running. Other places are hut\nminiatures   of    the    original.    Ayr,\nDumfries,      Strathaven.\n- There are aoores of ottu\n\"where t ths name hae a familiar\nsound to Scottish sen. One may\ninstance Beeforth, Culler, Nairn,\n2allendar, Ba-nnockbura, Peebles,\n^offatt, Kelso. Bat the above will\n\"ve some indication of the large\nite\u00bbt to whtoh Scottish place-\nlsmss sre reproduced In Canada.\nAnother fine qualify in Gandhi's character ia that\nh$ observes whole days of silence.\nSee\/? 5 MUlion Cold\n100 Feet Under Sea\nOut In tha Bay M\nttm mllea (Nan the part of Bleat.\nthere la an operation tat pmrw\nwhich cannot lall to atrlke a fa*\nsponslve chord tn the Imagination\not tha boja of yesterday who onea\nreluctantly laid aside their \"Treaatro\nMend\" to dream of burled rlehet\nand aunkan (old. When theae rlehee\namount to aeveral mllHoaa of dotlei-i\nIn gold, the attempte to aalni*\nthem are ecoompanlecT hy world Interest.\nIt la not plrau tald that an\nItalian salvage ship la eeeklnt to\ntree trom the graap of Neptune ln\nthe Bay of Biscay. It le tha proaalc\nraid of a modern commercial world,\nfire million dollars ot tt, loat when\nthe liner appt aank after a coin.\nalon ln a fog ln 18J\u00bb ln too teet\not water.\nInWli Swedleh ateamer found\nthe aunkan wrack attar M equate\nmiles of the Bey ot Btacar had been\ndragged. Defeat, however,\nthe ettarta of tha crew to recover\nthe treaaure. Then a Oerman selvage crew took a hand In tha tame\nwith the aame result. Finally the\nItalian salvage ahlp Arttgllo came\nupon tha aeene. In December, 1930,\nanother dlaaater Immediately con-\nnected with tha flrat took place.\nTha Artlalio and Ita companion vee-\neel had. In addition to Ita work In\nconnection with the Egypt's fold,\nheen engage, to dee-troy an eld\nnunlttone carrier which had aunk\nwith a carta ot eaploalvea tn tba\nbar .and waa a constant menace to\nhipping. The Artlgllo, loaded with\nexplosives, blew up. Artlgllo n Is\nnow on tba Job.\nOperettas, are proceeding on the\ntheory tbat the aweet way to\ncover tha treaaure was to lift the\natrong room of the veaael Intact. In\norder to do thla, however. It\nfirst necessary to eut lt away\nthe reet ot the vessel. 71m cutting\naway waa attempted by means of\nexploatves, methodically cutting\ngreat section 90 by SO fact through\ntbe four decks above the treasure\nroom. At laat report they had eut\naway all except one deck; after It la\neut away the bullion room will ba\nacceaelble for the giant grapnels used\nIn the operation to damp thetr\nsteel lawe upon tha atrong room and\n|lft lt to the surface.\nThat $50,000\nPayment\nSECURING A RUFF\nA* \"demreet Bridge South might\nDM the above band In verloua ways,\ndepending -upon the system ha\nwaa using; hot the final declaration\nwould ba four Hearts tn aay avant\nbecame South could not atop abort\nof game wtth only three losing\ncarda la hla hand.\nThere ate four ways ln which\ntht band oould ha bid. South\nmight call ton Heerte Initially;\nIf ha used aay ault bid of two\naa a forcing hid he might bid\ntan Bearta Initially, with Worth\nheaping the bidding open by calling\ntwo No Trumpa, South on tha aeeond\nround would bid four Bearta:\nIf ba used aay ault bid ot three\naa \u00bb forcing Md ha oould bid\nthree Bearta Initially; or he might\nuse tha artXMal two-Ch* hM initially and hid four Heerte after hla\npartner's weakneee answer ot two\nDiamonds.\nAt Auction bridge South would obtain an uncontested one-Heart contract.\nWhen the hand waa played wast\n___. by winning wtth tha King\naad Queen cf Diunonda; after which\nha led \u2022 third round whloh South\ntrumped. South then exhausted the\nadvene trumpa In three rounds and\nled a dub. forcing out tha advene\nhad a ahow-down for\ntour-odd.\nDid thla hand entitle him to make\nthat much!\nTHE CORRECT PLAY\nMt readily could have aaved tbt\ngame. Whan West led tbe King ot\nDiamonds (aat ahould have seen that\ngame could be aaved it South had\ntwo Diamond-. laat ahould have\ntaken tha flrat trick with the\nAaa of Diamonds and lad the\nsingleton Ace of Clubs, to trick I,\nreturning Waat'a Diamond. Thla\nplay would enable Wbat to mark\nlast with tha singleton Ace ot\nClubs and a desire to ruff and to\ntrte* 4 Weat would, hav* lad a\ndub. Eaat would have ruffed and\ngame would have been aaved.\nThat Body of Yours\nBy IASSSS W. BABTOH\nTHE ENEMA IS HELPFULf*. J\nale find  tha  dally   use  of  atr _\nparaffin oU all that la ns pessary \u00abi\nkeep tbe lateetlne actively healthy. I\nA little fratt dally, aad bending!\naxataleea give satlsTaotery reaulta tel\na gnat many parc^a. 1\nHowever, It Is well to know that|\nbead safely ooca a week, er three]\ntimes ln two weeks, aa needed.\nOM ef tha household remedlee\nthat ettat te ba going out of use\nla tha old fashioned enema or -ln-\nIsctlon,\" aa t it sometimes caliad.\nNot that than are nat a number\nof specially eccetructed taetnuaauta\nthat an being; eold for the purine, eome of which an vary help-\nful. Also tbe long tube being used\nto litigate or wae_ out the large\ninteatlna\u2014colonic Irrigation\u2014Is of\ngnat help tn ridding thte bowel\nof wastes and products from Inflected teeth, tonalls, and gall Madder, which often Ua than for a long\ntime after tha teeth, tonalla and\ngall bladder have bean removed.\nWhy did the uee ot tha enema\ngo out of taw to a cooalderahle extent?\nBecauae lt waa found that tta\nover-uae took away aome ot tht\nnatural strength of tha muscles\nof the large mtaatma. and thaaa\nmuscles became flaccid and loat\ntbelr tone.\nHowever, If enemaa ara not uaed\ntoo often they can ba of real help\ntn ridding tbe Individual ot wastaa\nwhich even lf not potsonoua aa\nwas formerly thought, nevertheless\nby pressure on nerve endings cf the\nintestine give rise to depression\nand lack of energy.\nThe beat method of using an Injection la putting about a table-\ntpoon cf salt to two quarts of warm\nwater. Aa you know, thla le the ao-\nlutlon that la uaed to replace blood\n~han mora fluid to needed In the\nblood veeeele.\nDr. Walter Alvarei telle ua tbat\nan enema is a logical remedy for\neoasUpaUon because It cleans out\nthe lsst two or three tbat of tht\nlarge lnteetlne (colon), where all\ntbe stagnation takes place, and rt\ndoes not upaet the as feet of small\nbowel where stagnation pnotlcally\nnever takee place.\nNow there are times wben purga-\n\"It's about ao you can't truat\na married woman Wo tar or a\nmarried man too near.\"\nUnemployment Officer\nArrives at Femie\npnuni. B. c. Oct. 4\u2014Mr. Brookar\nof Vlotoria has come to Fernie to\naaelat In tha public works office.\nwill take charge of tha aooountlng\nrelating to the unemployment camps\nof the district,\nLelth, Dunfermline ara email\ncomparison with thoee in the homeland, while several others are neither\ngreat nor small, auch aa Lanark,\nLauder,   Perth,   Gretna,   Sourts.\nIn several cases seaport, ot Scotland are alao on the water In Canada, but the reverse often occurs\nowing to the Immense stretch trom\ncoaat to coast. There la harmony\nln the caee of St. Andrew. Tobermory. Mgln, But Saltcoata Is on\nthe vast prairie. Dun vegan Is hundreds of miles inland, and Allsa\nCraig ls a peaceful village of Ontario.\nIn the province of Manitoba appear sucb names as Thornhlll.\nDouglass, Carnegie, while ln Saskatchewan (where one might expect fewer traces of Scottish Influence. a\u00ab the foreign population to\nnumerous) tbe map shows Aber-\nnethy, Troeeacha, Adair, Bigger, Cupar, Omit. Orkney, Stranraer, Stru-\nan. Familer also are auch plaoas\ntn Alberta farther weat\u2014elg_ Barrhead, Alrdrle. Carstalra. Lomond. On\nthe western coast tn British Columbia, whtch to mora English than\nScottish, eepeclally In Victoria, atlll\nwe aee Catthnees, Fife, Caledonia\nand Cralajellachie, where Donald A.\nSmith (afterward Lord Strathcona)\ndrove the gold spike which connected the eaatarn and' waatem aec-\ntlona of the Canadian Pacific railway.\nHy-. Arthur Meighen, member of\nthe Hydro Commission, tcid a meeting at Kincardine that it would not\nbe right to load the province wtth\nthe cost ot an Inquiry to determine\nwhy a payment of M0.0O was made\nto John Aird. Ha waa satisfied\nthat tha matter had been dealt wttb\nquite satisfactorily tn a stsitement\nmade by the chairman of tbs commission.\nThere Is ona way In which to\navoid an Inquiry, and that la by\nthe making of a statement from ths\nHydro Commission whloh will give\nall the facta and ahow to the satisfaction of the people ot thla province\nAberdeen, why It waa necessary to make thla\nWO.000 payment. _.^__^^_\nFifty thousand dollars la a gnat\ndeal ot money. It would purchase\ntha services cf several competent\nmen for a long period.\nPeople an not asking anything\nunree~a_a_e when they aay they\ndesire to know more about lt, and\nthe peop}_ h\u00abve not forgotten that\nthey probably would have known\nnothing about It were lt not for\nthe Beauharnois Inquiry. Mr. Meigh-\nen'a address at Kincardine did not\nclean up the matter at all.\nNotions in Sleep\nSteep la tar from motlonleee. The\naverage healthy adult during dean\naleep makes aome noticeable changes\nln noslUen on an average of once\nevery aevan or eight minutes, it li\nshown by experiments made at -the\nMellon Inatttota tor Industrial Research.\nTbe obeervatlena carried on by Dr\nR. M. Johnaon ahaw that ever:\naleepar hu a repetolre cf approximately a doaen different eleeplni\npositions. On a typical night ba WIU\nuse nearly all of them, chngtng\nfrom one to another tram JO to no\ntunas according to various aaaaa-\ntlons and body lrrttatlona. The\nbrain to sufficiently alert to guard\ntha sleeper's comfort but at the\nsame time the momentary dlsoom\nforts are kept out of cootelouonesa.\nOFFICIAL STSTtM POINIEB\nNO. 19\nHaving In recent pointers\nlearned what are supporting\ntricks for partner** sult-bld, we\nnext take up what number al\n\u00ab\u00bb_> tricks Is necessary in order\nta Jruttfy a raise. Thla varies,\ndepending upas, -whether thr\npartner has made an ortglna'\nbit af ana or two ot a salt:\nla the latter eaee partner hater\naa much Wronger, fewer support\nlag tricks an needed.\nTha specific requirements hi\neach edsa win be stated ta the\npointers whtch loHojr.\nMedical Aid Given\nBy Radio and\nAirplane\nOne of tbe most naarkable and\nbeneflclent development* in connection with tbe east Interior In Australia in araa about two mtLbon\nsquare miles, ta tbe Aerial Medical\nService of tha Australian Inland Mie-\nslon. Thla Inland Mlaelon waa bom\nIn tbe brain of a Presbyterian minister. Rev. John Hynn. It ministers\nto tba aptrltual and physical need*\nof tbe eettlera inland.\nIn almoat two-thirds of the Island continent there la no town of\nsufficient alee to support a private\nmedical practitioner. For 1500 mllee\nnorth and south, and for the aame\ndistance east and west, there la no\nmedical man tn practice. There are\nabout 20,000 white people scattered\nover thte huge area, who live at\nleast 200 miles or more from hospitals and medical aid.\nJohn flynn was tbe first to see\nln wireless and airplanes the annihilation of distance, and the possibility of an efficient medical service over vast sparsely populated\nareas. Be took a map of Australia\nand drew circles upon tt with a radius representing 300 mllea. Be found\nthan only six suoh were needed to\ncover tbe whole area at preeent out.\nside ordinary medical ranee. Be also\nreckoned that one doctor eojulpped\nwith an airplane could cover sueh a\nadlus. Bis reckoning proved correct.\nMNKKD  BV  WI-H.LESS\nWITH MMPLE TBANBMITER\nAfter many disappointment* be\nerected the first wireless station\n8 AB, in an old Dodge oar, tbe engine of which supplied the power\nAfter aeveral years of experlmer.\nthe Ideal Baby transmitter wss evolved which Is now revolutionising\ntbe whole of the inland. This mn-\nchine U r\u00abne man power, lt la won\ned hy foot pedsls like a bicycle\nThere are no batteries to get out cr\norder. This transmitter has a ren?-\nof a tarn hundred miles. Transmit\nsian ls by Mores code. The inlanders can be taught to uee It readily.\nTlie mother station was officially\nopened at Oloneurry. Queensland.\nAn expert Is always on duty at this\nstation- Bach owner of a transmitter haa a certain time allotted to\nhim tor sending and receiving messages. He taps them out by Moras\ninlanders ar? no longer isolated, and\ntbe bush la losing its dread loneliness, llie Inlanders can receive\ntflephonlcally, but can at present,\ntransmit telegraphically only. The\nowners of sets cannot only communicate with the mother station, but\nalso with one another. Messages\ncan be passed from one to another,\nand so to tbe mother station, so\ntbat *ny distance can be covered.\nTREATS  CASE BY BADIO,\nOB. It SEpIOCS, FLIES\nThe Australian Inl\u00bbnd Ulswon\ndoctor la stationed at Gloncuiry\nHe bu his plane and pilot. When\nan Inlander falls HI or Is seriously\ninjured six or seven hundred mllee\n*w*y, t|}e message is tapped into\nOloneurry. Ths doctor bas th\u00ab,symp-\nto*a described, he prescribes wbat is\nto be dons. If bs believes tbe illness is not serious be mty await a\nseries of bulletins on tbe patient's\nprogress. If the case Is serious he\nat once takes to tbs air, and In a\ncomparatively\" abort tins peys s\nprofessions! visit.\nThirty Years Ago\n(From Tbe Tribune of Oct. i.lgoi)\nA hunting party composed ot\nSteam. Ifusaon, Holt. Van Agnew\nand several other, tram tba Athabasca mine, started on a hunting\ntup up the eaat fork ot Cottonwood\ncreek jeaterday.\n^H ...\nTha contract for repladng tha\nKelson city wharf hag bean awarded\nJohn Toye tor tha sum ot gflSO.\nMayor Fletcher, plana for repair to\nthe approach of tho wharf.\n^\u25a0H ...\nAn old proapeotor named Andrews\nower of tha Goodenough claim on\nMorning mountain, has been missing\nnow for se*fer\u00bbl days.\n.   *   a\nA practice run of tht ftre brigade\nto tha Nelaon    Saw and    Planing,\nto test  the  power\not the water at    tbat   point, wat\nTen Tears Ago\n<ma na Dally Mam af Oet.\nIMD\nHM. Mowat, member for PaaktlJ\ndais, haa bean appelated to thej\nbench of tha supreme aoqft cf OmtJ\nm. together wlH\nwith the anBounoement ot tba in\npolntment of It. T. Oreen. luatn'Mg\nOf Kootenay, to the senate, aa\nof the Brltlah Ooitnab\n...\nBetween 84,000 and MjMO MM\ntba margin of traU as\nonr the ftfuiee   cf  1\u00bb1\u00bb   to\ndata. Tlie total    tonnage    tet\nnine moi_ba wa* M7.IM ton*.\nL. McCulloch. left tbe ctty\nday to make a cross seotlon ot thg\n1817 gurwy Una of th, Ta* roedfl\nto meat wtth the requtmneats\nthe   Dominion   go-rennnent.\n.   \u2022   \u2022 ^B^\nA   political   caucua  of  tha   Dls*\nMet   U__w   FWmtfa   OoocMtaUrg\nsociety waa  bald  laat  night\nplant  wen   made  ts hate  a  rapl\nnsentattt* la tba coming atactWiig\nTwenty Years Ago!\nThe   Deny   Newt  M\nOctober  villi)\nO. H. Stesrart-Wade, commlsalo\ner tor tha  proeinclel   _anr___a__g\nspent yeaterday  oo the  watt Affg\ncollecting   potatoea  to  ba  tent\nth, united Statee tor th* SUlwelg\ncup competition. ^^^\nlatum\nDr. frank on hla\nhis trip to Bcaaland\nvised Col. N. A. BurriU that ',\nPetrle of tbat plaoe, general nianaM\not th* Boundary Mining tsm\/M\nIgptoratton oompany, had\nhtm a telegram to tha etteot <\u25a0\u25a0\ntheir local ooal had takaa\nprlEea at tha Spokane fair.\n*   a   \u2022\nIntimations hare been recelead\nthat Bar. E. S. Lode, of Wadsbur*\nOnt, has accepted a oall to SM\nPaul's Presbyterian church, which]\nwas extended a short thaa ago,\nJ.  P.   FOrda,   tb*\nernment cam* ln last night\nBaeelttoke  and  la  at  the\nP?W^t -Sal\nI Find Many\nUses for Your\nWant Ads\nSays This Housewife\n\"Such a tlme-sarec! Aad results follow\nso qukklyl They're my tary fkst\nthought whenever there's a want xt be\nsatisfied ... a happy thought, too.\nFor yean, of oourae, I oaa* Nelson Bally\nNews tram Ads to hire doaaastlc help.\nAnd recently they're been netting au In\nother ways, too.\n\"Whan we moved laet fall, oat delightful bungalow was located through\nthese Want Ads. We sublet oar old\napartment tn the same way. Aai laat\nweek they helped aa again! You'd\nknow what 1 mean If yoa saw II la our\n| driveway . . . th* cuteet, prettiest\nsedan you ever laid eyee ou, almoat new.\nAnd wa found It tn the Nelson Dally\nNews Want Ads.\nNrlamt latlg Nrmfi\ntet Ail B-pt\nPhone 148 or 144\nAlnmimim Ware\nNow is the time to purchase your stock\nof Kitchen Utensils at a Low Price.\nSPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK\nSteamer and Sauce Pan  $1.09\nUtility Water Kettle     $U9\n8-Quart Water Kettle and Insert ............ $1.75\nSEE OUR WINDOWS.\nNelson Hardware Co.\n. Wholesale and Retail Quauiy Hardware\nNelson -<*\u25a0\u00bb  B. C.\n VMS'\nNELSON HOLDS TRM. UNE AND\nDUCK WAY TO 15-5 WIN OVER THE\nVEnORS IN EXCITING RUGBY GO\nShut Baw 55 Yarda fer\na Pretty ToQchdawn;\nMeLeod Bart\nWILLIAMS   INJECTS\nPEP TRAIL LINEUP\nNeleon Forte* PUy nd Usee\n' Forward Paae wtth hot\nUttle Saeceaa\ns* tk*\nrt us\ntsammmm\nCanadian Bag-by mxmml battled\ntt. mat to m 1S-5 victory em\nball tt tlu \u2014aetlf erne\nea Bandar agtcraooa. It ma tin\n\u25a0neater CSttfe tttet teetsseSS me-\ntttt In tm nn. Deeptta tk*\nfact that the bell wae xllsmmi\naad tk* foetlag treaelpraaa. tke\n*\u00bb \u00bbrtk*,ln\u00bb, wfco iteeea tke\nelnaoata   wan   treated   m   a\naaeppy eihtbmon of tk* gridiron  reme.    -\nHe-oa appecrod to be aa snurel,\naitferent team tram tb* oo* that\n\u25a0tumbled lliwkii ooat ot whlte-\nwaeb at Tnll laat week. Tb* line,\n\u2022tnoft-eoed br the acquisition of\nMm* and O'Qeneki. wu efficient ln\nmeeting tb* backfield. which, in\nturn ehowed great im-favement. Bill\nVenoe, th* looaal trlpU-t_net man,\nwae out\u00bbttnd__g tor the vloton. aa\nalao wea shugg at hla quartet po-\natttao.\neiam la tba viattow\" Uneup la-\n\u2022\u00bb**>. Curtla. BaWwo-. WTflunu,\nand Lauder. Tb* latter ehowed hlm-\ntrtlt to ba an able fleld-feneras, and\n\u25a0pap-tlled hJa force* to the beet\nadvantage througlwut.\nwaiiifi\nk>\u00abwa\u00abi pass\nThe opening quarter *aa* bard-\nfought   and   aooreleae.   Martin   waa\nrecetvlag   Trall'a   klok-oR, Decembrlnl.\nand nelaon lmmedtately broke into\natrial attack, but UcLeod'a forward\nPM w\u00ab* incompleted. Vance made\neight yards, ant Helton kicked co\nttm laat down. TraU encountered\naHW CRwattlan In litaiinillii. to\nenter tbe Helton territory, tb* play\ntoteeend in oenter. McLeod rude\n\u00bb 18-yard gain on a pwtty left-end\n-on. bat Ma next forward paae waa\ninternet*! by HaUlweU. Trail eouW\naat penetrate the looal defence\nwhan kl poeaeesion of th* ball, and\nman toreed to kick on third downa.\nSfcua. Martin, aad McLeod wan\nteetttert la end runs, the Nelaon\nquerter making a 35-yatd gain oo\nea* pJey. Neleon completed tta arte\nforward p*aa ait tbl* etege. the Mc-\nIted-Vanot ooenbinatlon 'stealing 13\nyard* throne- th* *tr. Advancing\nthue to Trail'* 90-yard line. MfcLeod\nBunttd la a deadline attempt. Mel-\nno Uneaten wen too anxious, and\nam aet tl** tba Tnll back enough\nyaide wb\u00aba b* received the kick be-\nMad hit line, and the referee ruled\nMeUOD  BUNS  WELL\nTnll ww Hints tint down oo tta\newa m.jstta lln*. tad tlw line tight-\nku wa* neuaied. After fumbln on\nboth eMee, nelson again advtnoed.\nMcLeod (ambled a snap, but n-\nto kick tbe ball trom the\n\u25a0poaad, aad Toung was bald on th*\nltall M-ytrd line. Curtla and Zuk\nwen stopped on bucks, aad Curtla\nktojert to Vanoe. McLeod carried the\nbaU to yarda around right and, to\nwithin alt yards of Tnll'* Ua*\nthe chance for a looal\necore, and called for a forward paaa,\nwhtch wa* incompleted.\nsotomv molbod hcbt\nTbe aecond quarter wae hardly a\naural* old. wben Vance opened tbs\ntearing with a field goal from \u00bb\nyard* out, giving Kelson a three-\npolnt lead. TraU kicked lrom the 40-\nyard line, and McLeod, ln running\ntht ball back li yarda, sustained a\nnote injury whloh put hlm out of\nthe game. Tbe grldden settled down\nto late-die tackling, Deoemt-tnl\na-bowlng up for Trail, and Buohanm\nand Reno air Melton. Play wee\nttfbt. except for Vanoe'e Jo-yard\nrun-back of Curtis' kick. Halllwell\nwa* sent otl tor 10 mlnutea. and _\u25a0\nZuk for two, a* a result of Illegal\ntackling. A little \u00bb:ter. with the pla,\nla oenter, Shugg broke through for\nth* first touchdown, on a snappy\n60-yard canter. Vanoe felled to convert, and the ecore stood 8-0.\nTh* Trail huskies tightened their\nbelts, and advanced to Neloon'a 19-\nyard line, mainly through tbe gains\not Toung and K. Zuk. Tba emelter-\nmea looked good for a touch, but\nlott possession of tht btU due to\nlneulflcle-t men In the Une, tod\nHelton kicked out of danger. Jonee\nbrake through to hold Toung a* th*\npunt wat received, and half-time\nsounded. Score: Kelson S; Trail 0.\nTBAIL   ADVANCES\nKo aeon wae nglttered In the\nthird apeem, which wae replete\nwttb fumMee tod offside penalties.\nVance held the spotlight with hit\nbroken-field running and atrelght-\nermlng. while Halllwell of Trail waa\nalao spectacular ta gaining yards.\n0_e__ki waa can-lad ott the Held\nattar * hud tackle. Both team* attempted forward panes, and both\n(tn*_ Curtis. Toung, and Lauder\nwen all trying hard tor gains, but\ntha local tackling waa etttoMnt.\nTrail began to march down the field,\nmaking three flnt do\u2014na In a row,\ndue to tht ilnt-plunglng of the Zuk\nbroHien, Halllwell, and \"Silvers\"\nRussell    and    Dolphin\n-mn making aura tackles,\nbrtnt and Freno amused the crowd\nwith terrific tackling and wrestling.\nAt throe-querler time, both squads\nwan fighting strongly.\nOn tkt third down after th*\nchange-over, Vance punttd to Curtla\nbehind the line, where the TraU\nback waa rouged by Dolphin for\none point. \"Windy\" Williams now\nappeared In the vlslton' half-lint,\naad he aad HaUlweU mad* sensational gains. Deoembr'.nt and N. Zuk\nploughed through to advance Trail\nte ttie Kelton three-yard line, but\ntht aggreeeora -wen aet back 10\nyarda co an offside play. Curtla\nthen kicked for Kelson's deadline,\nbut Vane* snagged the ball out ot\ntha air. Unfortunately, he attempted\nto kick out, and Burrows blocked\ntba punt and threw hlmeelf on the\nball for Trail's lone touchdown. Tba\nforward paaa convert attempt waa\nunauocessful. aad Uie aeon atood\n9-1, with 19 mlnutea to go.\nNelaon beam a forward movement,\nwith Martin and Vance earning tba\nleather. Within punting distance,\nVance kicked. Trail fumbled. Knight\nof nelson recovered, and tt -(aaa Kelson's ball with three yards to go fer\nt touch. Shugg called Bill Freno,\nwho smashed through on a power\nbuck to place the ball ont yard ovtr\nthe line. Vance converted on a drop-\nkick, aad the ecore was 15-S, with\neight minutes of play left.\nWILLIAMS    18    STAB\nWilliams continued to thrill tke\ngallery with beautiful running, wtth\nthe local crew still fighting firmly.\n^uu-ebDinG\nQ^eWlitWmiti\nThe Nelson Daily News Job Dept.\ncarries in stock the finest grade\nof wedding stationery and is\nprepared to give you the best the\nprinting art affords for the very\nparticular class of work.\nCome in and let us show\nyou samples and the modern styles of printing.\nSob -Separttttimt\nPhone 144 \u2014 Nelson, B. C.\nSociety Printing a Specialty.\nA Trio That\u2022 Hard lo Boot\nCONNIE   MACK   AND   BU   MAINSTAYS\nConnie Mack (Oenter), manager of the Philadelphia\nAthletlce,  with   two of  his  Individual  stars.  Mickey\nCochrane\npitcher.\n(lett), catcher,  aad Robert   (Lefty)   Orove,\nDall again failed to complete a\nforward pea*. Freno, Knight, aad\nBuchanan displayed effective tackling, but Trail wen alowly pushing\ntoward tke local team* citadel. The\nwhittle blew aa Vance smeared\nWilliams after a 10-yard gain, on\nNelson's 15-yard line.\nlhe teams starttd ae follows:\nTrail\u2014-Burrows, center; Anglln. K\nZuk. laeldee* K. Zuk, Decembrlnl.\nmiddles; Mllea, Richardson, outtldee;\nHumphries, flying wing; Lauder,\nquarter; Bradbury, Curtis. Halllwell.\nhalves; Williams, Sammoiu. Barron,\nB-Uour. apent.\nKelson\u2014 Woods, center; Jonet\nO'Qeotkl, Intldes; Freno, Russell,\nmiddles; Buchanan, polphin, outtldee; Knight, flying wing; Shugg,\nquarter; Martin. Vance. McLeod.\nhalvea; Wallach, Derby, Harper,\nwny, spares. -\nReferee, L. HaHem; umpire, L\nPiper; timekeepers, T. Fraser, L.\nStewart;   heed llneemaiu. B. Beattle\nHILL CLIMB IN\nEAST TRAIL IS\nVIEWEDBY1500\nProfessional Motorcycle Rid\ners From Spokane Take\nPart ln Thrill\nTRAIL, B, O., OOt. 4\u2014Aibout 1600\n\u2022met. tor* it tended tbe aeoond annual motorcycle hill climb in But\nTraU todav. Tbe hlU wa* in good\nibape and well marked off ao tbat\ntba contestant* were viable to tlw\nspectators on tbe whole course.\nIn tbe 40-lnch novice event Shrub-\n\u2022ole and Konak tied at 177 feet aad\nIn tha runoff Shnxbeole won, giving\nhim aeoond place and Sonak third\nin tbe evant.\nThe last event of the day, tba 80\nInch open, waa open to all and only\npraieeeionai men from Spokane took\npart, riding special hill climbing\nmachinea. It wee tbe only time during the hill-climb tbat any machine aotudlly went over the 276-\nfoot hill. It having & 00 per cent\ngride-\nSUvar cupe were givan for flr&t\nprlaea ln each event while motorcycle acceeearleB made up the other\npriaca.\nReaulta   ot   the   contest   were\nfolkm:\n45-incb novice\u2014 ned Simmons,\nflnt; A. I. Sbrubaola, second; J.\nKonak, third.\ntt-incb e*perU-Pelmer Rutledge,\n218 feet, Tom Davy, 912 feet, Fred\nSimmons,   197H   feet.\n74-tn-h   eJBpert\u2014Palmer   Rutledge\nFOOTBALL SCORES ON MANY GRIDIRONS\nPACIFIC COAST .\nW. 8. C. 13. D. C. L. A. 0.\nWashington  25.   Montana  0.\nIdaho 0. Oregon 9.\nv. s. c. a*, o. a. o. o.\nCalifornia 0. St. Hertae If.\nStanford  t, Santa Clan 0.\nUtah 13, College ol Idaho 0.\nITtah Agglee 21. Montana state 8\nWhitm.n 31, Albany 0.\nBatten  Ongon  normal  s,  Spokane tt. o.\nPuget  Sound  31.  U.   S.  S.   Hem\nTork  0-\nBrttham Toung IB. Nevada 14.\nMIDDLE   WEST\nOklahoma A. _ St. 0, Minnesota 30\nCoo 0, Purdue IB.\nRotre Oame M, Indiana  0.\nNebraska 7, NorthWesfern 19.\nWisconsin 13. North Dakota 7.\nMichigan 34. Michigan  normal  0\n(second  game).\nCentral State  Teachers 0, Michigan 37   (lint game).\nBradley 6,  Wtsconeln 33.\nBaldwin Wallace 3, Case 3.\nCincinnati t. Ohio State  87.\nButler 0, Ohio 40.\nWestern Reserve 0, Purdtas as.\n(second game).\nWyoming 0, crelghton 3.\nPittsburgh  (Iowa)  30, Iowa 0.\nSt. Louis 0, Illinois 30.\nCarleton 13, South Dakota  13,\nftlpon 13, Btlott e.\nMaine 0. Yale 19.\nUnion 0, Columbls 91.\nKnox 6, Ann 6T.\nWaahington and Jefferson 10. Carnegie Tech 7.\nUralnua 34, Kaverlord  0.\nBetas  0.   Harvard  IS.\nParana MUl 0. Lehigh  18.\nLowell   Teitlle  31.  Mlddlebur.   |3\nBoeton  U.  0,  New  Hampehln   \u00ab\nSt. Lawrence 0. Colgate 41.\nWilliam and Mary 3. Navy is.\nDayton 0. Boeton college 13.\nPtovWence 3, Holy Croat 38\nWilliams  3d,  Bemeelatr  Poly   13.\nWeat Virginia Wesleyan 0. N. Y U.\n34.\nBuffalo 0, Dartmouth 61.\nawartmor.  7, Pennsylvania 31.\nWestern Maryland 7, Georgetown SS\n\u2022   Drexel  6. Rutgers 37.\nLebanon Valley \u00ab, Penn state 19\nSuequehenn- 0, Dale-\nWett Virginia 7, Pord!\nBuckneli 14, Geneva\nAmhent  0.  Prlttoeton  31.\nRhode Island stats 0, Brown  ia.\nColby 0. Springfield 33.\nBowdoln  -9,  Massachusetts 33-\nNiagara  3, Cornell  31.\nHon   0,   Oeorge   Washington   43\nCollege oi New York 13, Catho-\nllo tl. 47.\nSt. Johns 33, Vermont 0-\nGeorgia Teoh 36, South Care-\nUlna 13.\ni.\nPenn Stat**\ni-ai 31.\n:\u2022<\u2022\u00bb'  30.\na Tr\nST. JOHNS MAO\nCOMEBACK TO WIN\nFROM MANITOBA\nFoMth-Qosrter  Rail}'   Stvw\nDay   for   Champs   ia\nWinnipeg Rugby\nwtNWpao.\nOet. 4 iCP)\u2014Oemora-\nllaad aai Impotent for three perlods\naa tfnlverslty of Manitoba', shifty\nhalvea thewered them with forward\npaaaea, St. John's scored a aat\u2014a-\ntlonal tonrth-ouarter triumph over\nthe Collegtana ln a Manitoba union\nconteet here Saturday, is to 1,\nand ntained their ipofiita rugby\nrecced. The Saint, hate been unbeaten by a Manitoba te-am atnoe\n19M.\nHae faeteat, strongest squad vanity\nhaa teat out ln yeara outplayed the\nchampions for three-quartan of Ute\ngsme and led by 7 to 3 at the end\nof the third period. \"Red'' Currie's\npasting and Tommy Miller's catching\nfeatured a varsity sttaek that waa ae\nbrilliant on tbe ground it in tht sir.\nTctnltneon went over for a touch-\ndowp In the aecond quarter\nCurrie converted It. Currie\npunted a alngle. Alt McLaughlin\ncounted two Mr St. John'a with\ndeadline kicks.\nVeteran Baddy Stewart and Tom\nmy Mobberley led the Saint comeback In a fourth quarter that'\nbrought disaster for the fighting\natudenta. Stewart snatched a loose\nball back ot the vanity goal-Una (or\nhla flrat touchdown and Mobberley\nconverted lt to put the champions a\npoint In front. A minute from the\nfinish, Stewart Intercepted a varsity\nforward pate xtstt nn it 40 yards\ntAt another touch. Mobberley added\na point on tbe convert.\n333 feet; J. Campbell. 330 feet, T.\nDavy 31. feet.\n80-inch open\u2014Oeorge Smith over\n.the top ln aeven seconds: R. Buth\nover the top In Hi seconds; both\nof   Spokane.\nIRELAND DEFEATS\nSCOTTISH SOCCER\nTEAM, SCORE 3-2\nBELFAST, Northern Ireland, Oct.\n4.\u2014(CaaadUn Press Cable}\u2014 After\nshowing deolded superiority la the\nearly stages ot the lnter-league\nsoccer match here Saturday the\nScottish team wttkened and Inland won by the odd goal of live.