{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-12-01","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1934-10-27","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0406762\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \u2014\nV I L I L'ft I A    \u2022    6\n ,\t\nClay Deposits in Fernie\nMay Mean Industry\n\u2014 Pa_e Two\n***|001t i\n\\.n\nJoe Cronin Is Sold for\na Record Price\n\u2014 Pa&e Seven\nVOLUME tl\nWS^'-ftA   \u2022\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING. OCTOtIR 27.1\u00bbS4\nFIVS CSNtS A COPY\nNUMBER IW\nOPPOSING ARMIES BATTLE IN AUSTRIA\n15 Ambushed and Killed in Clash\nBetween Catholics and Mexicans\nMEXICO, DT., Oct. 26 (AP).\u2014The dumber of deputlei wu\ninformed tonight thit 15 penoni were imbuihed md killed in i\nfight between militant Catholic elementi and local authoritiei near\nTanhuato, Mlchoaca.\nThe ambuicade, deputlei were told, waa arranged by a religious\ntaction.\nBan to Be Lifted Sunday-\nHealth Situation Better\nTriumph for British as Scott Plane Breaks Record\nDEMOCRATS IN\n5arty Does Not Care\nto Have Socialist\nas a Democrat\nCOMEDY OF ERRORS\nBY WASHINGTON\nFarley's Endorsation\nNot Authentic Says\nWashington\nBT CECIL a DICKSON\nAssociated preu Staff Writer\nWASHINOTON, Oct. 26 (AP)\u2014\nThe Roosevelt admlnlitntlon definitely turned iwiy from Upton\nSinclair today, dropping unmls-\ntikiblt Indications thit tt doei\nnot care to hive the former Sodil-\nlit elected ai Democratic governor\nOf California.\nA letter trom Democratic head-\nOuarters, urging the election of\nSinclair and carrying the tlgna-\nturr of Postmaster Oenenl Jamei\nA. Farley In the green Ink he alwaya uses, wai termed a \"mistake \"\nThe signature was affixed with \u2022\nrubber stimp. its dispitch wn\nKid to hive been an error on\nthe psrt of i minor employee.\nA growing belief hert thit the nd-\n(Contlnuid on Pige Tin)\nSeek Daughter of\nSenator in U.S.A.\nRENO, Nev\u201e Oct 26 (API-\nDepartment of Juitlce agentt wera\ntonight to hava joined In a aiarch\nfor Mlu Patricia McCarran, 15-\nyear-old daughtir of Senator Patrick A. McCarran of Nivada, who\nRano polloe uld, diippeired from\nhar home Mondiy night.\nIrish Free State\nto Delve Into the\nCurrency Problem\nDUBLIN. Irish Free State, Oct. 36\n(OP Cible).\u2014The Iriih Free State\ngovernment his appointed a commlulon of 20 to Inquire Into currency and banking problem! of the\nFtee State.\nThe commlulon'! talk wlll be to\n\u2022limine ind report on the system\nof currency, bulking, credit, public\nborrowing ind lending ind pledging\nof itate cndlt on behilf of igrlcul-\nture. Industry snd social services.\nIt li also chirged with the talk\nof considering whit ehingei ire\n\u2022dvlsible.\nThl sleek Britlih Comet airplane, \"Grosvenor Houu,\" piloted by\nT. Cimpbell Black (left, below) ind C, W. A. Scott (right, balow) which\nlid thl field In thl London to Mllbourm cliulc. It wai in English\nentry. Thl performinci ot thi Britlih airplane ll hilled u \u2022 triumph\nfor Britlih engineering. Thi other two ilrplines, ona piloted by Dutch\n\u2022Irmen, tha other by Col. Roicoi Turner, an U.S. built.\nCONSTRUCTION STARTS UPON A\n100TONMILLFORTHEQUEEN\nCrew Concentrated on Surface Work; Get\nPower Soon\nWith the underground development work in the Queen mine limited\nthrough breaking of the Sheep creek flume, the Wolf creek flume delivering only enough water to the compreisor plant to keep the mine\nSumps going in addition to one ihlft of drilling for the new shaft,\nlanagcr H, I. Doelle of the Sheep Creek Gold Mine!, Limited, hai turned\nhii entire available labor force to comtruction of the new mill, which\nhai been authorized by the directorate.\nSITE IS CLEARED\ni Work on the mill site, which it on the bank of Wolf creek, but\nfurther down itream than originally chosen, itarted a couple of days\nahead of the snow, but in ipite of deep mud the scenery li being rapidly\nchanged by tractor, ifraper, stone-boat, broadaxes, picks and shovels,\nthe site has been cleared, a fill is being made along the edge of the\ncreek to carry the new roadway, the old being obliterated by the mill\nlite, and a big drainage culvert hai been built with logs. A fill ii also\nbeing made for a yard below the mill.\nA few yard! above the mill site, carpenters are building the forms\nfor the concrete foundations for the main building, which will roughly\nbe 110 by 90 feet, and for the plant\nCITY WILL BE\nBACK TO ITS\nNORMAL TREND\nChurches and Sunday\nSchools Open Up\nDoors Sunday\nSCHOOLS, THEATER\nOPEN ON MONDAY\nPoliomyelitis and the\nDiphtheria Outbreak\nIs Now Curbed\nA normal tnnd of ictlvltiei\nwill agalned be returned In Nelson\nSunday morning when the second bin on public githerlngi wlll\nbe lifted. On Mondiy school! will\nalio reopen. \u2022\nChurch and Sundiy tchool ic-\ntlvMles wll] be returned sundiy\nmorning and sporting and other\nevents scheduled, wlll be carried\nont For more than a week the\nelty has been tied up In a strict\nban which barred all public gathering!.\nKervlee dubi and other public\nbodlei wlll be itiie to function\nafter Sunday  and  numerous dis\ncontinued on Pags Tan)\nSUCCESSOR OF AL\nOTONEB JAILED\nCets 18 Months snd Is Fined\n$5000 tor Evssion of\nIncome Tsx\nMcRAE NOT TO\nRUN FOR MAYOR\nCoast Alderman Retires From\nRace on Advice of His\nPhysician\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 26 <CP)-\nMayor L. D. Taylor stood alone today as the only candidate definitely\nin the current Vancouver mayoralty\ncampaign following the announcement of Alderman J. J. McRae that\nhe is withdrawing from the race on\nthe advice of his physician.\n\"My i.ysiclan has advised me not\nto put myself to the added strain\nof a mayoralty campaign at thts\ntime,\" Alderman McRae stated today. \"While I am willing to make\nany reasonable aacrificc in the city's\ninterest, I believe it would be up-\nwise and not ln the best interest of\nthe public or myself to act contrary to his advice.\"\nOthers reported to be considering\ncandidacy are G. G. McGeer, M.L.A.,\nJ. W. Cornett and Dr. A. K Buchanan.