\nBambrick waa a continual thorn in\nthe aide of the Scottish defence and\nwas conspicuous ln all the Irish attacks.\nThe teama were deadlocked with\nthe score one-all at half time, Crawford acoring lor the Scots and Kelly\nfor Ireland. Kelly sent the Irish\nahead and Bsmbrick made .heir\nthird. Boyd reduced arrears Just\nbefore time.\nWEST BROMICH ALBION LEADS WAY,\nFIRST DIVISION; BURY; SOUTHEND\nLINCOLN LEAD IN OTHER DIVISIONS\nLONDON.   Oct.   4   (O   P   cable)\u2014(\npositions and polntt of leading clubs'\nln English league aoccer at Saturday's matches were:\nI1KSI  DIVISION\nWeet Bromwlch Albion, li: Sheffield Wedneeday 13, Sheffield United\nand Everton.   13;   Arsenal,   Birmingham   and   Middlesbrough,   11.\nSECOND   DIVISION\nBury 15; Wolverhamton Wanderers\nStoke   and   Plymouth   Argyle,   1);\nLeeds  united   and  Bradford  11.\nTHIRD   DIVISION\nSouthern   section:   Southend   16;\nBournemouth    and    Boscombe     14;\nBientford 13; Pulham, crystal Palace\nand Luton. 13; Watford 11.\nTHIRD DIVISION\nNorthern section: Lincoln City 16;\nSouthport 14. Oateehead 13, Cnwe\nAlexandra, Tork and Accrington  11\nScorers In Saturday's games were:\nF1BST DIVISION\nBirmingham: Bradford (l); Portsmouth. Season, Bolton Wanderers\nBleekmore, Davidson (through own\ngoal). Newcaetle United Richardson\nChelsea Jackson <*\u00bb. Liverpool nil.\nKvt-fton Johnton (3). White, lltck-\npool McOlellan (3). Orlmtby Town\nMarshall. Sheffield Unit*. Tunatal\nMiddlesbrough Sarnsell- Huddersfleld Town sll, Sheffield Wednesday\nBurgess. Aatou Villa nil. Sunderland\nTuner. Connor. Blackburn Roven\nThompson. Bruton. Weat Bromwlch\nAlbion Shaw, (Hidden, Saudlord.\nw. o Richwdaon. Deity County\nall. west Hem United CHggins.\nLtteeeter city Blue (3) Chandler i3>.\nSECOND DIVISION\nBradford City Mitchell, Bury, Bd-\ndleston (3). Lindsay. Burnley Jonet,\njenklne. Manoheater united nil.\nChesterfield Pynegar (3), Tbornl-\nwell. Tottenham Hotspurs Bellamy.\nBrain.   Leeds   United   Keetley   (S)\nMilwali Smith (3). Port Vale Jonet\n(3). Preaton North End: Heatoe,\nBradord nil. Southampton Arnold.\nWolverhampton Wanderers rhllllpe,\nHar Mil, Butter)-. Stoke City Liddle\n(3), Sal_ Mawaon. Swansea Town\nSykaa. Pearce. Bristol City nil.\nthird   nivisiou     \u2022\nSouthern section. Bournemouth\nand Boacambe Williams. Hayward,\nThaln. Mansfield Town Baxter. Johnaon, Bristol Rovera nil. \"Norwich\nCity Blakemore. Cardlft City Bmer-\naon. Robhtn. Keating. Brentford\nBums, Lake. Clapton Orient Jack,\nPowler. Southend United Shankley\nC3), Barnett. Crystal Palace Lane.\nStmpson. Watford James, GUUngham\nWilliams. Coventry City Lauderdale.\nWhite, Bourton. Luton Town Tard-\nJey (2). Rennle i8>. McNestry. Exeter\nCity Houghton 131. Varco. North-\narfipton Town nil. Thames Device\ni3i. Kempt Queen'a Park Rangen:\nGoddard. Brighton and Hove Albion\nKlrkwood. Reeding Davie, (3), Bag-\ngcti, Eaton. Fuliiam Newton IS).\nTorqujiy United: Waller, Trotter.\nSwindon Town Morrle.\nNorthern sr-otion: Accrlngton\nStanley Afar. Ferguson. Williamson\n(3). Itotbtrbam Bayon. Splcer. Bat'\nrow nil. Lluceln City Riley. Thurhy,\nCacllile Ualted Hut-rMson. ?ork Wt\nBains Cnwe Alexandra Deacon.\nSouthport Dfvidton. Gateshead\nCharlton. MeNaiuhton, Leak. Hart*\n(epoelt United; Dixon. Halifax Town\nnil. Darlington Slddle. Mitchell.\nWelloek. Hew Brighton nil Cheater\nHedley. Orocha>le Wjtaon (3). Mc\nveer. Doneeater Rovera Knar;. Stockport county Swift. Jennings Hull\nCity nil. Waltal Halllwell, Roynton,\nTurner. Wlgan Bcro nil. wnxhun,\nBamford, Ferguson, iranmen Rovan\nMa-eton.\nESKIMOS HUMBLE\nUNIVERSITY BOYS\nScore 20-7 Victory on Grid\nField; Esks Outplay Cal-\nguy Students\nBDMONTON. Alta, Oct. 4\u2014Beaten\nin their flrtt two atarta of tbe\nseason, Bdmonton Eskimos stepped\nout Saturday In winning form to\nhumble University of Alberta, 30 to\n7 ln an exhibition gridiron fixture.\nUncovering a hitherto unrevealed\nscoring power In the aecond half\nafter being distinctly fortunate to\nfinish tbe flnt half with a 8-3 edge,\nthe t-klmoa outplayed the green\nand gold aggregation In every department. Ivan Smith, laet season\nvanity etar, smothered the early\nhopes o\u00ab hla former mates and akme\naccounted\npoints.\nfor   13   of  the  Eskimos'\nCan Connie Mack\nMake It 3 in R*w\n'sn&'Wr 6omt WiwS\nTka Mst\/es To .AM**-\nit A\/sftw MftWP-\nRUGBY SEASON\nROLLS AROUND\nACROSS CANADA\nOttawa  Bwers  Opm Sea-\nm   WHh    Wk   Ow\nBrockville  by 15-1\nCOWDENBEATH\nIS DEFEATED\nRANGER CREW\nGo  Into   Lead   in   Scottish\nPlay; MotherweU Gains\nDraw with Morton\nOLASOOW. Scotland. Oct. 4 (C P\ncable) Bangen went Into the lead\nln the Scottish first dlvlaion aoccer\naveregee on Saturday when they won\nfrom Cowdenbeath, while MotherweU could only get a dnw wtth\nMorton. Rangen, who won by s to\n1, had an easy time with Cowdenbeath.\nMorton actually led MotherweU at\nhalt time, but could not hold their\nlead. Aberdeen and Pai-tick Thlatle\nplayed a ding-dong flrat half, but\nthe Done alowly won their oppon-\nento down, scoring two goals la the\nsecond frame. Clyde, twice behind,\nmanaged to dnw with Aim United\nDundee United were down at the\nInterval, but finlahed strongly to\ndefeat Third Unark. Falkirk played\nIn fine form In the second half\nagalnat.. Dundee, winning I It t\nMorgan scored four goals for the\nwinner.\nWien the referee disallowed Kilmarnock's third goal which would\nhave given them a tla agalnat Celtic,\nthe crowd booed during the entire\nsecond half. Tbt hall went into the\nnet but wat disallowed becauae\nMaxwell handled. Celtic won by 3\nto 3.\nThe baseball universe le taking\nwhether Connie Mack, the <g year\nold wonder\u2014Manager of the Athletics, can ttttbllen two new e-\ncords, will ht bt thc flrat manager\nto win time Moceattve world *\nchamplontbipo tnd can he aotp\nthe jinx winch twice stopped tbe\nAmerican leegue when It tried far\nfive -straight title honora.\nOnly one other man. John McOraw, who wat Macka oppoaem\nIn three world's aeries, had a chance\nto win three blue ribbon titles\nla t row.\nTwice befon the AOierlctn lttgue\nhad a chance to win five straight\nworld's aeries titles. The Athletlce\nhad won ln 1)10 aad llll and 1913,\nthe Boston Red Sox winning la\n1(13. But la ltl4 the Boatoa\nBrevee stopped the Athletlce.\nThe American league won la 19 IS.\n1913, HIT end 1*1*. but the Cincinnati teem defeated the Chicago\nWhite See. known later ee the\n\"Block\"   Sox   In  1919\nBe Cotnellua MeQllHcudy, otherwise known te Connie Mack will\ncertainly try to \"bear down\" in\nthis eerlae.\nweek-end rugby\nRESULTS\nWESTERN SEMOB\nWinnipeg St. John's 15: University\nof Manitoba 7. Moose Jaw 1; Reglna Roughrlden  11.\nEXHIBITION\nCalgary 13; Saskatoon 10. Bdmonton Eeklmoe 30; University of\nAlberta 7.\nGEORGE SHAW RETAINS GOLF TITLE;\nMSS A. WRAGGE IS LADIES CHAMP\nShaw Gets Two Birdies and\nEquals Par for Nine\nHoles in Second Nine\nPlaying excellent golf in the firat\n18 holes of the 33-holc match Oeorge\nE. Stow defeated A. E. Murphy to retain the Appleyerd-Lowe cup and the\nclub championship which he won\nlaat year, on the unite of tbe Nelson\nOoM and Country club Sunday morning and afternoon. The ladlee' club\ntitle regareaierated hy ttie Ruth Armstrong Roae bowl goes tq Miss\nAlolse Wragge who eliminated Mrs-\nOuy w. Davis.\nWhen ttte mta teed off at 9:30\nln the morning the prospects for a\ngood day wen none too bright and\nat the day advanced the conditions\nbecame lets favorable. Throughout\nthe afternoon they played under a\nsteady drizzle which soaked their\nclothes and clubs and broke down\ntheir splendid play which they exhibited In the m <amlng.\nMr. Shaw negotiated the first nine\nholes ln 37 aad equalled par for the\ncourse In ble aecond round with a\n33, giving him a total ot 70 for the\nlg holes, a par for which It M. Mr.\nMurphy made the first nine holes\nla 42  and  the second In St.\nMr. Shaw seek 13 to 30-foot puttt\non greent No. 3 aad No. 4 tor two\nbirdies. Rls work around the green.\nhis approach aad hla putting waa\nsplendid, lilt opponent, a comparatively new bww et tfee gapi* on\nthe other head gained hit nd-rante-ie\noa hit long drives\nApproechlng green No. 9 on tht\nthlfd roiihd Mr. Murphy made one\nof the leagett drive* of the tournament. He placed hit tine that In\nthe hoilew just before the rite\nwhloh overlook! the holt, tad tht\nball bouactd clean over the rough.\na rocky point oontatatag aeveral\nemail treat on the right hand aide\noomlng down, it came to a atop only\na few feet bom tbe top eg the rise\nCochrane (31. Oldham AthleUct nil. home.\nPint mentioned  duba  played at overlooking the green. Starting out\non the laat round, after picking up\na hole bore and there and halving a\nnumber, he alto made a pretty drive\nand It looked as lf he might cut\ndown the big lead tbat was agalnat\nhlm.\nTeeing oil to the second green he\ndrove the hall away off to the left\nand on his aecond shot dropped it\non the edge of tht gr_n. a fine.\nlong shot. He failed to take ad-\nvamtage of hla petition, however,\nand lost out on ths putt. Mr. Shaw\nwhoae gems wa, featured by taking\nthe ball from poor positions, placed\nhit third ahot, an awkward one, on\nthe edge of the cup aad went in tor\n-four to halve the hole. Having a\nlead ot eight Holes and wltb only\naeven to go, Mr. Shew took the game\nby a comfortable margin.\nMISS   WRAGtiE   WINS\nMies Wragge had It pretty much\nher own way throughout her match\nwith Mrs. Davis for tye ladles'\ntitle. Oood putting with occasional\nlucky brake counted tn Mile\nWragge'. vlotory.\nPlaying for the flrat flight honon\nIn the ladka' data. Mlaa Jean Hunter downed Mlas K. Ethel Gray, six\nand five. Mlsa Oray drove well but\nthe breathe wen agtlntt her, her\nshots bouncing out of bounds oa\nseveral   occasions.\nThe men's third flight proved aa\nInteresting battle, Q. a. Godfrey winning out at the eighteenth hole,\nwhep hie opponent. Dr. W. Laishley.\nmade a poor approach shot At th*.\nand of th* math Mr Qodfrey led\nerae up, aad on the eUteenth Mr.\nLalehiey evened when he saak *\n40-yard approach ahot. They halved\ntbe aeventeenth end went dovra the\neighteenth fairway ell aauare.\nw Haae heat Paul Lincoln two\nup IB a cloee conteet for the a coad\nflight. Mr. unee-ln. erhe wae tin\ndown at aaa stage, pulled up in tbt\nlaet pert of the game. The playlag\nwat good, with Mr. Blane having a\nemail edge oa hie putting and approach a hots.\nPint flight honors were won by\nArthur Lakes on Mondsy when he\ndefeated   R.   L.   McBrlde.\nMISS 0RCUTr IS\nSTILL WEARING\nGOLFING CROWN\nBeats Margery Kirkham  of\nMontreal   for    Ladles'\nCanadian  Open\ne?(vl?        n?rwori   .. fteUN\nTORONTO pnt. Oct. 4\u2014Meureen\norcutt. par-defying mlaa ef Engle-\nwood, N. J.. M etlll wearer of the\nIn an International tut over the\nCanadian ladtea open golf crown\nHilla of Rosedale Saturday. She\nturned back the challenge ot Margery Kirkham, of Montreal, to retain the title ahe flrat won la 1930.\nTlie championship waa decided by\nthe convincing margin of eix up and\nfour to play. But to attain that\nedge in the face of one ot the moet\natout-hearted bids ever made for\nthe laurels, Miss Orcutt had to shoot\naub-par golf. In the 33 holes that\nwan played before a deelalon wes\nretched, ahe collected eight birdies\nand clipped four atrokee orf perfect figures for the hazardous rouse\nMedal scores for the morning 18\nholee were: orcutt, par 77: Kirkham\n73. for the 14 holes played in the\naftarhoou the defender uaed up 37\natrokee and Margery lo mon.\nMcGILL DBCKIVBLY\nBEATS R.M.C. CREW\nqueens   F_Bb   to   Maatraal\nA. A. A.; Bator Beaek\nWin Fn\u00ab Argewats\nOTTAWA. Oct. 4 (CD\u2014Oaaetag et\nn  Qnebec   Rugby  l%ilken  league\nfeatured eastern rugby maeebn yeaterday. oaa week left to wett tbem-\nseine into  ceadKioe.  senior,  ooa-\ntheouetv-e   wttb   exklMHas\nBrown*   football   beet   lato   It*\nva IB Breckvine\nu. by\nown IB Breckvin* etter a ltpae at\neeveeel years, Ottawa r\ntheir aaatoo ut tbe \u00ab. \u2022. p.\ntrouncing BroekellU 11 m> S.\nin   their   annual   e____-_ae   pn-\naeoa conteet, McOlU aalnMtp\ndeclalvety Mteted aogal __Haey\ncollege. Kiagetoai. us to i. The tint\nquarter eaat each teem aeon a\ntouch, Dohtrty *:_ng over frcat R.\nM. Ct five-yard Has. aai Blanchard, quarterback, caatribatlof the\neoldten' only scarir^ hi the game.\nMcOUl then took ooaaawad, adding\n13 sure poiate. 13 aeeatmtee lor\nby touehdewae. McOiU completed\naix out eg 14 forward paean, but B.\nM C. could gel bv -aith otiiv oaa\nof 11 trite.\nQUEENS IVU-UTLl*\nMontreal Amateur A'hletlc ,::nation, later-provincial entry, defeated\nQueca'e university 21 to t In an ee>\nhibiuon mateh In Montreal. M A. A.\nA. acored three touchdewat, one eat\naa tattNapM pan by Warns\nSteven. Brilliant kicking of welly\nWhitty accounted for flvt rouges.\nBalmy Beach, Domimen champions, defeated Toronto Argonaut*\nfor the Te-roato city ehaavtoaablp.\n3 to 1. Both teama tried the ferwaM\npaaa. Balmy Beech complealag two ef\nall. Argos tried twice, aad one waa\neucceesful. niaiget martmd tn tan\nacoring eaoept a placement kick by\nHarris  far  Balmy   Beach.\nboi gh MBcas mil's\nla Ottawa. Hough ...tme defeaM\nCan-Uaa Me-lecei ntiwan. Moat-\nreel Intermediate team, ti to 1 la\naa exhibition game. Sea*_r completed time toeeea tor galea of N\nyarda twice aad 33 atala.\nOpentaej the o R I' u. ia Moat-\nreal, Montreal Weetward. oaenrtteaa-\ned Cornwall ONte, 33 ta o. mi\nDlonne, ot Weetward acoteej two et\nthe touchea la aucceaalea.\nSarnla imperlala defeated Wlmtmr\nOreihounda 18-3 In a senior O. p. V.\ngame at Sarnla.\nHamilton Tlaen hamming \u00ab_J\u00bb\nway to a 31 to 1 victory asm Weat-\nern unl-eM-ty In an exhibition WI\nat   Htmllton.\nPACIFIC COAST\nLEAGUE STANDIN6\nsad   nunenco,   om.   i_T\u00bbe\nfinal ttandla* of the paettir. Ceaat\nBaaeball leegue for the tteattd keif\nef the aeaaoa follow,:\nW   L Bat\nSan Fraadaoa   go   338 tM\nLot  Angelea  Sk 42 Jtt\nOakland    ______ _ W   47 .MB\nrortiand  \u2022 t\u00bb .ita\nHollywood    47   ta .im\nSacramento    _ \u00ab   ii .ni\nSeattle  _. 43   r>n .toss\nMissions     33   56 .411\nPACIFIC COAST LEAUUE\nSacramento 2-11. Mudou 1-7.\nLoe Angeles 7-4. Oakland 3-1.\nSan Pnnctaco 4-9, Seattle .>-3.\nHollywood  3-3.  Portland  7-1.\nCalgary Ruggers\nBeat Saskatoon\nOALOART. Alta, Oct 4 -fCP)\u2014In\nclosing quarter attack. AltomeU-\nTtgem of Calgary defeated Quakers\nof 8aakatooa. sask.. In an exhibition\nrugby game hen Saturday ajfternecei\nby a soon of 11-10.