\nBusiness Volume, Mineral\nProduction on Up Qrade\nBusiness Recovery Mounting According to the Statistics\nfor First Nine Months of 1934 Compared\nWith Last Year\nto be installed in it. It is hoped to\nhave the building covered in by the\nend of November. The coarse crushing plant will be in a separate building higher up the bank.\nSTRAIGHT CVANIOE\nThe mill installation, which will\nutilise a straight cyanide process,\nwill be for a unit of 100 tons ore\ncapacity. Tbe. initial crushing ca\npacity Will be for ISO tons.\nAt an early date the Queen w \"1\nhave electric power from the West\nKootenay Power St Light company'*! Sheep creek transformer*\nhouse by the Kootenay Belle mill,\nbut* thenhort -line to' ctrrythe current to the Queen'! transformer\nstation, which will be located by\nthc mill, has not yet been'built. As\nsoon as the current is available,\npossibly in th next couple of weeks,\ntlve.company will be able to resume\nits full development program, and\na awitch will be made to electric\npumps,\nOther new surface equipment is\nthe new blacksmith shop and machine ihop, built near the tunnel\nportal, but up-creek trom the old\nshop, whose site is required for the\nnew shaft.\nWORK ON NEW SHAFT\nProm No. 7 level, the one on which\nthe downward extension of the big\nore body of higher workings wai re-\n(Contlnued on  Paga Ten)\nOTTAWA, Oct. 26 (CP).\u2014The receipt of information regarding the\nfirst nine monthi of 1934 sheds further light on the extent of the business\nrecovery, says the weekly economic review of the Dominion bureau of\nstatistics. The level of productive operation! waa much higher than in\nthe corresponding monthi of 1933, the index of the physical volume of\nbuilnesi baaed on 45 factor! averaging 94.0 ln the elapsed period 6f\n1934 compared with 77.4 in the same period of last year. The gain ot 21.4\nper cent is evidence of a marked resumption of business and productive\n\u2022nterpriie over the level! of lait year.\nIn wholeiale prices the official index of 567 commodities during the\nflnt nine monthi of 1934 wai 71.71 compared with 66.7 ln the flrat nine\nmonths of 1933.\nThe index of mineral production based on nine factors rose from\n107.0 in the first nine months of 1933 to 134.0 in the elapsed period of\nthe preient year, a gain of 25.2 per cent.\nManufacturing index based on 29 factors, during the first nine\nmonth! of thli year, iveraged 93.2 compared with 77 J in the lame period\nof lait year.\nMcAdoo Miss Foils\nto Use Her Licence\nLOS ANGELES, Oct. 36 (AP).\u2014The\nmarriage licence of 10-year-old Slim\nWilson McAdoo, gnnddiughter of\nPreildent Wilson, ipplled tor ln\nRiverside list Mondiy, hid not been\nluued' todiy to her ind her prospective huibind, 38-yeir-old Rifielo\nLopei dt Onste. Spmlih film ictor.\nThti wii. to hive been their wedding day.\nCmCAOO, Oct. 36 (AP).\u2014Public\nenemy Murray Llewellyn Humphreys,\nsuccessor in ricketi to Al Capone,\nfill heir todiy to the Ciponi fate\nis well ind wu sentenced to prlion\non hli pita of guilty to tba ehirge\nthlt hi dodged hli Incomt tu\nbill.\nHe* pleaded guilty to evidlng 128.-\n190 tixei on in Incomt tottlllng\nS1SS.561 tor the thret yean ended\nIn 1932. Judgt Woodward ordered\nHumphreys to Leavenworth penitentiary for IS monthi md fined\nhim 06000. Be wlll hive to piy hli\ndelinquent t\u00bb bill besides.\nMRS. SANKEY IS\nNOT GUILTY\nSIOUX PALLS, S.D., Oct 26\n(AP)\u2014Mn. Pirn Mai Sankey,\nwidow of tha lata Varna Sankiy,\ngangster and one-time wutern\nCanada railroader, wai icquitted\ntonight by a federal court jury of\na charge of coniplncy In tha\nChirlu Bottteher II kidnapping.\nIt wai Mn. Sankay'i second\ntrial on thli charge, ( previous\njury having dlugreed.\nWILLSTEVENS\nQUIT CABINET?\nProtests   About   His\nPamphlet Cause Row\nin Cabinet Meet\nMONTBEAL, Oet. 27 (Siturdiy)\n(Cr).\u2014\"Before the end of tbe\npresent week It li expected thit\nHon. H. H. Stevens, minister of\ntrade and commerce, will have\nquit hli post u chilrmin of the\nroyal commission inveitlgitlng\nmiss buying and price spreads.\nand ponlbly hli portfolio to the\nBennett cabinet.\" the Montreal\nOaaette wyt todiy In a despatch\nfrom Iti Ottawi corretpondent.\nOTTAWA, Oet. tl (CP).\u2014The\naction of Bon. H. B. Stevens,\nbead ef the price ipreid commission In Inning his celebrated\npamphlet On the probe, hu aroused itrong protests tn the cabinet\nmeetings of today ind yesterdiy,\nIt wu itated officially tonight.\nSome of his colleagues wanted to\nknow why Mr. Stevens luued the\ntapet ud alio took exception lo\n(MUs stitementi made by him\non puMIe platforms.\nPnmler B. B. Bennett tonight\n(ContlnUM on Paga Tan)\nCANADA MAY BE\nSTARTING POINT\nUlm Plans  Flight From  the\nDominion to Australia\nin November\n55 Cars of Apples\nShipped From Nelson\nThe number of can of applei\nthat has rolled from the warehouse \u00abr the Auociited Orowen\n\u25a0t Ntlton, hu new reached S.I.\nstltei W. M. Vlnce, loral manager.\nCin are ahlpped with fair regularity, tha greater part ot them\ngoing to prairie Polnti. Oversea!\nshipments, however, compare favorably with last year.\nAustralians Seek\nSecession Rights\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (AR- Four\nwestern Auitrallan delegate! came\nto London today to ask the King\nand parliament to permit their\nitite'i recesilon from the Australian\ncommonwealth.\nA recent plebiscite held in weatern Australia, separated by more\nthan 1000 milei of wasteland from\neutern Auitrilla, ihowed IU people\nfavored separation by more than 2\nto 1.\nRADICAL SOCIALISTS\nTRY SAVE DOUMERGUE\nNANTES, Fnnoe. Oct. 3d (CP).\u2014\nEffort* to uve Pnmler Outon Doumergue'! threitentd nitlonil gov*\nernment were being mide todiy.\nThe powerful Ridlcil ind Judical\nSocialist pirty, which la holding\nthree-day congreis hen psssed\nresolution cilculited to pavi tbe\nwiy tor a middle oount thit would\nprevent the pnmler ind thtttenita\nfrom finding themselves it logger*\nheidt wltb one mother on the\npremier'! reform progrim.\nHONOLULU, Oct. 36 (AP)-Leon\nSkilling, navigator for the famous\nAustralian flyer, Charles Ulm, an\nnounced on arrival here today from\nAustralia that he, Ulm, George M.\nLittlejohn and another Australian\nairman would attempt a flight from\nCanada to Australia ln November.\nSkilling said the four men probably would take off from Vancouver\nor Montreal, and fly to Melbourne,\nwith landings at Honolulu, Fiji\nislands and Auckland, N.Z.\nUlm and Littlejohn, he said, are\nin England testing a plane for the\nflight.\n' Ulm was copilot with Sir Charles\nKingsford-Smith when he with two\nAmericans, Harry W. -Lyon, navigator, and James Warner, wireless\noperator, fief from Oakland, Cal..\nto Sydney, Australia, via Honolulu\nand Fiji in June, 1928,\nPOPE CONGRATULATES\nBRITISH PI\nTRY TO BREAK\nSCOTTSMARK\nComplete First Lap of\nReturn Flying. Trip\nto Great Britain\nJONES-WALLER\nAFTER RECORD\nOther Race Fliers Are\nStill on Way; Dutch\nPlane Is Burned\nCHARLEVII.I.E, Australia, Oet. tt\n(Saturday)\u2014(CP cable via Rrutrrs)\n\u2014Cathcart Jones and Ken Waller\ncompleted the flrat lap of the return Journey from Melbourne to\nLondon avenging mort than too\nmiles an hour.\nThey tendM at Charleville, ttl\nmiles from Melbourne, it 10:00\ni.m. local time <7.\u00abo p.m. Frldty\nt.S.T.i saturdiy after turing off\non the projected 11,300 mile flight\nat 1.09 a.m.\nThe Britlih flyeri. four* ln the\nOreit London to Melbourne sir derby\nfinished thli week, hope to ttt a\nnew record for the round time from\nEngland to Australia ind return.\nThey took i little leu thin five\ndayi on the outgoing journey.\nSTOPPED  40  MINUTES\nAfter \u2022 40-mlnute itop thiy took\noft for Port Darwin on thi north\n(Contlnuad on Ptgi Tan)\nMarkets at\na Glance\nBy thi Cinidlan Preu\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Induitrial\nitock irregularly lower.\nToronto minei\u2014Lower.\nNew York\u2014 Stoeki lower and\nheavy at cloae.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat allghtly higher.\nLondon\u2014Bar illver and line unchanged; copper, tin and lead higher.\nNew York\u2014Bar illver, tin and\nlead unchanged; line lower.\nMontreal\u2014December silver lower.\nNew York\u2014Cotton, rubber and\ncoffee lower; sugar unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar up\n5-16 to 1.03 3-16.\nISOLATE EMPIRE\nIN CASE OF WAR\nUPON CONTINENT\nSuch It Plea of Lord Beaver-\nbrook; Dominion Would\nNot Follow Britain\nLORD   BEAVLR8R00K\nLONDON. Oct 36 (CP Cable)\nIsolation of the United Kingdom\nand tha Britlah Empire from continental qutrrela wu idvocated to*\nnight by Lord Beiverbrook, Canadian-born newspaper peer md\nstaunch Imperialist.\nIn a broadcast iddresi Lord Beav-\nerbrook declared thit ill Europe\nbelieved mother wu was inevitable,\nmd mmy believed that Oermany,\nnot Prince, would triumph. British\nIntervention would not determine\nthe luue, ind tht Leigue of Nation! offend so solution, he laid.\nThe Locarno agreement, he contended, had been washed out by events.\n\"The Dominion! will not follow ui\nInto Europetn quirrels,\" laid Lord\nBeiverbrook. \"Iaolatlon ot the Empire gives na a good, chanoe of\nkeeping out of the next war. And\nour Iaolatlon ahould Include aawcl-\nitlon with the United statu, to\nlecun tha affirmation of ill Anglo-\nSaxons to the declaration,. \"Wa ihall\npirtlclpite In no mon win.\"*\nJaeger Quits the\nNazi Church Body\nBBRLIW. Oct. 26 (AP).\u2014Relchl-\nhlshop Ludwlg Mueller'! hard-fisted\nsecond ln commind, Dr. Auguit\nJaeaer, quit todiy, leaving Mueller\nto hold the llnu igilnit thl mmy\nbitter forcti of hli church prognm.\nA letter Jaeger Mnt Mueller conveyed hit resignation u Naal commissioner for Protestant ehurohes\nln Prussia, md propoted thit Mueller cell \"an Inner council of bishops\nto assist you ln this reconstruction\nwork, with prospect of true piclflca-\ntlon.\"\nANTIOONISH, N.S., Oct. 26 (CP).\n\u2014Popt Plui XI todiy lent \u2022 con-\ngntiflitory cable to Moit Rlv. John\nHugh MacDonald, D.D, biihop of\nVictoria, on hli consecration hen\nyesterday. The new blthop leaves for\nVlctorli Nov. 3.\nOSBORNE, SECRETARY OF Tl BANK\nOF ENGLAND, JOINS BANK OF CANADA\nFIND CAUSE OF\nSWIMMER'S ITCH\nWINNIPEG, Oct 26 (CP)\u2014Tha\nciuse of \"swimmers' Itch,\" an affliction luffered by bithert In\nClear lake In Riding Mountain\nnitlonil pirk, hu been ditcovered\nby J, A. McLeod, graduate atudent\nof the Univenlty of Minltobi.\nThe orginlim ciuilng the Itch hai\nbeen iigngitid by Dr. McLeod,\nthut miking control of thi diseue\nooitlbli.\nIndian Question Will Be Big Thing Upon\nBritish Parliament Agenda Next Week\nYiddish Accounts\nCost Pont Seller\nCool Fine of $50\nMONTREAL, Oet 26 (CP)-Yim\nSolomon Krochmalnlck found out\ntodiy ha ihould conduct hli pints\nbuslneu ilthar In Frinch or English, Insofar is hli bookkeeping\nwu concerned. Chirged with in\nInfraction of tha Quebec Women'i\nMinimum Wige act, Krochmalnlck wai fined $10 and costs for\nmiking antrlu In his booki In\nYiddish, a language not understood by most government In-\ntpteton.\nFormer Kootenay Mon\nIt D^ad in Alaska\nKETCHIKAN, Aluka, Oct. 26\n(AP).\u2014The funeral for A. P. Craig.\n63, who hid lived here 24 years and\npreviously at Noma and near Nelaon, B.C., will be held on Sunday.\nHe died Wedneidoy after a lingering Illness.\nThe widow, \u2022 son, Albert Jr., 29,\nof New York City, and a 13-year-old\ndaughter, lurvlve.\nCanada is Ready to Take Place\nWith Britain In World Aff airs\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (CP ctble).-\nCanada'i high commluloner to\nOreat Britain, Hon. O. Howard Ferguson, tonight Mid thtt Canada\nwu ready to take tier ptrt with\nGreat Britain ln leadenhip of world\nattain.\nAddressing the annual dinner of\nthe City of London Wholeaale Linen\nTrade anoclatlon, Mr. Ferguson said\nCanada'i idea now wu to be ptrt of\nthe British Empire which was going\nto control world attain. He was\ncheered by the memben as he concluded hil speech.\n\"I came here believing that In\nworld attain the settlement of difficulties depends upon leadership,\"\nsold the former Ontario Conservative premier. \"History has shown\nthat the country which can lead thc\nworld better than any other ll Britain.