\nA klok to the deadline by Scharte\ngave the Quaker* the only point of\nthe tint querter and Calgary equal-!\nlad at the beginning of the aecond\nperiod when Gideon roughed. A field\ngoal by Scharte near the end of the\nquarter gave Saskatoon the lead\nfour to one. In the third quarter.\nQuaker, added six polnta with a\ntouchdown by pullen and a rouge by\nthe same player. Eleven polnta were\npiled up by Calf ry Jn the fourth\nquarter to win the same. Harrison\nand Holn-e acoring touclidowne and\nJohnson converting once- Brings and\nJackaon, membera of tlw -Quaken.\nreceived the only penalties of the\ngam*. \t\nCARD\nPRIZES\nOur assortment of smokers' supplies uives yiin\nample eholce in your selection of a very appropriate prizes for the\ngentleman.\nPIPES\n\u2022NOVELTY ASH TBAYS\nSMOKERS SETS, etc.\nWRIGHT'S\nCIGAR STORE\ny\u00abl can pay more bat yen\ncannot And a purer, clearer\ngin than .,.\n$1.50\nRep. PM\nSTERLING\nLondon Dry GIN\n$3.00   X\nf\u00bb Mb a% V\u00abMp^ *****-** ft-\u00bb I     U\u2014G|*w_.\n  OrtwPliTlPHOI, V^torU\u00bb \u25a0. <_.\noth delicate flavor\n\u25a0 I)\nti-m\n\"Thia adverti'-'amtnt is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by tha Government of British\nColumbia.\n\\\n -THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, &  C. \u2014 MONDAY .MORNING,  OCTOWR 8, 1M1\"\n\u25a0   **. \u25a0\u25a0 \u2014\u2014 \u25a0\u25a0 p t \u25a0    \u25a0   llir    -ttLVUn    V*tll   1     .^IH3,    Pll^'V    n     '       \u2014    -tvnvms     tnumr, s mxx.    .\/v   nnwi.    o,    twrnt \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 - -  \u2014-- \u2014 -* \u2014  \u2014\n\".^^V-Want Ad Panels%.li__\nMountain Woman\nHas Hands Fall\nAlta.. Oct. 4 (By the\nrrT\"\"\"* Press)\u2014To supervise the\nmanagement of a \"dude ranch,\" to\nrun a chalet for tourists and mountain climbers in a hlfh valley. IS\nmiles sway, to serve as a notary\npublic, an issuer of big gsme Uoens-\net, as local postmaster, and still to\nsmuar always unhurried and unflur-\nrlsd Is tbe remarkable achievement\nOf Mrs. Roy Hargreaves ot Jssper\nand Mount Robson, say\u00bb Helen Mat-\ntern in tbe Journal. When her husband Is absent with tourists on the\ntrail ln summer and hunting parties\nla winter sbe must take his place.\nBer three-year-old daughter has been\ntrained, too. She rides up the mountain, having learned to ride by herself ever slnoe sbe was two years\neld. before sbe could talk.\nIn the spring Mrs. Hargreaves goes\n\u2022 with ber husband to the round-up.\n, Tbe winter pasture is 90 miles\naway, and as soon as tbe worst of\ntbe snow le oft the passes, they\nstart out with a couple of cowboys.\nNinety miles means 10 or 13 days\non tbe trail, through ley streams\nswollen wltb tbe spring thaw; 10\nor IS hours in tbs saddle each dsy.\nsleeping out ln a bed roll, becauae\ntents mean extra pack horses. And\nall \"Just for an outing.\"\nOnos Mrs. Hargreavee, ln chasing\ntwo horses, got separated from tbe\nmen. Late ln the afternoon sbe got\ntbem turned about, only to find\n.that she was lost. To be 80 miles\nttom nowhere ln the mountains on\na rapidly tiring horse, and still to\nbars presence ol mind enough to do\ntbe right thing. \"As long ss tt waa\nlight enough to see, I followed my\nown trail back.\" she said. \"And\nWhen It got dark, and I knew I\ncouldn't be far from camp, I climbed a switch-back and waited for tbe\nboys to light a Camp fire. After I\nsaw that, I Just gave Buck his head\nand be got me down aU right.\"\nMermaid   Divers   Are\nSubject Health Research\nKURARHIKI. Japan. Oct. 4 (CP)\u2014\nTricks of nifty Japanese mermaids\nWho go out to sea and dive for\nshellfish are to be exposed for the\nbenefit of a lot of staid scientists\nat Geneva.\nMiniature figures showing the undersea work of the women divers\nwill bs used by Or. otto Teuoka,\npresident of the Kurashlkt Labor\nScience Research Institute, before\nths International Industrial Medical\nScience conference which began Its\nalttlnga at Geneva early last August,\n8uch work haa been carried on ln\nJapan for centuries, Dr. Teuoka wlll\nexplain ln detail the divert' task\nWbleh is generally looked upon by\nlaymen as an almost super-humsn\nact. His purpose Is to determine\nwhat effect deep-sea diving has on\nthe health of  women.\nIt is a well-known fact that some\nJapanese women divers can remsln\nMt 4 depth of 100 feet for two min\nvtes and a half without the aid of\noxygen or diving suits. Those divers\nwho are able to work longest under\nwater are women below the age\nOf 80.\nAmong other things, Dr. Terouka\nWill explain about the labor conditions of Japanese professional women and the psychological effect\nupon them of their work. He will\nspeak on the subject as seen from\nthe biological standpoint, dwelling\nupon such questions as the fatigue\nof women workt.-s, the so-called vocational illness and disease, and the\naoclal significance of feminine labor.\nBs will strew the necessity for protecting feminine workers, legally and\notherwise.\nColony\nINDEX TO CLASSITOO ADS\nAGENTS WANTED\nAUTOMOBILES FOR HIKE\nAITOMBOBILES WANTED\nAUTOMOBILES FOB SALE\nBIBTHI\nBEES\nBOATS, LAUNCHES, FOB BINT\nBOATS, LAUNCHES, FOB BAU!\nBOATS. LAUNCHES. WANTED\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nCANARIES  FOB  SALE\nCANABII8  FOB  SALE\nCATS AND DOGS WANTED\nDRESSMAKING\nJ ABM AND DAIRY PBODUCE\nABM PROPERTY FOB SALE\nFOB SALE OB EXCHANGE\nFOB BALE OB BENT\nFURNISHED BOOMS FOB BENT\nFUBN1SHED BOOMS WANTED\nFURNITURE FOB SALE\nHELP WANTED\nHOUSES FOB BENT\nHOUSES WANTED\nIN MEMORIAM\nINSURANCE\nINVESTMENTS\nLITEBABY\nLIVESTOCK FOB SALE\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nLOST AND  FOUND\nMACHINERY\nMARRIAGES _\nMINING.  TIMBER.  LIMBER\nMISCELLANEOUS\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTED\nMUSICAL   INSTRUMENTS\nNOTICES\nNURSERY PRODUCTS\nNURSING\nPERSONAL\nPLANTS\nPOULTRY AND EGGS\nPROPERTY   WANTED\nPROPERTY   FOB  SALE\nRABBITS   FOB  SALE\nRANCHES FOB RENT\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOMS TO BENT\nROOMS WANTED\nSCHOOLS\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSTORES TO RENT\nTEACHERS WANTED\n(1!)\n1411\n(421\n<l>\n(65)\n|\u00ab_|\n(44)\n(451\n(11)1\n(3)\n191\n(SO I\n(7)\ns\n8\n(Ii)\n(i\u00abi\n146)\n(Id)\n(21)\n(!\u00bb)\n(4)\n(II)\n(IXI\n(6)\n(231\n(24)\n(llll\n(56)\n(3)\nCM)\n<2\u00ab)\n(2\u00ab>\n(.-.41\n(8)\n(47)\n(11)\n1.11\n(.VII\n(261\niu!\n(341\n(2-.I\n(4-1)\n(17)\n111)\n(IK)\nCI2I\nllll\nill\n(13)\nW_NT AND CLASSIFIES-\n\\DVEBTI8\n_   JSWO\nOn. insertion 10 tots > Ha*\nSl_ i___t__s 40 cents t lot\nOn. month 1130 t Un*\nMinimum two lines.\n8o extra chars, la charted.\nlrth  notices  (re.  ot  chari.\nDeetha,    mernagee    and    cxtai   ol\nthanks.  20 cants  ner   Una\nmntral   Boners   IS   centa   par  Una\nVerne of  th. Day  Items.  20  centa\nfit) EXTRA COST IF CHARGED\n(I)\nOAIRNS\u2014To   Mr.   and   Mrs.   A    K\na i na   at   Trall-Tadanac   hospl-\nI  I, October 2. a son.\nMacKINNON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. John\nMacKinnon ol Procter, October 1,\na son.\nU.UAL NOTICES\n\"Government  Llruor  Act\"\nNotice ot Application <or Beer\nLicence\nNOTICB ls here? given thst on\nthe 2Bth day ot October next the\nundersigned Intends to *PPW to\nthe Liquor Control Board tor a\nUcenoe ln respect to tne premises\nbeing part of the building known\nas the Occidental Hotel situated nt\nNelson upon lands described aa Lots\nTwenty-one (21). Twenty-two (22).\nTwenty-three (23), and Twenty-tour\n(24), In Block sixty-eight i\u00abSl according to the Official Plan of the\nCity of Nelson Province of British\nColumbia. Nelson I,and Registration\nDistrict, in the Province or British\nColumbia, lor the sale of beer by\nthe glass or by the open bottle\nfor   consumption   oa   the   premise*.\nDATED this 28th day of September,   1931.\nHARRY  WASSICK,\nApplicant\n(7505)\n_____\nNOTICES\u2014Continue..\n\u2022\u2022G-verom.nl  i.muor  Art\"\nNotice ot Application for Brer\nLicence\nNOTICB la hereby given that on\ntho 98th day of octot-r next the\nundersigned Intends to apply to'\nthe Uquor Control Board lor a\nltosnoo In respect to the premises\nbeing part ot the bulldl-g known\nae tbe Hume Hotel situated st Nelson upon lands described aa Lots\nPour (4). Plve is), and Six (6).\nBlock Nine mi, subdivision Ninety-\nfive (PS), according to the Official\nPlan ot the City of Nelson, Province of British Columbia, Nelson\nLand Reglatratlon District. In the\nProvince ot British Columbia, for\nthe sale ot beer by me glaas or by\nthe open bottle for consumption on\ntbe   premises.\nDATED thst 28th day of September.   1931.\nOEOROS BENWELL.\nApplicant.\n(74\u00bb7)\n\"Government  Liquor  Act\"\nNotice of  Application for Beer\nLicense\nNOTICE Is hereby given that on\nthe 29th day of October next the\nundersigned Intends to -Apply to the\nLiquor control .Board for a license\nin respect to the premises being\npart of the building known aa the\nSherbrooke Hotel situated st Nelson upon lands describe;} as Lots\nFive ts) and Six (6). Block Ninety-\none (91). Subdivision Ninety-five\n(95), according to the Official Plan\nof the City or Nelson. Province ol\nBritish Columbia, Nelson Land Registration District, In the Provinre\nof British Columbia, for *.ae sale\nof beer by the glass or by the open\nbottle for consumption on the\npremises.\nDATED this 29th day of September,   1931.\nHARRY DUNK.\nApplicant.\n(7513)\n\"Government Liquor Act\"\nNotice   st Application for Heer\nLicence\nNOTICB Is nereby given that on\nthe 24th day ot October next the\nundersigned intends to apply tD the\nLiquor Control Board lor a licence\nIn   respect   to   ;hc   premises   being\nBart of the building mown aa the\new Grand Hotel situated at Nelson upon lands described aa Lot\nPlve tfi) and the East Half <'--,) of\nLot Four (4). Block Two (2), sc-\ncordlng to the official PI in or the\nCity of Nelson province cf British\nColumbls, Nelson Land Registration\nDistrict, In the Province of British\nColumbia, for the sale of beer by\nthe glaas or by the open bottle tor\nconsumption   on  the  premises.\nDATED this 24th day ot September,  1931.\nPETER KAPAK,\nApplicant\n(7440)\n\"Government  Uquor Act\nNotice of Application tor Beer\nLlcenc.\nNotice Is hereby given that on\nthe 28th day ot October .iext the\nundersigned Intends to apply to the\nLiquor Control Board ror s licence\nln respect to the premises being\npart of the building known as the\nQueen's Hotel situated at Nelson\nupon lands described as Lot Eleven\nLEGAL NOTICE\n(Continued)\n(11). Block Two (2), Subdivision\nNinety-five (95), according to the\nOfficial Plan of tbe Ctty ot Nelson\nln the Province of Brltian Cclumbla,\nfor the aale of Beer by the glass\nor by tbe open bottle aor consumption   on   the   premleee.\nDATED this 28th day of September,   1931.\nADOLPH   LAPOINrE.\nApplicant\n(7500)\nl.ttSONAL\n_<\u00bb\nBALDNESS.  BALD SPOTS, PALLING\nHair\/   New method, aim result,;\nwrite  today  for  guarantee.    Free\ngeniculars,    Home    Remedy ' Co.,\noi  1508,  Chicago, 111., U. 8. A\n(7816)\nTHREE QUESTIONS ANSWERED\nby Astrology for 91. aend olrth\ndate; sex\u2014to Edith Allen, psychic\nresder, 416 Beverldge Bldg.. Calgary. (7662)\nFOR PURELY MUSICAL PERSONS\u2014\nH.  M.  Augus.    Plan:> and  orgen\nTuner,    Box    7876,    Dally    News.\n(7575;\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n_\u00ab  .\nWANTED \u2014 HOUSEWORK BY\nyoung girl. Good with children.\nApply Dally News Box 7120. (73201\nA-_aVl_   WANTED\n(12)\nLOTS OF MONEY-WILL BE MADE\nthis fall by Agents selling \"Imperial Art'' Personal Christmas\nCards. They wlll have the finest\nand most complete line made ln\nCanada at opular prices, ssmple\nbook free to responsible people.\nBritish Canadian Publishing Co..\n61   Wellington  West,  Toronto.\n(7496)\nGOOD MONEY CAN BE EARNED\nhandling Chrlstmss Cards and\nslde-Unes. Few districts still available, write Mr. Hunt, 1633 Marine Bldg., Vancouver. Free samples. (7516)\na. UUM   AND   BOARD\n(171\nDESIRABts! ROOM POR BUSINESS\nperson\u2014board\u2014Baker St. Phone\n674L. (7600)\nKOOMs  TO  REM\n(19)\nCOMFORTABLE ROOM\u2014HOT AND\ncold water for rent by the month.\nSavoy  Hotel,  Nelson. (7543)\nTERRACE APTS.. FURNISHED OR\nunfurnished suites. Apply P. E.\nPoulin. (7577)\nl-ol L1K1    UNO   EGGS\nCM)\n150 ONE YEAR OLD LEGHORN\nhens at 65c eacn. Wheat and oat\nstraw at -fclo a ton, F.O.B., Gust\nHenke, Nskusp, B. C. (7472)\nWHITE LEOHORN AND BARRED\nRock -pullets. Police dog pups.\nSacks for potatoes. McKim poultry Farm. i7542)\nFnrs rellned. repaired and remodelled.    Mrs. Falrhead, 611 Silica St.\n(7624)\nHOUSES FOB BENI\n-\u00abSi\nFOR RENT\u2014FOUR ROOM BUNdA-\nalow furnished 126 per month.\nPhone   698-6. (78441\nLAKE SIDE COTTAGE POR RENT,\npartly lurnlahed. W. Rutherford.\nNelaon. (7C2\u00bbl\nLIVESTOCK   FUg___t_B (W)\nFOR SALE\u2014YORKSHIRE PIOS 7\nweeka old \u00abS. C. H. Loehnert,\nBox 621, Nelaon. (7546)\nREGISTERED    SHROPSHIRE    RAM.\nWrite or phone F. Hetnti, Waneta.\n(7501)\nLIVESJOCK_WANTIiD _\n-W\nWANTBD\u2014HORSES FOR FOX PEED\n\u2014Avis Broa,  Perry Siding, B.  C.\n(7387)\nBABBITS   FOR  SALE\n_S__\nCHINCHILLAREX, CASTORREX\nRabbits, pure bred; full grown.\nTwo does, one buck, 620. Sharpe\nNakusp, B. C. (7616)\nMISCELLANEOUS FOB BALE      lj}j\nI J_l 11111 11111111111 \u25a0 IM1111111 MUM\nCOAL and WOOD\n:    CORBIN    FURNACE    LUMP,    3\n|    CORBIN   WASHED   STEAM.   S\nDrumheller Egg\n3    SLABWOOD \u2014 CORDWOOD    =\nBip.cn.\nPHONE 106\n| Will_am'sT,rans_e_ |\n1 609 Ward St. Nelson 3\n= (7629) 3\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllll\u201e;)\u201e,i;....lllim\nOASOLINE STUMP-PULLER HOME\nCan Sealer and Cana; Six Tube\nRadio; Two Gas-Lanterns; Large\nTent and Fly: and 8ewlng-Ma-\nchlne for sale, all ln good condition. Must sell thle week. Apply Mrs. C. W. Ketchum, Ross\nSpur, P. O. (7536)\nELECTRIC LIGHT PLANTS\u2014 SPR-\ncial offer: 1930 model Led-O-Ute\nelectric plants, complete wltb batteries. 15-light capacity, 6105;\n30-llght capacity, (235; 30-llght\ncapacity, 1385. Leeders Ltd.. 137-\nPortage Ave.. Winnipeg.       (7671)\n50,000 praT i tNCH USED\nblack pipe, good condition\n5 centa per foot. Large stock of\nother sizes. Enquiries solicited.\nSwartz Pipe Yero. 220 East 1st.\nAve..  Vancouver, Jl. C.        (7675)\nFOR SALE\u2014FOR A LITTLE MORE\nthan expressage. Pedigreed Homer\nracing pigeons. Have either tlown\n300 to 600 miles or ate from\nstock with record. Box 7503,\nDaily  News. (7563)\nSPLENDID PIANO\u2014 REASONABLE\nprice. Music given free. Apply\nMrs. H. Thorpe, mornings. Phone\n277L3. (75211\nMISCELLANEOUS FOB I ALE\u2014(Con)   LOW AND FOUND\n\"HO-MAYDE\" BREAD. IMPROVE*\nMakes bread of finer texture and\nflavor, better color and quality\nfrom eame quantity flour. Gives\nlarger loaf. Packet 30c sufficient\nfor 100 loaves. C. At J. Jones, Limited.   