\"\nBetting and Lotteries Bill Is\nPomeste   Issue;   House\nSits on October 30\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (CP cable)-\nParliament reassembles on Tuesday,\nOctober 30, and lt is hoped to complete remaining work by about November 16 in which case the new\nparliament may be opened with the\nspeech from the throne on November 20.\nBy far the greatest Interest of\nthe waning session md the new sei-\nsions following closely afterward,\nat .aches to the Indian question. The\nJoint parliament committee which\nmade exhaustive study ot tbe preient Indian proposals ta contained\nin the governmental white paper,\nmust table Its report before the end\nof the preient parliament\nThe white paper lava down pro-\nporals for greiter self-government\nwith safeguards, In other wordi reserving vital questions like defence\nfor British authority. While the die-\nhards condemn this as a surrender,\nthe Indian congress party equally\ncondemns it as inadequate. So far\nu tho latter Is concerned, however,\nthe situation has Improved immensely, undoubtedly owln(| to Lord Wil-\nllngdon's firm administration, inasmuch as the congress is apparently\nWill  Be  Deputy Governor;\nFrench-Canadian Will\nBe Assistant Deputy\nOTTAWA, Oct. 26 (CP)-J. A. C.\nOsborne, secretary of tho Bank of\nEngland, has been appointed deputy\ngovernor of the Bank of Canada,\nFinance Minister E. N. Rhodes announced here tonight. The appointment will take effect as at December\n1 and will be for five yean.\nIt has been arranged, however,\nthat Mr. Osborne may return to\nEngland before the expiry of hil\nCIVIL WAR IS\nCERTAINTY IN\nTHEBALKAKS\nRevision of Taxes Is\nCause of Unrest in\nProvinces, Cities\nGREAT MASSES OF\nARMS SMUGGLED\nYugo People Demand\nReturn of Terror\nGang for Trial\nBY CHARLES M. MEI8TER\n(Assocli\/d Preu Foreign Staff)\nVIENNA, Oct, 26 (AP).\u2014Poll-\ntlcal tensity throughout Auitrli,\nbringing dire forecast! of new\noivll ttrlfe, Increaied tonight ai\nthe government proclaimed new\nlegislation regulating fixation\nright! of the federal, provlncltl\nand municipal government!.\nChancellor  Kurt  Schuschnlgg'i\nctblnet stirred up in old hornets'\nnut by taking from the province!\nand municipalitiei their right to\nahare In tixei collected In Vlanni.\nConflict betwun the  heimwehr\n(Fatclit homi guityi) htided by\nPrince Ernst von Btarhemberg and\nSchutchnlgg'i   Catholic   atorm\ntroopi reached the point of open\ndishes it Innsbruck tnd Graz.\nA recent editorial in \"Die Bund*\nespolizi\" (organ ot the national po\nlice)   prophesied  a final  decislvi\nbattle for power in Austria befon\n(Continued on Ptgt Ten)\nFRUIT MARKET\nSCHEMEMOVES\nMarketing Board Is\nWefl Advanced on\nTree Board Plan\nVICTORIA, Oct 28 (CP).-Mtr-\nketlng plans were developing rapidly before the provincial marketing\nboard today, with a number or\nschemes In varioui stages of sub\"\nmission. That of the interior tret\nfruit board, for provincial regulation of domestic sales, was farthest\nadvanced, after conferences between\nmemben of the board and the pro-\nvincialbody this week. W. E. Raskins, chairman of the interior tree\nfruit board, was expected to place\na completed scheme in the handa of\nthe provincial officials shortly.\nFraser valley milk producen will\nhave a further hearing with tht\nprovincial board on Monday; while\non Tuesday, B.C. sheen breeders wlll\nspetk to plans they nave for market regulations on live stock.\nVancouver Island houthouse tomato growen have withdrawn a\ntentative marketing scheme for revision and further discussion, after\na contested application made thli\nweek. Three barrister! were endeavoring to reach agreement on\nthe plan.\nSHE IS A MOTHER\nAT AGE OF 14\nter-i as deputy governor \"If he can\nconveniently be\nister said.\nconveniently be released,\" the miu*\n\"It is the view of the government,'\nsaid Mr. Rhodes, \"thtt Ctntda is\n(Contlnutd on Ptgt Tan)\nHE WAS IM THE RIGHT\nPUCE AT RIGHT TIME\nMONTREAL, Oct 26 (CP)-Alex\nMilne owei his life to the fact that\nhe happened to be in hospital when\nan abscess wu ruptured in his\nstomach. The slightest delay, doc-\nton said, ia fatal in tuch cases.\nMilne wu visiting his sister when\nhe collapsed, and a successful operation wu performed.\nHELD MAN WAS NOT\nHUNTED KIDNAPPER\nSALT  LAKE CITY,  Oct 26-\n(CP)\u2014A 14-year-old mother and\nher ion wire reported \"doing nicely\" todiy tt t local hospital. Tht\nmother li Mrs. Ralph Ivie of Dus-\ncheine, Utih. Her child wu delivered by t ciesirlan opentlon.\nThe huibind li 10 yttn older\nthin the child-mother.\nMRS. LATTA, WIFE OF\nFORMER SASKATCHEWAN\nMINISTER, DIES, REGINA\nREGINA, Oct 28 (CP)\u2014Mn. S. J.\nLatta, wife of the former Sukatche-\nwan minister of education, is dead\nhere. Mrs. Latta was believed to\nhave been recovering a few dtyt\ntgo.\nMr. Latta was tppolnted commli\u00bb\nlioner ot the bureau of publication\njust t few houn before hi! wile'l\ndetth.   \t\nTHE WEATHER\n(Continued on Pigt Tin)\n\/\nPICHER, Okla., Oct 26 (AP)-\nPolice today investigated the possibility that a young man arrested\nhere might be Thomas Robinson Jr.\n\\ anted for the Stoll kidnapping at\nLouisville, but a check disclosed\nthat his description did not fit that\nof Robinson as given out by the\ndepartment ot justice.\nTRAVELS ACROSS CANADA TO\nATTEND DAUGHTER'S FUNERAL\nWINDSOR, N.S., Oct. 26 (CP).-\nGivtn Elliott, prominent British\nColumbia lumberman, today reached the end of a transcontinental\nJourney to attend the funeral of his\ndaughter, Catherine, who died in\nhospital here last Saturday.\nVictoria\nNanalmo .\nMn.\n44\n....   88\nVancouver  - \u2014\u2014\u25a0\u25a0 88\nAtlln -   W\nKamloops    \u2014_....-. to\nprince George  \u2014\u2022\u2022 30\nPrince  Rupert   - 88\nEstevan Point  -  64\nSpoksne       _..\u201e...'..-. 42\nportlind      - **-\nSeattle   46\nSin Franciico \u2022\u2022\u2022-   J8\nPentlcton    ~ \u2014  37\nCranbroox ...._. - - 3'\nNelson  \u2014  tt\nVernon  - ...._ \u2014- 83\nCilgiry     -  'i{\nIdmonton  -  30\nQu'Appelle  28\nSwift Current -  30\nWinnipeg  30\nMoose Jaw   -\u25a0- 32\nDswson   32\nPrince Albert   34\nMlg\n40\n60\n60\n36\n40\n43\n48\n48\n64\n64\n66\n78\n48\n60\n38\n44\n40\n60\n44\n44\n26\n39\n\t\n_________________\n \u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022-\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022^\nPAGE TWO-\nTHI NELSON DAILY NEWI   NEUON. l.C\u2014SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. P. 1M4\nUpton Sinclair and His Epic Plan Have\nThrown Scare Into California Industry\nElection Day, Nov. 6,\nWill Tell the\nTale\n(ly Central Press Canadian)\nSAN FRANCISCO, Oct JS. -\nWhat will happen in California on\nNovember 6 is living politically inclined Americana much to worry\nabout On that day, Ctlifornians\nwill go to the polls to elect a new\ngovernor. In doing so they must\nalio  supply  a  yard-rule  fw  aU\nSales\n\u00ae\nService\nBE PREPARED\nwith\nPRESTONE\nDon't let \u2022 real cold\nnight catch you unawares\nFILL UP TODAY WITH\nEVER READY\nPRESTONE\nThe Perfect Anti-Freeie\nPhone 117\nKootenay\nMotors\n(Ntlson)   Llmltsd\nUpton Sinclair . . . ex-Soclallit . . . Democratic candidate for\ngovernorship of California . . . eonflicationlst . . . slngle-taxer . . ,\nleft-winger.\nUnited Slates to use tn measuring\nthe size and spread ot new radicalism preached by political reformers\nGuide for Travellers\nNeUon, B. C, Hotels\n\"Finest in the Interior\"\nThe HUME HOTEL\nphoni m\nBreakfast 25c to 60c\nLuncheon 35c to 50c-Dinner 35c and 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarters\nTree But Service Nelson B.C. Oaorga Benwell, Prop.\nHUME\u2014A. 3. Ironside, Cranbrook;\nF. Ust, 8. Chatwin, K. S. McOlll.\nB. w Buchanan, W. P. Frant, vanoouver; R. Milton, Montreal; M. Mr-\nLean, Toronto; A. 8. wattleld, C. A.\nTula,  W.   E.  Lawrenoe,  R.   Fraaer,\nPentlcton; H. Coursay, O. Sibley,\nMedicine Hat; Bishop of Kootenay,\nVernon; A. O. Low, Calgary; H. Ross,\nReno mine; H. V. Dawson, Recoma;\nA. O. Dlsroslers, Procter.\n^The Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is Kin&\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms Wttb Private\nBaths or Showers.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n124 BAKER ST. PHONE 19 NELSON, B.C.\nBAVOT\u2014\u00bb. Alpsen, Nakusp; How\nard Rogers, calgsry; E. McNelllle,\nMaybaln, Saak.; P. Stutt, Kellhtm,\nAlta.; J. A. Fisher, Gerrard; Mrs.\nW. E. Russel, Slocan CUy; Mrs. McKlnnon, Mr. and Mrs, J. J. Scott,\nAlnsworth;   j.   K.  Bergman,   Orsnd\nI.\nForks; Bill Zoyttoff, Brilliant; Albert Palrleer, Romeo Laros\u00ab, Shell\nRiver. Sask.; John Marsden, Lardo;\nM. McDonald. B. Andretta, Trail;\nMr. and Mrs. H. Lang. Mr. and Mrs.\nA. E. Sulrdolr, r. s. Ahue, Vancouver.\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nMS.   E.  MADDEN\nCompletely   Remodelled\nHot  and  Cold   Hater\nln  tht  UEAKT of tht City\nNow Orand Hotel\nF.   L   KAPAK,   Prop.\nWeekly and Monthly Rates\nHot and  Cold  Water\nSimla SOo op     Doublt 11.90 up\nRooma \u00abI0 a Montb Mid Up\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon St Phont S87L\nII.   WASSICK\nSPECIAL MONTHLY  RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nMinerr Head .uartert\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA. LAPOINTE, Prop.\nRooms from Ho to 11.50\nMonthly 110 and up.\nSteam heated and hot and cold\nwater ln every room\n\u00ab05 Baker SU Phont w\nVancouver, B. C, Hotels\nniwlv   Jwu^Aweuvn will-     \u201e;0NM\nRENOVATED 0111161*111  HOtel      \u2022***-EVAT0\u00ab\nA, Paterton, late of Coleman, Alta., Prop. aOO StymourSt- Vtncouvtr\nTRANSPORTATION-Frsight and Passenger\nSO I CHANGED\nTO OREYHOUND\n\u2022 \u2022 . became I can travel by luxurious coaches from\nTrail er Nelion to Vernon, or Kamloopi, In one day. And\nthe Week-End Excursion rate from Trail or Nelion to\nVernon ii only $10.00.\nCentral Canadian Greyhound Lines, Ud.\nAGENTS IN EVERY TOWN\nNELSON - TRAIL - ROSSLAND\n^itrvS1015    FREIGHT LINE\nLeaving Nelson\nat > s.m.\nPhone      \u25a0>\u2022 C* \"SCOTTY\" MUIR. prop. phoM\nNelson      prompt   efficient   servics Trail\n77\nAT  ALL  TIMES\n13 or 191\n17 Students Looking\nfor Girl Friends\nTORONTO, Oct It (CP)-C. R.\nEllia, editor of the Varsity, University of Toronto's daily newspaper,\nwu shocked today to find In hla\nmall bas \u2022 monster application for\ngirls. The application waa accompanied by \u2022 request that it be forwarded to tht university's student\n'date bureau.\"\nWritten neatly op \u2022 ltrft place\nof birchbark, the messast said 17\nforestry studerta from an Algon-\nquln park station would come \"out\"\nfo one night, November 13, and\nwould like 17 {iris.\nThe men wtre described as two\nEnglishmen, one v\/stterner, one\nnature photographer, one Lapp, ont\nsix-footer, several farmers and one\n\"Clark Gable.\"\nFERNIE CONCERT\nPROVES SUCCESS\nFERNIE, B.C., Oct, It\u2014Fernie\ncititens turned out again to support\na local Interest. A concert sponsored by the Ladies aid of the\nUnited cburch attracted an audience\nthat tilled the I.O.O.F. hall. The\narogram included vocal solos by\n[its Helen Podblelanclk, F. Alexander, William Riley, J. Riley, P.\nBenn and C. W. Owen, chorus by\nseven of Miss Podblelanclk's pupils,\nsaxophone solo, Dick Vernon; piano\nduet, Edith Rewers and Lorraine\nNolan; mouth-organ selections, Henry Cerkirk; accordion selections, F.\nFzetland; Scotch dances, Thomu\nStewart and a number of conjuring\ntricks by H. Harrison of Hillcrest.\nSELLERS AGAIN HEADS\nFEDERAL GRAIN\nas a further step towards prosperity\nwhich the new deal promised, and\nhas not yet achieved.\nFigure of radicalism In California\nis Upton Sinclair of Pasadena,\nnovelist and Socialist convert to the\nDemocrat party, whost plan for\ncomplete recovery ln California hu\nbeen spread far and wide over the\nsouthern state under the title EPIC\n\u2014\"End Poverty in California.