Winnipeg. (7635)\nUSED CAR PARTS FOR At.L\nmskes. Including Willis Knight\nfour. Orandview Auto Wreckers,\n2084 Commercial Drive. Van. (7696)\nFOR SALE-OFFICE SATE. WOULD\nconsider smaller sate In trade.\nApply   Box   7668   Dally   {Jews.\n(7658)\nOAK HALL SEAT AND MIRROR\ndining room light fixture, gaa\nheater\u2014snap.   Phone 674L. (7602)\n-Pi- 121\nFOOND-PDBSB COHTAIHING SUM\nof money. Apply box 7619 Dally\nNews. 17019,\nli'lUMOBILBB ro. ,_u, ,\u201e,\nFOR SALE-BARRELS. KEGS. BUH-\nlap sacks, white sugar sacks. McDonald   Jam   Co. (7598)\nFOR SALE \u2014 LAROE McCLARY\nHeater coat 136. Now 648.50. 407\nLatimer  St. (7600)\nymimiiimiiiiintimmiimiiiiiiiiiuiii\nG.M.C.\n\u00a3   CANADIAN   MADE  TRUCKS S\n\u00a3 Prlcu   Reduced\nZ, Model T17A, l-Ton   -. HJ0.00 3\n- Model   T17B,   1-Ton    ... C86.00 \u00a3\nS Model   T3JA,   IVi-Ton   1100.00 3\n- Model   TJaB.   lJi-Ton   1190.00 3\n3      Price.  F.OJB.   Vancouvor 3\nNelaon   Dealers:\nI Nelson Transfer I\ni        Co., Ltd.\n\u00a3  G\u00bb\u00abR_L MOTOB8 TOU-KS \u00a3\nriillHIIHMIIIIIIIinilllllllll|l\".,Vinr\nFOR  SALE\u2014STEWART  HEATER   IN\ngood  condition,    phone  724R.\n(7364)\nrOR SALE FAWCETT CIRCULATOR\nMrs. Rowling, Phone 686R3. (7601)\nMcCLARY   FDRNACETTE.   PRACTI-\ncally   new.    Phone  238X.    (7572)\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTED        (M)\nWANTBD \u2014 SMALL KITCHEN\nrange, cheap; good condition;\nmuat have good oven, Box 494,\nKaslo. 17630)\n.1USINE8H   OPPORTUNITIES       Iglj.\nIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMMMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJ:\nBarber Shop |\nTwo chaira,' low rent, beat lo- \u00a3\ncation on North Shore (not 2\n\u00a3 for aale). Will trade for Ber- \u00a3\nber Shop In Nelaon or any \u00a3\ngood  town  Inland.  Apply       \u00a3\n57   LONSDALE  AVE.,\n\u00a3   NORTH   VANCOUVER,   B.   C. \u00a3\n\u00a3 . * (7618) \u00a3\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiff\nLEARN A TRADE PATTERN DRAFT-\nlng and Dressmaking at the\nAcademy. Victoria Bldg., Josephine   St. (7411)\nFARM   PROPERTY   FOR  SAI.K     nil\nKOOTENAY FHUIT-VEGETABLES\ndistrict; 30 farms, irrigation adjoining station; sacrifice $20,000\nterma: coet 645,000. Sell farma\nseparately. Captain Peters, Creston.  B.  C. (7655)\nSTORES   TO  RENT\n(51)\nFOR   RENT-   SMALL   STORE   AD-\nlolnlng Club  cigar  Store.   (7633)\n1630 Wast Iat Ave., Vancouver,\n5*\u2122\u00b0' L\u00bb,_?t reliable wrecking\ncompany. >ower plants, trailers\nand  parte. (7699)\n\u25a0\"Kt.Siff \"J930 \"MtD COACH.\nSplendid  condition.    521  cart-i-\n\"\u00bb\u2022*\u00bb   (7660)\nFOR SAM CHRYSLER 52 SEDAN.\nA-l. Price $460. Bog 442, Trail\nB- O- (7534)\ncords, small dealt, Daulton din\nner Mt. Brase Bed 4' 6\" epnni\n(nd mattreaa, Oolden oak dreaaei\nlarge mirror: Child's crib aa\nmattreaa; one Oak Chair. \"\nW. R. Thomson, 104\nApartment,. (fni\nMB8EBY PBODUCTB\n-i-ll\nPLANTS  AND  BULBS\nSELLING     RASPBERRY      PLANTS\nLatham, 13 tor 60c;   Black  Curran\n,.l.na.    w*nlH    ,s*   ._-   .. m.   -CV._\nulanta, Naples. 13 tor $1.00: \"ona,\nberry pliH. n for il*; SaaUtooi\nMante. 13 for 60c. Poetfieexffi\nThe  Hartman   Nuraery,  Delia,  Alls\nClttS\nCATS AND POOS FOB HAff     ,||\nFOR   SALE   \u2014   ITOALE   COClttI\nSpaniel.   Three montha old. Pfln\n1.    C.   A>   Cawley,   Baimo,   B.   C\n(7657.\nM1SICAL   lN^BU\u00bbtgNTg___Juj\nEXCELLENT PIANO $166 CASH OI\nterma. Mtaon _ Risch, Ud. NeUon\n(78391\nMACHINERY\n____\nGASOLINE ENGINE 6 H. pTusB\none year, half price. 1133 Hoove\nst..   Phone   638L1. (7669\nBUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAccountants\nCHAS.    F.    HUNTER,     8.F-NT.A.O.\nMunlcipsI and Comme-cial Audits.\nP.   O.   Boi   1191.     Nelson,   B.   C.\n(7578)\nL.   A.   READ\nPuollc  Accountant\nSuccessor  to W.  H.  Fsldlng, CA.\nBay Avenue, Trail, B. c\n(7679)\nAssayers\nE. W. Wlddowson. Box A1103 Nelson,\nB.  c. Standard  western  charges.\n(7580)\nChiropractors\nDR. GRAY. GILKER BLK., NELSON.\n(75811\nDR. MITTUN, X-RAY, CRANBROOK\n(7583)\nDR.   MAC MILLAN   GRAD.   PALMER\nSchool, Aber. Blk., Nelson, Th. 213.\n(7883)\nDressmaking and Designing\nDRZBSMAKINO,      DEBIONINO\nFlower making,  Academy of Useful  Arts-   No.  4.    Write Mary  E.\nRogers. Boot  362.  Rossland,  B.  C.\n(7587)\nSecond Hand Stores\nThe Ark\u2014  dealers ra second hand\ngoods.    Phone 634.\" (7592)\nEngineers\nI.   D.   DAWSON,   B.C.L.S.     Roon\n12A. K.W.C. Blk. Nelaon.      t7MS;\nC    MOORE\u2014Grlftm    Blk.,   .\nEngineer and Surveyor. Boi \u00abH\n (7J$ft\nFlorists\nGrlraeUe'a Oreenhouaes. Nelaon. cu\nFlowers and floral designs.  (75_|\nNELSON FT.OWER SHOPPE. Ful\nline cut flowers at all times. Floft\ndesigns.     Phone   283. (756\u00bb;\nJOHNSON'S OREENHOUSEB-Phoni\n343. -cut Flowers, Potted Planti\nand  Floral  Designs. (7590*\nInsurance and Real Estate'\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate. In\naurance. Rentals. Next Hlpperso!\nHardware, Baker St. (7191\nTransfer\nWILLIAM'S TRANBTER\nBAOOAOE   \"OAL AND WOOD   J\nPhone  108 lltlS)\nATKINSON   TRANSFER.     Coel   _\nWood.     Long   distance   hauling.\n(7694\nWood Factory\nLawson's Wood  Factory. 317 Bake\nSt.   We pleaae our customers.\n(7595>\nMAY  ABANDON   ISLAND\nTristan da Cunba, the lonely lsland\n\u2022utpoat of the Brltlah \"-Empire lying\nIa the South Atlantic between Cape\nTown and Buenos Aires, amy be.\ncleared of Ita small colony of settlers this autumn. Tbey have previously refused to leave their lonely\nisland where they are eald to lead\n. happy life.\nis worth\nquardinq\nPAY\nBY THE 10^\nor m agreed m\nGOVERNMENT AND\nAUTO CLUB JOIN\nTO STOP ACCIDENTS\nMONTREAL, Que., Oct. 4 (By\nthe Canadian Pt_bsi\u2014In an effort\nto discover the underlying cauae of\naccldenta and to find the best\nmeans to remedy conditions, the\nprovincial authorities and the Royal\nAutomobile Club of Canada are cooperating in an educational plan\nto teach motorlsw w report every\naccident. The club's part, li was\nexplained, is to bring to the notlrc\nof motorists the importance of reporting accidents and the direct\nbenefit which they derive from do*\nlng so.\nThe plan makes it compulsory\nfor any driver, owner, police authorities and Insurer of any car which\nbu been in an accident, to bring\ntbe matter to the notice of the\nprovincial authorities, it was pointed\nout. Forms which must be filled\nIn are to be found at the club's\nheadquarters and the provincial automobile- offices. The Idea behind\nthe present effort, however, it was\neald, Is not so. much to punlet.\nthose who have caused an a.ccident,\nthough the law la strict on this\npoint, aa to complete statistics. The\nauthorities -explained to the club\nthat they wish to find the contributing cause of mishaps, whether the\ndriver, the condition of the road, or\nother circumstances, bo that they\ncan adopt measures to prevent repetition.\nWhile hundreds of accidents arc\nreported, a greater number ife not.\nand the chief causea are never uncovered because it is impossible to\nsecure proper figures. It ls claim\ned that as long as this state or\naffairs continues remedial measures\ncannot be taken properly, and lt\nwa* decided tbat If motorists will\nco-operate, by giving all the details\nof an accident, improvement wlll be\nmade easier and the highways safer\n*tfcl\n. . . for Instruction\nHigh, college or trade,\nLearn for advancement,\nYou'll be well repaid.\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nWANT ADS\nPhone 143 or 144\n___\u25a0\n \u2022in NBISON  DAttV  NEWS, NELSON.  B.  C. \u2014  MONDAY MOWING. OCTOBU I,  1881\"\nMarket and Mining News\nNO CUT MADE IN PRICE ON MACS\nSAY FRUIT SHIPPERS, OKANAGAN;\nPROTEST AGAINST COAST STORY\nM\u00abe\u00bb Set at $25 Ptr Ton;\nGrowers Storlag Fruit\nto 8m Markst\nB. O, Oct. *.-8blppert\nan entirely dleeetlsOsd with an ar-\ntide which appeared on the ooast\nand J. & Montague ef tha B. 0.\nttip Shipper., chairman ot a ape-\nest.) committee cf the shippers'\ncouncil,   haa   Issued   the   following\n'In ooaaection wltb article dated\nM Victoria September to In which\na picture of tba worst possible con-\ndlticne ww painted aa to the trult\nsituation ia tha Okanagan valley,\nthla article appaara to have em-\naaated from the office of tbe provincial bureau of markete Information, aad la eaualng a great deal ot\nUnfavorable oommant by tbe shippers ot tha Okanagan.\"\nA committee ot tht shippers'\ncouncil met Friday morning in\nconnection with thla and checked\nmm with tbe office of the bureau\nol markete information operated by\n9. A. Orant and secured Information tbat thla article waa not Inspired from tbat office.\n\"It Is quite true that there has\nbeen a lot cf team track leading of\nbulk apple, by shippers outside of\ntba shippers' council and alao by\ngrowers who prefer to tell their own\norops. Preesure has been brought to\npear on tbe shippers' council to\nmeet thla competition, and oa Monday price waa eat oa bulk Mclntoah\n\u2022f  M\u00bb  per  ton,  household packed\nSaay shipper. At the seat time\na price* on packed and wrapped\nMcintosh remain firm se set originally.\"\nTha article In question states tbat\ntha prlc* oa Molntoah bulk was\neut from wo to M5. Thl* u in-\neceract. Tb* tint and only prlc*\nPlaced on bulk Mclntoeh by tbe\nshippers' oouncil  waa 838 per ton.\nTba faot remelna that every mem-\nbar of tha shippers' ooundl Is packing medium site fancy and 0 grades\nand storing them, taking them entirely ott tbe market untll such\ntime as tha market wlll absorb\ntheae two grades.\n\"The bureau of markets information operated by the government\nat Vemon la functioning satisfactorily and tbe shippers aee no rea-\naon for tbe government to close\nthla office.\n\u2022\"With tb* bulk cf tbe Mclntosb\ncrop In th* packing houses now.\naad a large percentage going Into\neold tscrage for later sals, and the\nemail crop oi winter spplss following, the shippers tie confident that\ntha apple deal, the marketing of\nwhich will extend over tbe next\n\u2022even months, will be bandied ln\nweb a way tbat the moet poaslbla\nteoney will ba had from It.    The\nepara ara thoroughly convlnoad\nit la lmpoeelble to cram thla\n\u2022PPl* trap down the throats of tba\npreirl* consumer, in a abort time\nand ara fujly prepared to store and\nM*\u00bbnd th* marketing period. Tbey\nalao teal tbat tba few outsider* wbo\nare determined to unload their\n\u2022rep* quickly regardless of pries ar*\neel* bringing poor returns to thetr\ngrower, through their Inability or\ni\u00bbwl_lngneet to work with otgan-\nMd ehlppara. If their supplies were\nJerg* It would probably permanent-\nly cripple th* deal, but fortunately\nauch outaid* supplies ara not heavily\ntnd ooee they ara off tb* market\nthe altuatlon will clear up.\"\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPBU, Man., oet. j.-oraln\nMet,: \u2022\u2014\u00ab.\u00ab_\nOpen   High Low Cloae\nWHSAT:\n83H   it Mu   53\nhh an, m, 53U\nMH    MH MH    63!.\n87H   MH MH    57*\nOot.\nKov. ...\nDee. ...\nMay ...\nOATS\nOct. ...\nDec\n38       J\u00bbH   JTH   37H\n...   WH   MH   37*    38H\n\"j^Jj,-.-    \u00bb\u00b0H    *>\">   \u00ab\u00bbH    SOH\n<0 MH M'i 30H\n\u00bbH MH M\"< 30%\nMH    MH   MH    MH\nMH   MH   MH   MH\nlot     1MH 100H ioo>4\n81% H\u00ab S1H 31H\nS\u00bb      MH   ga*H   s_|4\n-cUmV ** \u25a0\u00bb \"*\nWKBAT: Na 1 hard J5H; No. I\nHer. 64; No. 3 Nor. Ml No. 3 Nor.\nw-. It*. 4, 41-No- B. \u00bb7H; Bo. \u00ab,\nS3; \u00bbY*d 35; Track MH: No. Dur.\n*g*H-\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nBraaUlan _ _ j.\nCanada  Oement   _ _  34\nCanada  steamera       3>,\n\u2022fcwaeto  cotton    10\nWlnnlp^i   Blec.        -j*\nLogan & Bryan\nOBAW,\nftOCKS, BONDS, COTTON\nMEMBERS:\nNew Tork, Montrael aad Vsncouver Stack Eichsnge,, Chicago Bawd of Trade, Winnipeg\nOraln  Exchange, aad other\ntrading exehnges.\nPBIVATE   WISE\nOrrtCBt:\nTane-avar,  Spokane,  Seattle\nB. C. Turkey Grower.\nHave First Chance\nfor Thanksgiving\nVICTOBU, Oet 4.\u2014Owing to\nthe early dale ot Thanksgiving\nday this year British Columbia\nturkey growers have a gocd opportunity of capturing the* turkey trade of the wast, Decease\nth* average weight ef turkeys\nla th* prairie provinces at this\nperiod Is far below the average, It was stated today hy ;.\nB. Terry, poultry commissioner\nfor the provtaee.\nBemuse af tha early date of\nmarketing Mr. Terry advises the\nturkey growers to pen. or yard\nteed birds before killing, so\nthey may be In prime condition\nfor tale. An extra heavy demand\nIs expected io ba made oh the\nB. C. growers this sesson wltb\nprices averaging about as aiual.\nMINING MARKET\nSESSION ACTIVE\nIssues Show Firmness; Gold\nStrong; Noranda and\nHudson Bay Gain\nTOBOglTO, Oct. 4 (OP)\u2014With ln-\nterllttad Issues strong, tha et.nda-rd\nStocking aad Mining exchange made\na firm showing In trading Saturday.\nTrading, However, waa largely confined to tha higher prload metal list.\nTotal sales ware 87*15 sharee. the\nloweet rate for tha year.\nOold issues again held speculative\nattention and all leader* la the\ngroup moved upward In prloe. Lake\nShore again lumped 13 to clcee at\n\u266635; Holllnger rote it cents, to\nMM and Mclntyre 50 cent, to\n\u266618-0. pome at 80 30 waa up t cants.\nIn ths baaa metal section Noranda\nand Hudson Bay each registered a\nemail gain, tha former lo oent, to\n\u26661S.10 and the latter 35 cents, to\nMAO. while International Nickel feu\n30 cents, to dose at M38. The oil\nsection developed price flrrnneas, in\ndull trading. Brltlah American at\nt\u00bb.16 and Imperial at tioao each\nmoved up (0 cent*, and Interhatloasl\nrata gained M centa to t>M.\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nAllegheny     SH 3H <H\nAllied  Chun  .... 77 H 7t 7Mi\nAm  Can 77H 75H 78-H\nAm  f P   __ 13H 13H UH\nAm   M   A   T   _ 18% 17H 17H\nAm   S   *   F   _. MU 33H 33H\nAm   Telephone 130 137ft 1MH\nAm  Tobacco  _ giu 78* 7SH\nAnaconda    . I5H ItH 14',\nAtchleon  10SH 10JH 10JH\nBaldwin  7 8% sh\nBait Is Ohio ... 34H HH >1H\nBendix,   At  It 14H 14H\nBeth   Steal   _.._. 3SH 3\u00bbH 3SH\nOan   Pac     14 UH ItH\nCerro   de   Paace 13% UH 13H\nChee as O   JT. 3SH 38\nChryalar      HH HH 13H\nCom   ii   So   .... 5H \u00bb >H\nCon   Oaa   N   T M 85H 8SH\nCom   Prod   .... 