\"\nSinclair won Democratic nomlna*\ntlon for the governorship by trouncing his nearest opponent ln the\nstate primary, New Deal Appointee\nCreel by over 1,500,000 votes, yet no\nman since William Jennings Bryan\nhas so outraged the vested interests.\nBut the vested interests, thost\nwhose investments in the state are\ngreatest, hold themselves personally\nresponsible for smashing Upton Sinclair and his EPIC plan. They hate\nhim as a platform genius who rakes\ntheir interest without stint or reserve. They hate him as a Socialist,\nas a labor left wing sympathizer.\nThoy hato him u a single taxer, but\nthey hate him most of all because\nhe intimates tht desirability of confiscating private property for tht\ngood of the state and its workers.\nADV0CATE8 BARTER\nBefore Upton Sinclair appeared as\na threat on California's political\nhorizon he sat down and wrote a\nstartling pamphlet visualising himself in tls position he aoon may\nhold. \"I, Governor of California and\nHow I Ended Poverty,\" he called it.\nIt was a forceful presentation of his\nEPIC plan. Mostly it advocated uae\nof the ancient barter idea but with\nthe state as agent It uld theoretically, \"I, Governor Sinclair have\nmade it legal to appropriate vacant\nand idle land for unemployed to\ncultivate, to 'acquire' factories\nstanding Idle, for workleas laborers\nto operate: to issue scrip for barter\nIn place of the money now scarce\nand bonds to pay for mv appropriated land and factories. I have\nabolished the sales1 tax, tax on\nhomes and ranches with less than\n$3000 assessment. Instead I have\nplaced heavy taxes on inheritances.\nIncomes, (there the vetted interests\nnoted with alarm) public utilities,\nbanks, unimproved land, and have\nhanded pensions to widows with dependent children, to invalids and\nSersons of three-year residence over\n) years old.\"\nThe EPIC plan was greeted with\nfanatical enthusiasm by red hot\nradical groups, but not without the\n\"upport of thousands of unemployed\nind moderately inclined depression\nuffcrers could it have carried Sin-\nlair to the nomination. From the\ninform* he sways audiences with\n.is oratory. He was a Socialist, but\nSocialism, he said, was getting htm\n\u25a0Where. He therefore became i\n\u2022emocrat.\nI8TURBS WASHINGTON\nFrom Washington brain trusters\nof Ihe new deal watched with disturbed minds their convert. They\nrushed a compromise candidate into\nthe breach. The primary swamped\nhi\u00bbn, to elect Sinclair. The victorious Epicurean marched to Washington, embraced an embarrassed\nPresident Roosevelt, became \"close\"\nfriends with political aides of the\nchief.\nImmediately the party heads decided that he could be \"handled,\"\ncould be made lest dangerous. They\nplaced their seal of approval upon\nUpton Sinclair, but ignored his EPIC\nplan. Sinclair, home in California,\npromptly Issued a ntw pamphlet\n\"Immediate Epic.\" It stnt a thrill of\nfear through conservative Californians. State, county, district, city\nbonds have been sinking in value\never since. Sinclair intimates $3.-\n000.000 to JIO.OOO.OOO levy on utilities\nond Industrial corporations at once,\nto prime his EPIC pump, to start\nImmediately his round of reopening\nfactories, and doing business with\ntax receipt scrip and tht barter\npolicy. Three years after promulgation of the scheme, California will\nvote to make it permanent or to\nwreck it So Sinclair proposes.\nHis new impetus makea old-line\npoliticians shudder. Delay was their\nhope. Sinclair is too ready to put\nhis plans into action. The hugt\nquestion mark looms for November\n6. California's voters must then decide lf thty art ready to give Sinclair and tht radicallst theories ht\npropounds tht trial a governor's\noffice would warranL\nWliwn-O, Oct. _8 (CP)\u2014AU officers of the Federal oraln Company, Limited, were returned to offlot at a meetlnt ot directors held\nfollowing tht annual general meeting\nof the company htrt.\nR. 1. Sellers, Winnipeg, waa reelected president and managing director and Alex Thompson. Winnipeg, vice-president. H. J. Symington,\nMontreal, wu reelected director.\nFERTILIZER\nEFFECTS ON\nSMALLFRU1T\nThe memben of the Northwest\nFertilizer conferenoe, rtprtttDtlaf tht\nexperiment atatloat of waahlngton,\nOregon, Montana, Idaho and British\nColumbia approved a number of suggestions regarding tht ust of ftrtll-\nlasrs on am'll fruits ln tht northwest. The conference met lut July\nIS and 17, at Yakima, Washington.\nThe tuggeatlona la the use ot fertiliser  on  tht  following  kinds  of\nfruit are stt out In this report and\nIt reads:\nCHItftHY\n\"1. Cherries seem to be susceptible,\non the basis of axptrlmesta and\nobservations, to Injury exhibited u\nyellowing and premature dropping of\nleaves following applications of cy.\nanimid any time during tht dormant seaaon. Dropping of leavea waa\nnot marked Immediately following\nirrigation.\n\"3. Order ot susceptibility to this\ninjury It u follows: Bins, Napoleon,\nLambsrt.\n\"3. Color,\n\"(A) Plott ln which phosphorus\nwu used invariably ltd. A-Iadlvl-\ndual frulta were colored; B-rrult\nthroughout tht thret developed oolor uniformly.\nPOOREST COLOR\n\"(B) NK Plot registered poorest\ncolor, a-At Harvest time these treet\nshowed color ranging from fully colored specimens to frulta showing\nlight: B-Delayed picking did not\nmaterially Improve color: c-Lam-\nberta frulta began to soften and\ndrop without developing color.\n\"(C) color of fruit in N plott\nInvariably showed poorer than In\nplots where P had been added wtth\ntht N.\n\"(D) Size\u2014Theplott ln which sodium nitrate had been used invariably\nproduced larger fruit than plots\nwhere nitrogen had been left out of\nthe mixture, sin of cherries, however,- It profoundly Influenced by\nthe crop born.\n\"(E) Keeping quality\u2014rrult from\nphosphorus treated plou wu firmer\nand exhibited bitter handling and\nPlenty of \"Hot. Stuff\" Is\nPromised in Stevens Probe\nThe vocational guidance aervlce,\na semi-official body which helps\nchildren of school-leaving tge to\nchoose a career, proposes to uat\nfilms illustrating \"Industrial psychology\" in furtherance of its aims.\nThousands of Letters\nPour Into His\nOffice\nThis Is tht tteond ef a tirles\nef two articles en tht forth*\ncoming session of tht Stevens\nprlct probt oommlsslon.\nBy WILFRED EGGLE8TON\nCtntral Press Canadian Staff Writer\nOttawa, Oct. JJ.\u2014\"You ain't heard\nnothing ytt!\"\nSuch it a colloquial summing up\not the broad Mnts which those who\nare ln touch with the work of the\nSttvens royal commlulon Inquiring\ninto Canada's \"sweat-shops and\nother economic injustices manage\nto convey when they are asked\nabout the sessions which are scheduled to begin about tht end ot this\nmonth.\nInvestigators have been busy all\naummer and early fall, auditors,\naccountants, trained economists, a\nsmall army of thtm going up and\ndown Canada, gathering together\nthe facts which will be revealed\nto the public when Hon Harry\nStevens resumes the sittings of his\ncommission.\nWhy fish landed at the docks\nnett tht fisherman a cent a pound\nand costs the householder 20 cents\na ftw days later; why farm implements went up when wheat wtnt\ndown; how much the workers in\nCanada's textile mills get, and how\nlong hourt they work, the retl \"low\ndown\" on the mats buying of Canada's chain stores; the spread between the price a farmer gets for\nt buktt of tomttoes and the cost\nof ctnntd tomttoes, with t few\nsidelights on what tht people who\nwork in the ctnning factories receive; these are some ot the lines\nwhich the paid investigators of the\nStevens commission have bten following.\nOf course, they ctn't come out\nand tell the scandalous details yet.\nbut one hears at the capital that\nthere will be plenty of \"hot stuff.\"\nLITTERS BV THI HUNDREDS\nIt it approaches the sensational\nnature of torn, ot tho tobacco and\nneedle-trades evidence spilled last\nspring before the parliamentary\ncommittee, it will again blow the\nlid off things, and hold tht centre\nof the federtl stage again.\nThe minister of tradt and commerce certainly released an avalanche with his Toronto speech of\nlast January.\nAlmost ovtrnlght ht became a\nkind of national hero. People with\ngrievance! began to write in by\nth**? hundreds. Mtnv confirmed his\ngrave charges tbout industry. They\nsupplied him with new facts and\nnew suspicions. They congratulated\nhim by the hundreds.\nThese floods of letters still pour\nin. People want thia investigated\nand that. Everything from the Pacific scandal to the prict of razor\nblades. Some ot the letters which\nretch Mr. Stevens tre the obvious\nproduct of cranks. But everything\nwhich offert to throw any light on\nconditio.is. or which makes charges\nof sweat-shop or slavery conditions\nIs passed along to tht commission\nfor Investigation.\nCLAMOR FOR OASOLI   I PROBE\nTwo demands have been made\nrepeatedly. The public wants the\nprice of coal investigated. Also they\nwant to know why gasoline costs\nso much. So far the conmmlsslon\nhas had to resist these demands.\nThey already hava mort than they\ncan r .pe to clean up by the time'the\nnext session starts.\nBut the clamor for probes Into\n8U and coal prices continue. In\nit tnd tht pressure may be so\ngrttt the Inquiry wlil htvt to bt\nenlarged.\nIt hat betn enlarge**.' twlct now.\nT t creation ot tht roytl commission uw tht extension of lt to the\nsubjects ntmed ibove: firm implements, fish, canning of fruits and\nvegetables, and so forth.\nBut there was no mention of textiles.  And  textiles  arc  a  subject\nPEARSON\nDrafted fram Ottawa's department ef external affairs, L. B.\nPearson formtrly profetsor of economics it Unlvtrslty of Toronto,\ntook ovtr thi stcrttarythlp tf\ntht \"brain trust\" of thi Steveni\ncommlulon. Professors Curtis tnd\nBladen alto acted is \"brain trusters.\"\nwhich scores of people wert sure\nshould be investigated.\nIn the long run thty prtvalled.\nTht commission htd demurred on\nthe ground thtt the industry wu\ntoo largt to be tdequately invest-\ngated ln the timt available. But\ntht public wat not to bt denied\nsome kind ot Inquiry into textiles.\nAnd they are getting it. Not t tull-\ndreu affair like the one which wu\nconducted Into Canada't largt department stores. Afttr all, there\nare 175 textiles establishments in\nCanada. To investigate them all\nwould cost a small fortune. But\nsomething at lust is to be done.\nThree experts tn economics have\nbeen dratted trom the department\nof external affairs tor tht work\nof the Sttvens commission. L. B.\nPearson, formerly of the University\nof Toronto, and one of the brightest minds in the civil service, is the\nsecretary. Two professors were\nb ought In trom outside points. A\nskilled indexer wit brought up to\nOtUwa for the occuion.\nREPORTS BEING PREPARED\nThis \"Brain Trust\" has betn buty\ntor weeks with the 4000 ptges of\nevidence tnd the uveral bushels of\nexhibits, sitting, analysing, organising, recommending. They hive\nboiled down to two things:\n1. What the committee found out\nlast spring.\n2. The possible remedies.\nThe eleven members of parliament who trt on the leytf commlulon hive been asked to go\nthrough the findings to date. Thty\nare being supplied with copies of\nthe \"Brain Trust's\" confidential rt'\nport. Thty art expected to htvt\nclarified thtlr idtu on tht subject\nduring the recess, tnd to bt ready to\nwrite a prescription for the economic ailments disclosed lut session.\nIt would be t lot simpl for them\nto write their report if thert wasn't\nt general election around tht corner.\nThere ire powerful factions on\nboth ties. Big business Is annoyed\nat some of the things Mr. Stevens has\nuid, snd tt tht way in which parts\nof the Inquiry have been conducted.\nThe famous ''Stevens\" pamphlet was\nbinned and dutroyed\u2014with tht result thlt nttrly every Camdim\nwis exposed to t copy or more of\nIt Tht ftmous \"sctne which wu\nto h'vt rocked Otttwt whtn Mr.\nStevens and tht prime minister\n\u2022gain came face to fact collapted\nwhen Mr. Bennett went to Europe.