43* 41 41\nC   Wright   pfd \u2014 \u2014 3H\nDupont     to* MH MH\nEastman  Kodak 103 9S>._ \u00bb0\nn   f   ll   Is  31H 30 30\nBrl*   _   ia n n\nPord    Eng     \u2014 \u2014. tu\nFord of Can __ \u2014 \u2014 10H\nFirst  Na  Stone 49 44 46\nFreeport Tet __ 17 10 H 17\nOen    Motors   _ 23% 31 31V,\nOen    Elec      37 H 31 38\nOen Fooda   34H 33H MH\nOold  Duet   19H 13 18\nOranby      854 \u2014 t%\nOt   Nor   pfd   ... 33 33H 33\nHowe  Sound  .... 13U IS is\nHudson   Motora S% IH IH\nIns    Copper    .. 4 \u2014\u2022 4\nInt   Nickel   .  IH 7% t\nInt  T It  T ... 16% ItH ItH\nKelly   Spring   . 1 \u2014 1\nKenn    Oopper UH 11 1114\nKresge   S  S   .... 30H 30H 30H\nKroegg   t%s   ToU 7H 7H 7H\nMack   Truck   .... 17H UH ItH\nMilwaukee   pfd 4H 4H 4H\nNaah Motors   ... It ItH UH\nNa   Dairy   Prod 33 31% SI\",\nN Pow _ Light \u2014 \u2014 14%\nN   Y   Oent     SOH MH MH\nPac Oaa & Elec 33 31'. 3IV4\nPackard   Motors 4!4 4H 4H\nPenn P. B _  33H 31H HH\nPhlUlps   Pete   .. SH 5\". SH\nRadio   Corp   ... 13 ft 13 13 ft\nRadio  Keith  Or g \"'\u2022 7%\nRem    Rand       . 4ft 4H 4Vi\nRock Island     38 33H 33H\nSafeway   Btorr-s 4fi 43% 43ft\nSt L At s r .... \u00bb I Sft\nShell   Union   Oil 3% 3\", 3ft\nSinclair Con .... tft 8 8\nSO    Cal   Id    ... S0>, 30 30\n80    Pacific      S3 SOH SOH\nStan OU  Cal .. 39ft 30H SOH\nStan OU Ind _.. \u2014 \u2014 17ft\nStan OU N J  .. 30ft 39% 39H\nStewart   Warner 8 Sft 6ft\nstudebaker      10H 9H 9ft\nTea  oorp    toy. 15H 1SH\nTex Quit BUl _ 33ft 33 33\nUnion   Carbide toft 39ft 39H\nOnion  OU Caltf 13 \u2014 IS\nUnion  Pacific   .. 109 10SH 105%\nUnited   Aircraft ltft 13ft 13ft\nU 8 P _ F    .. 1314 UH 13ft\nU S Rubber ... 8ft 8%H 8ft\nO   8   Steel     71ft MH MH\nWeat   Blec     44% 40% 41H\nWillys   Overland 3 1ft 1ft\nTeUow Truck _ 4H 4 4\nTht Consolidated Mining & Smelt-\ntag Co. of Canada, Ltd.\nTRAIL-BRITISH COLUMBIA\nManufacturers af\nELEPHANT\nAmmonium  Phosphate\nSulphate of Ammonia\nTriple Superphosphate\n-CBXM1C4L   riRTtLITIRg\nSOLD BT NATIONAL rRUIT CO., NELSON\nProducers  and  Beftaatt  of\nTADANAC\nElI-TBOl-TIC\nLead-Zinc\nCadmium-Bismuth\nMETAL MARKETS\nr TOM Oct. \u00ab\u25a0  Metaw Kcmtn-\naUy  uacbaased.    Foreign  bar so.\nver   31   casta   at   London,   metals\nncanlasUy unchanged.\nNINE BUILDING\nPERMITS TRAIL\nFORMPTEMBER\nTotal for Month $9490; Four\nResidences,  Four Repairs.\nOne  Retaining  Wall\n'TRAIL. B. C. Oct. 4.\u2014Building\npermit* issued in Trail during September amounted to 8*490, bringing\nthe total tor the year to 8113.388.\nOnly nine permit* -ware Issued,\nfour for repairs, one for a retain-\ntng waU and tour for residences.\nFollowing were tbe permlte Issued:\nRESIDENCES\nF.   Tnvieon,  Byers   street   .... too\nw. Oratory, Birch avenue __ 3400\nA.  Oonnel,  Second  avenue   .  3080\nF. 0. Koehn, Bey avenue   3340\nTotal     .97330\nREPAIRS\nMra. Webster, Columbia\navenue ..( 7J0\nMrs. Spence, Lookout street \u2014   470\nA. Monaldl, Ceccanti street ...   IM\nI. MacDonald, Hendry street ...   300\nTotal tlS70\nRETAINING  WAU\nKootenay Breweries, Rouland\navonue   -.  js, 700\nTotal  permits  Issued ..99490\nmm prices\nMAKECOMEBACK\nRnmor of Canada Abandon-\nins Gold Standard Bring\nChange Sentiment\nWWJ-riFBO, Man., Oct. 4. (CP)_\nActive short oovertng la tht lut\nhour of trading lifted wheat prices\nfractionally above yuterdsy's close\non the market bare. October cloeed\nat M; November at Mft; December\nat MH. and May at 57ft. Final\nquotation* war* ft to ft Higher.\nRumors from unofficial sources\nthat Canada pad abandoned the\ngold ataadard brought about tb,\nchange of sentiment ln the final\nhour. Tha raporta were later officially denied. The market had trad-\ned around ft oant lower. THere was\na noticeable lack ot hedging operations. Export' trade waa negligible\nOaah wheat and coarse grains held\nfairly steady In light trading.\nGOLD ISSUES AT\nTORONTO STRONG\nOils Firm and Base Metals\nSoft in Short Saturday\nSession\nTORONTO, Oat. t (CP)\u2014Continued\netrength of the gold-mine stocks\nws* a feature of Saturday's short\neeuion on tho Toronto sto* eg.\nchange. Aggregate turnover amount-\n*d to 10.375 sham\nWhile oils and some other Issuu\nwere firm, bue metals -were soft.\nThe gold mine eharara were, strong\nthroughout. lake Shore at IU close\nof 834.10 wa, up tl3S andVMcIntyre\ngained SS cent, to tit .40.\nInternational Nickel waa off H at\nIte close of 9H. The three leading\noils were higher at the cloae. B. A\nOU gained H to 8ft. Imperial being\nup H at Its clou of 10% and c p\nR. which wu off % at lift. Ford\nwas uncl-Bnged gad walker cloud\ntt IH. up %.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAbana     _ \u00ab,\nAconda     _     ,\"        Jl\nArno _ ;.;;;    ;\u201e,\nAJag     i.j;\natmulet __ J,\nAmity           '\u201e,\nA P ConsoUdated        ot\nAssociated     _)\natrea          nt\nBaltic  OU          _,.\nB. A. OU  \u201e_... sjo\nBase  Metals          ]_x)\nBldgood     ,1\nBarry   Holllnger toy.\nCalmont _ _ _      .05\nClerlcy    _ 01%\nDome         9.45\"\nDalhouale        .(,\nEutcrest    _____ .0914\nFoothills    .'.   35\nFalconbridge  \u201e 99\nOoodflsh    _ otfi\nHome  Oil     ,        .40\nHarker   Ocld 01%\nHowey     _       .30 ij\nHotltnger      5.50\nInternational Nlckei      900\nKeelly          a\u00bb\nKirkland Lake       A9H\nMclntyre       113J\nUke   Shore _ _   34-0\nMayland  _ 11\nNewbec       xy\nNew Imperial ou  _   10.3S\nNlpleslng     _      130\nNcrsnda         h.jj\nPeterson  cobalt       .0114\nPend orelUe         .80\nPremier   Gold     .      .40\nSherrlt oordon _..      M\nSudbury   Buln   ...__,_..-...       40\nSlscoe - 49\nTech   Hughe,        too\nVlpond    \u2014 84\nWright Hargreavaa   .    3.70\nWalte Aekerman  -    100\nPeaches Valued\nfor Duty Upon\nInvoice Prices\nOTTAWA, Oct. 4 (Cp)--*tfee-\ntive teday, the fixed valtn tor\nduty purpetw at 4H cents par\npound on peeebM coming into\nCanada bu bean cancelled. Tha\norder for a tired valuation wu\npat Into effect a* July 11 laat.\nPnchM new entering the country wlll De valued far duty\npurpose, st thetr Invoice prleea\nOfficial announcement ta thla\neffect wat made today.\nKING, JONATHAN\nAPPLES SELL AT\nTHEOTMARKCT\nQuiet   Session   Experienced;\nTomato Prices Are\nVaried\nFor tba end of the month, the\nlocal market had a comparatively\nquiet session Saturday. With the exception of two new varieties of\nspples, Jonathans and Ktngs, there\nwere no new Item, on tb* market\nlist. Jonathans and Kings war* both\noffered at 90 centa a boa.\nA wide variation waa noticed ln\nthe prloes of tomatoes. At one stall\nfield grown tomatou sold at four\npounds, for 3i cents and hothouse\ntomatoes at 10 cents a pound; another eold them at six pounds for\n3S osnts, while a third stall asked\n40 cents a pound.\nTurnips sold at six pound* tor 35\ncenta.\nPotatoes brought 11 AO per 100\npounds, and Orand Duke pluma 35\ncants a basket.\nTbe  prices  were:\nVEGETABLES\nBreed   beans,   3   lbs ......t .35\nBeets, 5 centa a pound or\nt pounds  for   T _   .35\nCauliflower, per bead .10, .11 and .26\nCelery, 3  heads       .is\nCarrots,  3   bunehee     .10\nHorseradish, per lb.    .10\nPotatoes,   100   lbs  1A0\nSqusab,   per   lb _   _)3\nDry onions, per lb _   sib\nSwlu chard, per bunch _ _   .10\nOnions, pickling, per lb    .08\nPumpkins, each  lt to .SO\nTomatoes,  8  lbs     m\nTurnips,  per  lb     .06\nVegetable marrow, up from \u2014   .It\nOreen peppers, I lhe.\nLettuce, per bead     ,ot\nBed Cabbage, per  lb.      M\nFRUIT\nApplu. Kings,  per boa   *o\nApples, Oravenstelns, per bog _ 1.M\nApples. Jonathans, per box   .90\nApples, Wealthlee, per box   lit\nApplu, crabs, per box _ __ 1.40\nApplu. Macs, per box ___ L40\n7   lbs.   for   .   jj\nApples,  Jeffery,   per  basket \"\"II .it\nPlums, Burbank Sugar,\n> lbs. for .        __ __,\nPears, Bredsbavs, per buket\".'! 30\ntkti plant, 4 for  ..,_  __.\nWatermelon, per lb   nt*\nCanteloupes. each  .ioliind 11\naad   *   for     jt\nOrapu,  3   lbs \"\" 95\nCitrons,   each      ..\nFLOWERS,   PLANTS\nAND BULBS\nFerns,  each    _ _ ______ jjo\nIvprlutlng   flowers,   doaen\"\"\" it\nAsters. 3 doaen tor  _\u201e.. __.\nFbrna   ___   t_\nSnapdragons,   par   bunch,\naeranlurns, up trom\nFibrous  Begonias   \t\nAphodellus, potted, up from\"'\u2122 100\nSootch   m_t,   potted    _ tt\nIvy plant,  potted    II   ]jg\nOrnamental  grew _.-_      \"    _n\nMEATS\nUver, per lb.\nPork, per lb.\nUmb, per lb    4t to .30\nBeef,   per   lb.     10 _, M\n 31\n  30\n35\nto   .71\n 10\n\u2014   M\nSt\nAO\n.30 to   .30\nHams, per lb\t\nPotted meats, per lb. ...\nHead chew, per lb. .\nMutton, per lb  jii'io\nTongue, per lb.  ..\nOttall   \t\nPOULTRY, EOOS    - \u2022\u2014\u2014\nAND BUTTER\nEgg,,  firsts,  par   dona \u2022\t\nVMs, extraa. per doeen\nDuck eggs, per doeen .1.2\nSpring chicken, per lb.\nButter,   per   lb\t\nFowl,  per  lb\t\nHOME  COOKING\nBrown broad, per loaf\nBuns,  per  doeen\nCookies, per doaen\n.SO\n.40\n.40\n.40\n._\n35\n30\n.20\nChocolate cake _.7..._II\u2122 \" 'ts\nScotch ehort cake, denn Till   !lt\nCrow's Nest Glacier\nGets New Fiances\n\u25a0SPOKANE. Wash., Oct. 4-The ap-\npointme-t of V. j. Freeman, a P:nn-\nsrlvanla oil operator, as flsld man-\nager for the Orows Nest-Olacler Oil\ncompany ig announoad by A. J.\nKnudson. president, In a te_grsm received hy Ben (. stlmmel yesterday.\nThe new manager bu ordered a\ncomplete new rotary diamond drill-\nlng equipment that wu to bave left\nVsncouver. Brltlah Columbia, yuter-\ndsy and that la expected at tha No\n1 wen at Sage creek, British Columbia by the middle of thla week.\nA h\u00abd rock driller and his asaistant,\ntw'h from California, \u00abre preparing\nn.l VS,, \"\" \"\"* \"\u00ab-*PU\u00bb\u00bb \u00ab the\nnew drill.\nCompletion of u_ well Is expected\nn three weeks from the time drUling\n_\u00bb   J-*'   \u00b0n   completion   of  this\nwfll, the rotary diamond drtu will\n\u2022Pud In what will h. th, jj0. s weu\nPresident Knudson states thst Mr.\nFreeman and hi, suoclstes hsv, ac-\ncep-ted 100,000 shares of treasury\nstock at 40 oent* * .hare, thus giving\nthe company _ working capital of\nMo,ooo, say* Mr. stlmmel. All other\ntresaury stock  hu been withdrawn\nw__ V,!_,'\"' I,dd* M^H* ta the\nW\u00abt Vlrglnle f_fld, Un )_\u00bb,_,\u201e\naaa operated in pennaylvsnie. 0bio\nand the west He passed eight yesrs\nI_,.*\" \u00bbPw*tor lD tlw east Indian\nii^h. ,,'?. ?f** *\u2022 mStt* service\nin the OU fields during the war.\nCall for Pend Oreille\nP.^\"8^,', \u00ab**Toct 4-Btds for\nS_ _?*1U* m\u00b0- *\"<f M\u00bb*ala\njumped to 84 cent, on an announce-\nment tlut stork that hsd been sold\nano not delivered would be oaUed for\n_\u00a3\u201e.-\"_ ,un * \"\u00bb\u00ab\" *<\u00bb* v\"']\noouw, British Columbia, received\n\u00bbr I. J. Qtbeon t> Co. yuterday. As\n*r**ult tb,re 1, a Mvaly effort to!\nBorrow stock on two point premiums\nthat may reach three or . ur cents.\nOlbaoB as 00. aald S000 shares\nwere due them aat) that stock b>-\nOkb due five or six houau here for\n\u00abhe lut two or three wteks from\naeveraj firm, i_ vanoouvw.\nThe clou at Varciuver follows:\nBig Missouri, u t\u00bb 13 cents:\nCrow. Nest, 4H to t \u00abrta: Oolconda,\n33 to 34 oente; Orandview, 4H to\nS cents; NobJe Five, 4H to t osnts,\nPtnd OrelUe. u to 70 cents; Premier\nOold, 43 to 60 cents; Kuvcs MacDonald, 30 to ft centa.\nRAILS PAYE WAY\nTO MARKET DROP\nON WALL STREET\nSteel Hits Bottom and Entire List Is Sent Scampering, Saturday\nNIW TORK, Oct. 4\u2014A* hu usually been the case In recent months,\none session of comparative proep-rlty\nproved too much for the etock market, and Saturday prices mon than\nlost their Friday gains.\nWeakness ln the rail*, coincident\nwltb tbe filing of the four-system\nmerger plan at Wublngton,' upart\nthe entire list. Steal and chemical\nIssues were put on the spot for substantial tosses, with United Statu\nSteel common closing on tb* bottom\nof a l'a\/, point break, which put It\ndown to ItH, a new low.\nTbe rmrket wu not unusually ac-\ntlve. but the sheenco of support allowed quoted values to shrivel euUy.\nSsles wens lust mor, thsn 1,000,000\nshares.\nWaU strut found lt bard to explain the rails' weakneu, unless lt\nwu that the, had discounted all\nf-vorable news tn sight and were\nskeptical of the freight rate Increase proepect. Kew Tork Central\nand Union Pacific loat S. Santa Fe\nSH and Southern Pacific 3H. all\ngoing to new Iowa. Chesapeake cor-\nporatlon yielded t and Rook Island 4.\nAllied Chemloal. American Tobacco\n\"B\" and Baatern dropped 4, Bethlehem, Wutlngbouu, Du Pont and\nAir Reduction about t, and Union\nCarbide, Natlonal Biscuit, Loew'a,\nGeneral Electric, North American.\nConsolidated Oas and sears Rot-\nbuck 1 to 2 Loew'a preferred slumped SH- U. s. Distributing preferred\nand Worthington Pump \"A\", both\ninaotlvea, loat 34H and 14H. re-\nspeotlvtiy,\nStricter control over Oennany's\nforeign exchange holdings, reeultlng\n\u2022from recent large gold leases, found\nthe mark still heavy, t, u possible\nthat tbe Relchebank may lncreau\nthe dleoount rate, now g per cent.\nSterling reacted to 43 84 and cloaed\nst es-8\u00ab, off t oente. Advioes from\nLondon uld tb* decline wu attributed then to political unotr-\nIslntlu, to th* completion of short\ncovering, and to a halt in tbe uie\nof aecuritlu on thla market.\nMINNEAPOm GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS, Idna.. Oet. 4. \u2014\nFlour unchanged. Shipments 38,-\n6t4, bran  1000\u201410A0.\nWHKAT: No. 1 Nor. till\u2014t6H:\nNo. 1 Red Durum 48H\u20144SH; Dec.\nMH;  May 08%.\nCORN: No. 3 Tellow WH\u201484H\nRTI:  No.  1  t7%-S\u00bb\u00bb.\nFLAX:   No.   1.   133\u2014133H-\nEXCHANGE  RATES\nNIW TOUK. Oct. 4\u2014SterUng e:-\nchange Irregular at tst. for caMes\nCanadian doUara 13H centa dla-\noount.\nFranca   394   oente.\nLire 5.18 cents.\nUruguay   31.75   centa.\nMarks   33.30   oents.\nKronen 33.90 cent*.\nFirst Ship Arrives\nat London With Grain\nFrom Churchill Port\nLONDON, Oet. 4 (C P cable)\u2014\nA new chapter la th* history af\ncommaatratlea between Csaada\nand tha mother eeaatry apesed\ntoday with tke berthing la Victoria Sack af tbe steamer rare-\nworth, krtagtag S77,**t bubals\nof wheat treat CherehlO, Making pioneering \u2022 bad* route\nwhich bring, the great grain-\ngrowing areas ef the prairie provinces 1*90 miles closer te Britain.\nArrjtlag tarlier tkan expected,\nthe Farnworth made her way la\ntbe dusk slowly op the Thames\nto ber goal. Bat a few saUors la\nthe docks, seeing her lights realised history wes being made\nand tbey raised a cheer as the\nvessel was berthed.\nPOTMAN CHARGES HOOVER BH\nINTERNATIONAL SILVER 'ARLEY;\nONLY SOLUTION SAVE U.S. HE SAY!\nWide Fluctuation\nin Sterling Prices\nMontreal, Saturday\nMONTREAL, Oct. 4\u2014Wife flac-\ntuatten M-Ktces tar aterltag la\nMontreal wu reported Saturday,\nthe prlc* varying betweea 84Jt\naad S4 so with tba elea* at\nK40 ta 34.41.\nMONTREAL LIST\nWJLLJACTIVE\nOnly   5000   Shares   Change\nHands; Nickel and Brazilian Features\nMONTREAL. Oct. 4 (CP>\u2014m a\ndun and Inactive session, tn which\nonly 5000 shares changed hands, one\nadvance and two declines were\nshown on the Montreal stock exchange Saturday rooming.\nTba activity wsa practically confined to four issues. International\nNickel end BraaUlan Traction furnished over 3000 of the 8000 shsres\neold while Canadian Pacific and\nCanada oir accounted for much of\nthe remainder.\nOnly 30 Issues wer* dealt tn cf\nwhich one, Cockshutt Plough, gained\ntwo. International Nickel snd Canadian Pacific showed losses. Six\nwen unchanged from the previous\nclosing prices and 11 were traded ln\nbroken lots.\nInterrutlonsl Nickel active leader,\nclosed at 9H, off vt; BraaUlan.\naecond. cloalng unchanged at 10.\nCanadlsn Pacific closed at ItH. oft\nH- Total ssles 8017 ahares. Bonds\ntlOO.\nCUSTOMS RECEIPTS\nTWO THOUSAND UP\nFOR HALF YEAR\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 4\u2014Cuatom* reoeipte at tbe revenue office In TraU\nfor tba tint six month, of tba fiscal\nyear 1981 exceeded the ume months\nof 1030 by over 83000.\nReceipts ln 1930 for AprU, May\nand August exceeded thou of 1981\nbut reoeipte this year for June,\nJuly and September were higher\nthan lut year.\nFollowing an the receipt* for\n1930 and 1911:\n1030 1931\nAprU      g 8,014.85   t 7,943.88\nMay      8.088.48       7.i74.88\nJune     13,618.8-      15.977.98\nJuly     - 10.340.33     12.078.48\nAugust     14,688.37     10,139.33\nSeptember       9,968.99     13.789.07\nTotala    -  64.481.78     6S.4t7.89\nSPOTLIGHT HELD\nBY THE PRECIOUS\nMETALSAT COAST\nPrices Show Firmer Tendency; C. P. R. Issues'\nAdvance 50 Cents\nVANOODVSR, B. O. Oct. 4\u2014Prtew\nshowM s ioroewhftt rirnj\u00abr tendency\nat tb* tnd of tn* \u00bbt_ort \u00ab\u00abMlon\non tht Vancouver ttock tichftnge\nSftturdty, wltb th* precious metal*\ngroup occupying tbt spotlight. OU*\nwere entirely ntglecwct with no \u2022*!*\u00bb\nrecorded. Total \u25a0*_*_ for the half\nday were io.M2 thtrei on the big\nboard   end   13.380 on  the  curb.\nCottonbelt continued tctlre and\ncloeed up lit cent* \u00abt 39H cent*\nbid. Oeorglft rim, alao active, gained a fraction at 3H cant*, pioneer\nadd ateadlly at 316. at which figure lt cloaed. uncnanged. lorne\nOold, another active trader, cloted\nfirm at ly, cent* unchanged. Ptnd\nOrelUe after opening it 04 cento, a\ngain of T eent* tated to 63 cento\nat the clot* for a gfTa of b <*ent-#\nSnowflakt waa fractionally higher\nat   \\y.   cent*.\nIn th* Industrial* Canadian Pacific\nIn three \u2022mall transaction* advanced  M  cento to clow  at   16.00.\nWHEAT CORN AND\nOAK PITCHED TO\nBOTTOM LEVELS\nCHtCAOO, Oct 4. \u2014 Shattering\nquotatlona both on stocks and ater-\nllnf broke down buylnt resistance\nof trains yesterday, and pitched\n-wheat, corn and oata to fresh bottom levels. May wheat outdid any\nlow prloe record -which that delivery\nhad ever reached befon slnoe or-\ntanlaed trading began hen. The\nfall ln sterling militated eepeclally\nagainst wheat, with North American export business In that commodity  fading almost to aero.\nWheat cloeed skittish. IH to S\ncenta lower; com 1 to IH down:\noata '. to l', oil, end provision,\nvarying from 7 oents decline to S\ncenta advance.\nWAMBKROK, Oet. 4 >la*l\u00absal\nHerbert Hoover waa chaise* |^^^B\nator Key Plttm\u00bbn Seturds^^^H\nblocking an International alH^^^H\nrei.no* which tb* Marsala Pun at\ncontend* la one solution 4^^^H\nworld d uveas km.\nHttmen. ekalnaaa cf a senate\nver situation, said an\ntlonal coatennce was \"\u25a0-_,\nly necessary\" and sd-*d data?\nwaa \"exceedingly danger***. 8*\ntke muasearis af tba laited\nStates.\"\nHa predicted tbat Ow M-\ntala'a tempenry abaadouaeat et\nthe gold staaitert would axefaaw\ntbla onutry frees feraaga __r-\nkets aad anlees sometklng were\nstem tt remedy tb* sltuatlwi tk*\nI nlted Stetoe would be fiarred 8*\n\"Uee within Iteelf.\" Tk* reealt.\nhe said, would ke roatlaoed\nunemplayaeat aad aten ante\necanemle distress.\nPlttman aald tba calling of an\ninternational silver eonfannoe, by\nthe president, aa su**e*ted by tb*\nsenate, would Involve \"no suggestion\nof en sbsndotuneut of tha gold\nstandard by the United Statee.\"\nVANCOUVER  LIST\nMOiSS\nMf   Missouri   \t\nOeorge int.     \t\noeorgla River _\t\norandview     \t\nInt. C. * c. _...\nLome oold \t\nNational   stiver\nNoble  Hve  _.....\u00bb_\nPremier     \t\nPend   Oram*\t\nPioneer    _\u2014_.-\nPorter   Idaho  \t\nReno  Gold    \t\nRufus   Argenta  \t\nButh Hope   ,\nSilver    Crest    \t\nSnowflake'  _.\nJ8H\nat\nMtt\n.04\n10\n\u202207 ii\n.01\n..    .04\n. l.lt\n.   M\nAl\n\u2022OIK\noa*\nA.  P.  Consolidate*  \t\no and \u25a0 Land* ...._..__.._.\nCommonwealth    ..,.,.,..,\u25a0_..\n\u25a0setcreet     \t\npabyan \t\nHargal     - ^*-\nMcDoufall ssgud Haw _-...\nMercury     ______\nMcUod    \t\nMUl   City   \t\nMayland      \u201e\nwwallte    _ \t\nss*\nA).\n-081.\n08\n.44\n.78\n2311\n-18\nJt*\n.08\n.01H\n.08 ti\n_0\n08\n.08\n\u25a001 Vi\nas\n.08\njOS\n3.\n.08\n.18\n8.00\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL. Que.. Oet\nbutter and egga hlgner. Hia *gg\nmarket advanced during the mmtt\n2 centa a doaen on top gradea of\ntrash eggs. Carlota ot Ontario ar\nprairie province eggs were quoted\nat 18\u201484 centa on Saturday tat extru and 37\u2014at for firsts. Brttfci\nColumbls egg* -wen to csote for\nextraa and lb\ncenta for flnte.\nCheese, Ontario,  uw\u2014UH.\nCheese  Quebec,  13\u2014 IX! i.\nButter Nb. 1 finest SO.\nEggs  treah  extru  In  cartons   87.\nEggs, fresh flnte In cartons. 83\nl^s, storage extra* 1q cartons.\n.33.\nEgg<. storage firsts In carta**,\nJt.\nBYoadcastYourProgram fromStation\nW^N-T-A-D-S\nEveryone who has a real message broadcasts over this station,\nwhether for good used cars, beautiful apartments, jobs, or musical\ninstruments, dogs, small businesses, etc., etc., etc. Whoever has\nsomething to sell, to trade, or to buy, whoever has lost something\nor found something, whoever wishes to employ or be employed, uses\nthe want-ad columns of the News. Use The Daily News classified\ncolumns.\nUse Nelson Daily News Want Ads\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING DEPARTMENT\nRhone 144 or 14}\n FADE  TEN\nThe Remington Typewriter representative is\nin town. If you need\nhis services phone us.\nNana, RutharEord\nDrag Co.\nKootenayPlumbing\ndc Heating Co., Ltd.\nat Old Grill Block,\nBaker   St..\nREPAIRS\nby Experienced  Workmen\nPhone 666\nJOHN A. SMITH\nSTANLEY JEMSON\nBuilding?\nNo matter how big or\nhow small the job you may\nbe planning we are always\nat your service to supply\nyou with the best of building lumber.\nW.W.Powell\nCo., Ltd.\n\"The Home of  Good\nLumber\"\nFoot of Stanley Street\nPhone 176\nHOMES BUILT IN NELSON DURING THE\nPAST NINE MONTHS TOTALLED 36 AND\nTHE COST OF ERECTING THEM $82,050\nBuilding in Nelson and Fair\nview About on a Par\nNot Counting Shacks\nDuring th* put nine month*\nNelson hM experienced a steady and\nwell balanced building program\nwhich well exemplifies tbt healthy\n.growth of the city. During that\nperiod 183,050 haa been invested\nIn Nelson homes, which represents\nths erection cf 86 structures. This\nls span from business building and\nrepair.\nNot only were th* honvs numerous but they were commodious. 11\ncosting MOOO snd over, five costing\n14000 and one costing W5O0.\nOf tbe 38 penults Issued six were\nfor the erection of small structures\nvalued at brtween 150 and $350\nBuildings ln the upper part of\nNelaon, which Included five auch\nshacks, numbered 30 and homes\nbuilt ln the Fairvlew section of\nNelson, 18. Not taking Into consideration th* small dwellings, both sections of th* city wer. on a par\nwith 15 homes each.\nPHONE TAXI\nri\ntrelibt Schedule\nDally to Rowland\n\u25a0nd Trail. 10 a.m.\nTrail    rhone    135\nEUI T. T. * r. LTD.\nELECTRICAL\nWORK\nC-U   u   ioc   aa.   eiertrkei\nwork that nil mar MN la\njotir homo.   Keaaontbla ratal.\nSatisfaction guaranteed.\nFHONI a\nL. B. Electric\nUse  The  Nelson   Daily\nNews Classified Ads\nCOAL-COAL\nDon't hesitate\u2014Now is the time to fill your\nbins\u2014Before\u2014not after the cold weather catches\nyou unawares.\nGALT LUMP, ton $11.50\nGALT STOVE, ton    9*50\nJEWEL LUMP\u2014The best tor\nhot air furnaces. Ton .. 11.50\nMcGILLlVRAY Screen Lump\nSteam Coal, ton  10.50\nSPECIAL RATES on Car Load Lots\u2014Dry Cord\nWood\u2014All Lengths.\nPHONE 35\nNelson Transfer 2J.\nFORTY-EIGHT MEN\nWILL BE ON RELIEF\nIN TRAIL MONDAY\nTRAIL. B. C, Oct. 4.\u2014Thirty men\nart at present employed on relief\nwork by the city of Trail end the\ncity engineering department sipects\nto put 18 more to work on Monday\nmorning.\nSlaty men leave the city this af-\nternoon*for Murphy creek where the\nroad camp ls ready for occupancy.\nThese men will work on relocating\nend standarlzing the highway on\nboth sides of Murphy creek.\nThe unemployment situation in\nthe city is much alleviated with\nthese develpoments and wlll bt further Improved with the opening of\nmore road camps ln the near future.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nFor rent\u2014 Furnished Suite. ISe..-\ntrlct refrigeration. Kerr Apt*. ^7856)\nOne nicely furnished suite, al.o a\nsmall suite for rent. Annable block.\n(75(13)\nTonight. 8 p.m.. Salvation Arm?\nHarvest Festival Sale, produce and\nhome cooking. Sheriff Harper, auctioneer. (7888)\nLadles of the Royal Purple ere\nholding a military whist drive followed ny a dance ln Elks hall. October 7. at 8 p.m. Admission _5\ncents.    Refreshments. (7048)\nFast President's Night of the Sons\nof England benefit society at Memorial hall at 8:15. Tonight is the\nnight All active and ex-members\nInvited. (7685)\nAWAY\nwith Dost and\nAshes.\nHEAT WITH\nGAS\nAutomatic, Smokeless, Bootless and Cinderless ....\nthat's the story of Gas Heat.\nLet's {five you some interesting facts and  figures.\nPhone 37, City Gas Works.\n\u2014The City of Nelson\nNEW LAMPS\nfor\nOLD\n\u20ac_ a   jgsa allowed on any old Lamp or Lan-\n*W*m\u00bb3*mf terri) coai oil or Gas, Turned in\non a\nNEW COLEMAN\nWood Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Vsmited\nWholesale - NELSON, B.C. - Retail\nROSE\nBeauty Parlor\nK.W.C. Block Ward Rt.\nPhone .117 for Appointment.\n Downstairi\t\nHunter Electric\nand Plumbing\nFOR  MATERIAL      -\nTou  rati  aaave nanny  M\nTBI NELSON DAILY KIWI, NELSON. B.  C. \u2014 MONDAY MORNWO, OCTOBER I,  MM\"\nBRITISH FOOTBALL\nRESULTS\nyoUowlnf at the old country soccer results:\n\u25a0FIRST DIVISION:\nBirmingham 2. Portsmouth 1.\nBolton 2.  New Cutis  i.\nChelsea 2,  Liverpool  0.\nFverton S. Blackpool 2.\nClrlmsby 3,  Arsenal  1.\nManchester City 1, Sheffield TT. 1\nMlddlesborourh  1, Huddersfleld 1\nSheffield Wed. 1, Aston VHW *\nSunderland 2. Blackburn %.\nWest Bromwlch 4. Darby 0.\nWestham  1, Leicester *}.\nAccrlnfton 6. Rotherham 2.\nBarrow   0,   Lincoln   2.\nCarlsle   1,  Tork  *.\ncrews ], Southport '1.\nOsteshead 3. Hartlepool 1.\nHalifax 0. Darlington 3.\nNew Brighton 0, Chester 1.\nRochdale 3, Doncaster 1.\nStockport 2. Hull 0.\nWalsall   3,   Wlgan   0.\nwrexham 2, Tranmere  I.\nSECOND  DIVISION:\nBarnsley 0. Plymouth 0.\nBradford City   1, Bury 3.\nBurnley  2,  Manchester  United  0.\nChesterfield 4, Tottenham 0.\nLeeds United 6. Oldham 0.\nMlllwall   2,  Portvale  2.\nNottingham  2.  Notts   1.\nPreston  1. Bradford 0.\nSouthampton l. Wolverhampton 3.\nStoke  4,  Charlton  0.\nSwansea 2.  Bristol  0\nTHIRD   SOUTHERN:\nBournemouth 8. Mansfield 2-\nBrlstol 0. Norwich 1.\nCardiff   3,   Brentford   2.\nClapton 2, Southend 4.\nCrystal 2. Watford I.\nOllHngham   l.   Coventry  3.\nLuton  8, Bxeter 3.\nNorthampton 0. Thames 4.\nQueens Park Rangers 1. Brighton 1\nReading 4. Pulhsm 2-\nTorquay 2, Swindon  1.\nEGGS ADVANCE IN\nPRICE FIVE CENTS\nAT TRAIL MARKET\nDemand Greater Than  Supply; Flowers in Profusion\nFew  Price  Changes\nTBT  SCOTTISH  LEAGUE\nFIRST   DIVISION:\nAberdeen 2. Partlck 0.\nClyde   3.   Ayr   8.\nDundee 3. Third  Lanark 2.\nFalkirk 5, Dundee 2.\nHamilton  1, Hearts 4-\nKllmarnock 2. Celtic 8.\nlelth 0, St. Mlrrert 4.\nMorton 2. MotherweU 2-\nQueens Park 3, Airdrlonlans 1.\nRangers 8. Cowdenbeath 1.\nSECOND  DIVISION:\nAlbion l. R\u00bb1th tf.\nArbroath 2, Ct. Johnstone 3.\nBo'ness 2,  Montrose 0\nBrechin 1, Stenhousemulr 7.\nDumbarton 1. Porter 3.\nDunfermline 1, St. Bernards 1.   .\nEast Fife  4.  Armdale  1. '\nHibernians  1.  East Stirling  1.\nKings Park 3. Edinburgh 2.\nQueen of South 0, Alloa 3.\nFINED   |2\u00ab   IN   TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 4\u2014With the\ncharge amended to \"entrusting his\ncar to another who operated it to\nthe common danger,\" Harold A.\nRush pleaded guilty this afternoon\nand was fined $26 and costs by\nPolice Magistrate Noble Blnns. Rush\nalso was ordered to p*y the expenses of th* police department In\nbringing him back from Nelson.\nA Blind Eye\nIt may appear to be so. bat\nthe majority of cases can be\nbrought back to see by proper\napplication oE glasses.\nThese amblyopic eyes, as\nthey are properly called, are\ncases of neglect from child*\nhood.\nWe have a good number of\nsuch cases of men and women\nin the fifties that we have restored to normal vision.\nJ. O. Patenaude\nR.O.\nOptometrist and Optician\nExpert Optical Service\nBuilding Materials\nLumber\nBrick\nCement\nLime\nGARAGE? Bang-low? Store?\nIndu\u00bbtri\u00bbl Plant? Whatever\nit is you plan Us build, you can\nrely on ni for all your building:\nmateriala.\nFOR SALE\u2014Door and Frame (or Vault. A bar-tain.\nA. H. GREEN Si.\n(SuccMaors to John Burn, ft Son)\nOFFICES &\u00ab\u25a0\u2022 *\nPHONE  2M\nTRAIL, B   C, Oct. 4-Eg\u00bb\u00bb at ths\nTrail markft were advanced fire\ncenta per doeen in all grades Prlday\nand there wu scarcity at most\nstalls.\nPlowcv  were In profusion.  Vend-\nors, however, were selling them fast.\nMeat,   shown   by   two   or   three\nvendors,   wu  popular.\nThere were only a few changes In\ngeneral  commodity prloes  Friday.\nprlcu quoted  wen:\nPotatoes,  12 and 14 lbs. - I 25\nLettuoe.    lb !    .16\nTomatoes, fl and 7 lbs \u201e..   M\nVegetable   marrow,  lb \u201e   .03\nBach     _.   .10\nRadishes,   bunch       M\nVancouver Approves\nUnemployment Relief\nProgram for 2500 Men\nVANCOUVER,   B.   C,   Oct.   *.\u2014A\n$1,110,000 unemployment relief program far Vanoouver, capable of put-\nting to work for three months between 2,000 and 2.600 married men.\nwu approved by toe city council\nSaturday. ,\nTht Dominion and provincial gov-\nernments are to pay $604,000 and\n$188,62. respectively, and left the\nctty M20J75 to carry IU shsrs of\nths  wort.\nCucumbers,   2   for\nDoeen     _...;....,\nSwlu   chard,   lh\t\nParsnips,   .0   lbs\t\nLb\t\nSquash, 6 and 7 lbs. ......\nParsley,   bunch   \t\nSage,  bunch\nDill  pickle,  bunch  \t\nTurnips,    lb\t\nParsnips,    bunch   '.\t\nBeans,   4   lbs\t\nCabbage,    lb.\nPickling  onions, lb.\t\nCarrots,   6   lbs\t\nCitron,   lb    .01\nEach 10\nBeets,  6  and   8 lbs 25\nCauliflower, lb 10 and    .l.'\/j\nKale,   bunch       .05\nCooking onions, lb    ,08\n4    lbs.     26\nCom,  doe. 10 snd   ,15\nPickling cabbage, lb.  .03 and   .06\nPickling cucumbers, dos 10\nOreen   peppers,   lb.\nCelery,  lb.\n. .06\n\u25a0 10\nTomatoes, green and red, box .75\n. .80\n. .06\n. .10\nTomatoes,  ripe,  crate\nEgg  plant,  each\t\nSpinach,    lb\t\nFRUIT ^^^^^\nCanteloupes,  from, each      .08\n~     plums, 6 lbs \u00ab   .25\nDamson plums, buket     .3ft\nCauba   melons  lb 06\nEsch _.   .25\nGround  cherry,  lb.   10\nHazel   nuts,   lb 10\nPeaches,  basket     .35\n^^\u2122   _-\u201e 1.50\nBradshaw plums, 3 lbs    .26\nCrabs  1.40\nPlums, lb 04, .06 and    .06\nAPPLES\nOravenstelns,   6   lbs -..   .25\n12    lbs ..__'. -   .25\nColbert*,   6   and   12  lbs     .26\nAlexanders.   6   lbs       .35\nTwenty-ounce Pippins, 7 lbs. M\nOrlmes Oolden. 10 and 12 lbs. .26\nWealthy,   14   lbs    .25\nBox       1.26\nMcintosh,   basket    .26\nBox    1.60\nCrab apples,  10 lbs. 26\nKings,   box       .00\nJonathans,   box  1.00\nPears,   boxes   76  snd    125\npanteloupe.\\   each    10\n3  for 25'\nItalian prunes, lb.     .08\nCss&ba melons, each    .10 and   .16\nWatermelon,   each     -25\nPrunes,    buket       .25\nCUT   FLOWERS\nSalplglossls,  bunch .    -10\nMixed   flowers,   bunch 10\nEverlastings, bunch .. .26 -and .35\nDabllu,   bunch   .10,   .16   and   .25\nPanslee.   bunch    10\nSnapdragon,  bunch   10\nRoses,  2 _br  \u00ab   .15\nBunch 80\nVICTORIA, B. Ca. Oct. 4\u2014Local\nWealthy apples are selling at $1-25\nper box. Cooking apples ers from 85\ncents to $1. Ontario Concord grapes\nst 85 cents per buket. The grapes\nfrom the Okanagan are of superior\nquality to the Ontario product now\noffering, says the msrket news letter,\ndepartment of agriculture, Victoria.\nTomatoes, hothouse, sre quoted at\n$2.60 per 4-buket crate and Held\nst $1-26. Cooking pears are selling\nfrom $1 td $1-25 and table pears st\n$2.26 per box. Xocal onions are on\nthe market at $1-40 and mainland\nonions st $1.75. Yakima prunes are\nwiling at $1.30 per crate. Celery at\n90 cents per doeen. A car cf Gem\npotatoes arrived from the Chllllwack\ndistrict this  morning.\nThe    following   wire   received\nfrom   the   district   of   markets\nfrom  Calgary: \"Car of Mcintosh\napples   on    track    from    Orand\nForks district advertised by railway company for sale by tender\nup until  Thursday noon. Valley\nbulk Mcintosh expected here tomorrow. Strawberries and blackberries   arriving  irregularly   and\nquality not very satisfactory.\"\nSASKATOON\u2014    The    weather    ls\nagain   fine   for   threshing   after   10\nday\u00ab -of   mln.   Ontario  grape   stock\nheavy   with   movement  slow,   prices\n40 to 46  cents  per 6-quart buket.\nBulk  Mcintosh   apples  are  expected\non the market Pridsy. Some wilt be\npackxd  and  sold  ln,  approximately,\n40-lb.,  faced, and filled hampers.  A\ncar of Wenatchee prunes arrived during the week and ire selling at gi.io\nto $1.25 per esse. British Columbia\noniony are selling st gi .60 to $1-75\nper 100-lbs. A car of Spanish' onions\nIs expected later this week. Also another  car   of   cranberries.   The  first\nshipment   o_   Victoria   hothouse   tomatoes arrived on the mr.rket today.\nLocal hothouse tomatoes are retailing at 3 pounds for 25 cents.\nTOpONTO\u2014Peacfces, Elberta, six-\nquarts, Ro. 1'at 90 to 75 oents. Pears,\nDuchess, slues. 20 to 26 cents. Celery\n40 to 75 cents per dozen. Cabbage,\n40 cents per doeen. Cauliflower, 50\nto 75 cents per down. Apples,\nWealthis in bushel baskets, $1 to\n$1.25. Plums, Relne Claude and\nOrand Dukes sixes, 20 to 35 oents.\nOnions, per 100-lb. bag, Ho. 1,\n$1.78. No. 2. $1: Sllversklm, 1 .-quarts\n50 to 75 cents. .Potatoes, per eo-lb.\nbag, 40 cents. The first British Columbia Mcintosh apples arrived yesterday, extra Stacy, $340 to $2.50,\nfancy 85 cents less. Weather a little\ncooler. Market still overloaded with\nclocsl fruits and vegetables and\nmovement   draggy.\nPetunia,  bunch\nBcabtosa,' bunch  \t\nZlnntu,   bunch   \t\n.10\n.15\n__________^_ \u25a0   \u2022\u2022&\nSweet peas, bunch .06, .10 and   .16\nCosmos,    bunch     10\nCoreopsis,   bunch    10\nRoom, 2 blossoms  16\nCarnations, bunch .... .20 and   .26\nGladioli. 6 In bunch    .10 and   .16\nAsters,  bunch  10 and   .16\nChrysanthemums,  bunch -...._   JO\nPOTTEII  PLANTS\nIrish Moss, each .._. -   ..0\nGeraniums, each  16 to 1.50\nPerns,  each   60  to 2.00\nFuchsias, each    1.00 to 2.00\nStar of Bethlehem, up from     .80\nPotted  roses, up from  60\nLate  ferns,  up  from. .... 60\nDAIRY   PRODUCE,\nMEATS,   ETC.\nCream,   H   pint  _.\u201e  js\nPint  .46\nButtermilk, quart  _......_ .10\nGallon     \u201e.. .36\nCurd   cheese,   lb.  .10\nChickens,   wring,   lb  .25\nChickens,  routers,  lb 30\nVeal, lb 10 to .30\nButter, lb.  .80 snd .35\n3 for  55 and .88\nChicken,   boilers,  lb.   .20.   .23, .25\nBaby beef, lb 12 to .25\nPork, lb 16 to M\nHomo cured bacon, lb. .30 and .35\nPotted meat, lb ...\u00bb .20\nRabbits, each  .86\nExtru,    do_ _...,. ,46\nFirsts,   dos \u201e... .40\nPullet extru, dog.   .35\npee weu, doe.    JJ0\nVines Defeats Perry\nto Win Pacific Title\nSAN FRANCISCO, , Cal., Oct. 4\u2014\nEllsworth Vines, Paudena, United\nStates Blnglrs champion, annexed\nthe singles crown ol the 42nd annual Pacific roast tennis tournament\nhere today by defeating Frederick\nPerry, British Davis cup star, ln\nfttpilght   sets,   6-3,   21-10,   6-3.\nOrder\nMERCURY\nCOAL\nClean\u2014Sootless\nEconomical\nPhone 797\nRENWICK'S\nTRANSFER\nCP.R. OFFERS TO\nSELL CAR, MACS\nOF GRAND FORKS\nOkanagan Grapes Found Superior to Those of Ontario; Spuds Roll\nCAPONE\"RAZZFD\"\nAT RUGBY TILT\nCrowd   Gives   Him   \"Bronx\nCheer'1  and  He  Quits\nStands;  Had Guards\nCHICAOO, Oct. 4\u2014Forty thousand\nvoices gave \"Scarfsce Al\" Capone\nthe \"Bronx che^r\" yesterday ln\nNorthwestern university's stadium ln\nBvanaton. Th* gang leader, accompanied by \"Machine-Gun\" Jack\nMcOurn and several other men, supposedly body-guards, wu jeered and\nhooted by the vast throng attending\nthe Northwestern-Nebrssfc. football\ngame when he arose and departed\nat the end of the third period.\nThe Capone party walked hurriedly\nand apparently somewhat abashed\nto the nearest exit and hastened to\nescape. Northwestern woh.\nROUGHRIDFRS\nWIN BUT LOSE\nSERVICES, STAR\nREGINA, Suk.. Oct. 4\u2014Losing the\nservices of the dynamic sddia James\nln the second quarter when he\nsuffered slight concussion of the\nbrafn after a hard tickle Reglna\nRoughrlders were still able to beat\nMoose Jaw Maroons here In tbelr\nfirst \u2022 home game of tbe senior western rugby schedule by 11 to 1-\nProminent through the first Quarter touchdown of the game before\nhis injury. He will be sufficiently\nrecovered, lt Is expected, to play in\nthe game against Saslcatoon Quakers   next   week.\nCOPPER PRICE\nSTATUS SHAKY.\nBUYING LIGHT\nFarther Drop From Present\nLow Mark Forecast Lead\nUnsettled  Zinc Steady\nBy CHARLES r. WILLIS\nEditor, The Mining Journal, Phoenix\nConsidering tbe net that tbe demand for nonferrous metals Is so\nsmall, It Is rather remarkable that\nlead and zinc have maintained their\nprloe and It ts omy ous to the excellent and improving statistical position of those metals and tbe fee.\nthat there la no preuure to sell.\nWithout a doubt the declining stock\nmarket hu had an Influence od thc\ndemand for metals.\nLONDON MART DISTURBED\nThe continued \u00abea__ness of lead\non tbe London market hu been \u2022\ndisturbing factor and lt bu been\npractically on a parity wtth New\nTork but hu not gone sufficient,\nlow to threaten the New Tork price.\nProduction of lead Is sufficiently\nwell under sales that no price re\nduetlon from that condition ls anticipated,\nA probable cause of the bobbin*\nabout of the London lead prloe 1'\nthe  difficulty  tn suing where  th\"\noutlet  Is to be  for ttie new  Australian  production that  li comin\non to ths market.   The refinery t\nhandle Mt. Ha bullion is design-\nto  produce between 6000 and 600\ntone   of   lead   monthly   tnd   ever\nthough   Mt.   Isa   might   scale   down\nproduction  to fit tne edict of the\nLead   Producers'   Association,   there\nwill   still   be  a  slzeaoie  production\nto absorb.\nThe United States lead statistics\nfor the month of August thow that\nthe industry, Is making forward\nstrides In putting Its house in order. Refined prooufioq for the\nmonth amounted to 36,702 tons, a\ndecrease of 864 tons, shipment*\nfor the month of August amounted\nto 38.6&0 tons, whtcn it the second\nlargest shipment for any month thla\nyear, but 3641 tone less than were\nshipped ln July. Rtfined stocks ln\nthe hands of United States producers at the end of August amounted\nto 131.082 tons, a further decrease\nof 2876 tons from tbe previous\nmonth.\nIt his been small quantities of\ndistress sine that have disturbed that\nmarket and brought It down from\n340 two weeks ago to the current\nprice of 8.70, but lt H felt that It\nwould take only small evidence of\ndemand to bring It back eg-tn.\nConsumers are known to have but\nsmall stocks and sre not bought\nahead and the dealers feel that a\nbuying wave ls close by.\nZlno consumers nave been restricting their purcnases to immediate needs only. There wu an\nactive buying spurt in July and it\nls probable thst some consumer\noverbought at that time and that\nthat accounts for the smaller sales\nmade during August snd September, while sellers have been unwilling to sell for future delivery,\nthere ls stated to be a loosening up\nsnd thst sine can now be bought\nat current prices for delivery\nthrough November.\nMost of the large une producers\nhave withdrawn u sellers realise\nthat little is to be gained by offering metal on an unwilling market. The opinion la expressed that\nlf sellers would only bide their time\nand not show such great anxiety\nto wll they would probably experience leu difficulty In making sales\nand would undoubtedly get better\nprices.\nDomestic copper buying Is to\nsmall that the custom smelters, to\nwho the market hu been passed,\nare paying little attention to selling but are devoting their attention to the foreign demand which\nhu maintained reasonably well since\nthe lowering of the export price.\nDomestic producers are making no\neffort   to   sell   at   any   price.\nToe situation with regard to copper ls reaching a climax, with the\nlowest price on record and surplus\nstocks lnncreulng each month. Many\nobservers wonder why, ln tht apparent lack of leadership of the\ncopper mining industry, Interested\nbanker* and stockholders have not\ntaken a hand and forced some action toward stabilization.\nThe question, \"How low can copper go*** it now' heard on every side,\nand this Itwlf denotes there Is a\ngeneral feeling, or fear, that the\nbottom of the marxet hat not yet\nbeen reached- Having come down\nto 7 oents, and with supplies \" increasing, snd demand dwindling,\nand tellers anxious, lt may go lower\nbefore the threat, or realization, of\nbankruptcy forces a drutlc reor-\nganlra-Jon.\nnome people may argue that the\ncorner crisis has come and gone,\nand' that despite the large unsold\nstocki, the market Is just bumping\naloni? somewhere near the bottom\npending a revival In trade, which Is\nu ture to come u day follows\nnight. Prom * philosophical point\not view, there Is muen to be said\nln favor of this line of thought.\nPULLOVER\nSWEATERS\nA sweater has be-j\ncome a regular part]\nof every man's wardrobe, and of course,\nthe new sweaters Sre\ncolorful. Here's a\ngreat collection of\nnew ones \u2014 in the\npopular, pullover\nstyle. Price? are\nmoderate.\n$3.50-$3.95\nto $6.00\nPhon*\nTAXI and\nTRANSFER!\n44    lull j   Freight   Sche-d\n*  *    to  Tnll  anil   Rosalaoa\nLeaves   NeUon   10   e.1\nTrail Depot\u2014Dominion Gann f\nRoaelaud   Depot\u2014U   D.   CM*\nCON. CUMMINS\nFor Modern Plumbing\nat Moderate Prices\ntu\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER  PLUMBEB\nOpp. City Ball non. 114\nA. D. PAPAZIAN]\nWATCHMAKER,\nJEWELER\nand Graduate Optician]\n413  HALL  STBEET\nPhone\nTAXI\nThe Beit at Servtal\n.Careful,  courteotu\n^^^^^^^U      Driven\nNelson Tranfer Co, Ltd. i\n35\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Laughton, RCL\nOPTOMETRIST  and  OPTICIAN\n\u2022iult. 209-201. Medical Art. Bld|.\nA   full   etock   of   various   .lie*\nand colors carried by\nCITY DRUG CO.\nXehon's Dispensing ChemisU\nPhone 21 Box 10M\nAlways at your, service\nFrench Runner Makes\nNew Record for Mile\nPARIS, Oct. *.\u2014 (AP)\u2014JnlM\nMdnirmr^r, French mldrtH 'Ht-\nt ance star, todsy srt a new\nno.Id's record for the mile mn\nwhen he covered the dtatanre\nln four minutes *'i seconds.\nLadoomegue's performance slipped more than a second from\nthe accepted world's record or\n4, 10 2-5 Kt by Paavo Nurml In\n1921.\nNelson\nBusiness Collet*\nDAY OB EVENING CLASSES\nIndividual    Tuition\u2014Commence\nany time.\nP. O. Boi 14 Phone SM\nJUST   ARRIVED\nAnother shipment of Parker Duofoli\nPens,   right   from   the   factory.\nThe Pen with a lifetime ruarantei\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrescription  Specialist\nPHONE   1\nShop with us by mall.    _\nNOW SHOWING\nGood-Time Charlie's\nHere to Set Tou All\na-Laughing\nTwo Shows\n\u2022 ..Nightly\n7:30\u20149:30\nMatinee\n2:30\nCHARLIE\nRUGGLES\n-THB JOLLY rUN-SltiXtR IN\n\"CHARLITS AUNT' OFF ON A\nLOVB  BPRSE.\nGIRL HABIT\nALL HM I_FB HTS BDN AWAY\nFBC.'. MATTtlMONY\u2014AND WHIN\nKIT FINALLY BBOS FOB IT THB\nOIBLS WONT TAKE HIM SERIOUS!\/. I\nSOMETHING MUST BE DONE-SEE THIS MATR.M0NIA7, MIXUP\nCOMEDY. .\n\"THE   LUBE   OE   HOLLYWOOD\"\nWith\nTtralna   Brooks.   PhjIH.   Crane.\nRita  Ftvnn,  Qeeete  Chandler\nSPORT1.IOHT Vf\\\\  lWITWa\n\"THB    DIXIE    CHASE\" \u00a3__\"_\nNEXT ATTRACTION\nBARBARA STANWYCK in 'TEN CENTS A DANCI?\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1931_10_05","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0405080","@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":"1931-10-05 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1931-10-05 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\/1.0405080"}