\nThe Stevens Inquiry wu tried out\nin tht little general eltetloi\" ln Ontario on Sept. 24, but it seems to have\nbeen a dud. a\nkeeping quantise,\nrldt,  howtver, tend\nthan do larpt t[\n'\"OT) Maturity,\nnitrogen or potuh tlont or In combinttion whtn applied to young trwt\ncaused tbt leavet to remtln tntn\nand atar on tht trut a maximum\nItngth of time In the fall, with dt-\nlaytd maturity of wood; B-Touna\ntract whtn treated with phoiphorui\nmatured the wood earlier tnd to a\ngruttr degrtt thin treet not treated\nwith phosphorus, thereby oppoalng\nwinter injury.\n\"(O) In Montana nitrogen and\nphosphorus art thi element! mott\nlikely to benefit Blng and Lambert\nswtet   cherries.\nHn\n\"I, nitrogen spptars to bt tht\ntint limiting nil tertUltT tutor In\nUtt growth and production ot ptin.\n\"2. Nitrogen may bt supplied preferably by the growth of a good\natand of Itgumluous cover crop ln\nthe orchard, by the application ot\nlogumlnoua hay, or msnurtt, or\noommerclal fertilisers.\n\"S. Whtrt nitrogen It deflolint, u\nindicated by trie response approximately three-quarters pound of actual nitrogen mar be annually applied ptr tret ln orcharda when logumlnoua cover crops an not balng\ngrown. Since color lt not a factor\nin fruit quality, greater amounts of\nnitrogen may bt tpplied without it-\nduolng grtde. In rtglons whtn tht\ncontrol ot pttr blight Is a problun,\n\u2022xctHlvt imountt of nitrogen may\nitlmulatt growth tufleltntly to\ngristly incrtut tht lu-mptlblllty ot\ntht tmt to thi pur blight organ-\nlam.\n\"k. In orchards whttt nitrogen it\ndeficient applications of nltrogtn-\noua ftrtillaers ttnd to lneruu vtg-\netttivi vigor, u mtaaiyed by terminal growth, leaf tin color, and\ntrunk clrcumftrtnot, and to eftict\nthe crop slightly Improving the ut\nand Inortulng Ult tin ind yield of\nfruit.\n\"I. Ixptrlmenttl ivldtnot Indicant no additional direct value for\neither p and K togithtr without\nnitrogen or ln combination with nitrogen.\n\"\u00ab. Applications of ftrtlllatr htvt\nno muaurable affeot upon tht de.\nvtiopment ot tht troublt known m\ncork ipot.\nrtvui\n'Of tbt thru fertlllieri (NPK)\napplied, nitrogen alone gtvt dependable -multi. Nltrogtn incnutd\ngrowth to torn extant. Thlt wu flrtt\nnoted ln mon vlgoreut shoot growth,\nthtn Ui a largir numhte of growing\npolnti. Nltrogtn alto toemid to lncreau flrmnttt tf tht fruit.\n\"Alfalfa cover crop lntrtutd ylildi\nind It recommended when tht\nwater aupply ll adequate. Alfalfa\nseemt to bt mort btniflelal than Inorganic aourou of nitrogen.\nSMALL FRUITS\n\"Humut or organic matter It generally lacking from mineral tolla ot\nwutern wuhlngton. Thlt difleWney\nUmitt tht profltablt production of\n\u25a0mall frulta on tuch toils, prior\nto pltntlng of tuch cropt, tollt Othtr\nthtn muck and put ahould bt\nbuilt up by tppllcttion of firm\nminuret or by growing itgumlnoui\nmanun cropt.\n\"1. Rupberrles and bltckbtrrlei.\n\"(A) Apply U or M poundi ef\nphosphoric told ln addition to e\nto 13 toni of barnyard manure or\nt to e tont of poultry litter per\nten soon after thi planta havt become dormant.\n\"(Bl Bow Ul ttrly fall, about September 1, a gtwn manun ef hairy\nvetoh and winter whut or othtr\nquick growing crop. Flow undtr whtn\nabout two fett high er ln my etu\nby April 16.\n\"(C) when manure U not available commercial firtllleera may be\napplied. Ixptrlmintil evidence\nthroughout the united Statu Indicates that as a rule nltrogtn and\nphosphorus are the only aliments\nto which tuch crops show a men-\nuriblt retponse.\n\"2.  StrtwberrlM.\n\"(A) strawberries occupy 1 glvtn\npiece of ground for \u2022 relatively ihort\ntime. Building up of soil fertility by\napplication ot farm msnurtt, growing ot green manure cropt, or by\ncrop rotation prior to planting la\nmott economical.\nAPPLY PHOSPHORIC ACID\n\" (B) Slnoe nltrogtn tnd phoiphorui an tht mwt Uktly limiting\nticton ot toll fertility, etttbllthed\npttchtt wlll usually btnttlt by:\nA-Annuil application ot at to 85\npounda of phosphoric aeld In addition to * to a tana of well rotted\nttr mmanure; B-If manures art\nnet available, apply ln tht aprlng\nSO to to poundi of nltrogtn ud 40\nto 80 poundi of phosphoric told. If\npotuh lt thought to bt deficient\n90 to 60 poundi of thli element miy\nbe idded; C-In lrrlgited districts\nof Euta-m wuhlngton early ftU\ntppllcttion ot fertlllieri It utlitic-\ntory.\n\"Mat ind much tollt an usually\nwell supplied with nltrogtn but mty\nbe deficient In phosphorus ind pot-\n.POSITS AT FEME\nMEAN NEW INDUSTRY\nPottery Company Makes Tests and Product\nIs Satisfactory; Deposits Extend\nFour Miles; Ample Supply\nBy O. V. STAINSBY\nFERNIE, B.O, Ott 2\u00bb- Cin\nPtrnlt find e stunt if revenue\nIn tht ground apart fram Itt WlIT\nThirt tra Indlcttlont thtt thlt It\npoulbli tlthtugh ntt In tht lint\nunu thit hu bun trut tf Its\nmlnu.\nftr tomt tnt thtn mty bt t\nmodinti  Incomt fnm tht tlty\ndtposltt thtt tbtund In thit neighborhood.   Tinglble   evidence   tn\nthlt pottlblllty un bt ittn In a\nnumbtr tf bowlt thet in tn dlipliy In I loctl dtptrtmtnt tttn.\nNe effort hts bttn mtdt u ytt to\nittun thut goodt In tommtreltl\nqutntltlu tnd thtn in ntnt ftr\nult but thty tuggtst tht htpt thlt\nin unttuehid loctl ruourei mty\nbt turntd te profit\nSomt tlmt tgo Wlllltm Short-\nhouse showed t sunplt ot tht city\nto t traveller for pn Albert! pottery\ncomptny. Tht trtvtlltr wu inttr-\nested tnd tent It to tht fictory to\ntut IU biking qutlltles. It ctmt\nback btked tnd glutd tnd of a\nhardntu thtt resisted htnuntr blows\nto which tt wu subjected to tut\nIU ttrtngth. Lut winter Thomu\nShorthouse Sr. mouldtd t vtry tr-\ntittle tobtcco jar and stnt It to tbt\nfactory to be finiihtd. It s tmong\ntht irticlet now on dlsplty btked,\nglued tnd btiutifully colored.\nCOMPANY INTERESTED\nTht compiny thlt hid bun doing tht fitting btttmt luffltltntly\nIntirttttd   te  tlk  ftr e   lirger\neimplt. Thlt wu tint and from It\nctmi tht bowlt In whlth Ptrnlt\ntltlstnt en Intirattid tt tht prat-\ntnt tlmt. Somt if thl trtleltt trt\nmede intlrtly fnm tht (tttl mi-\nttrltl and umt in mlkid with\nethtr tlty. Ptr tpptinnu tnd\nttrtngth thl Ptrnlt product ttandt\nup wtll. A bowl mint frant Ptrnlt\nind  tetkitthiwin tltyt mlxtd,\nhowtvir, It thi eholot irtlelt tf\ntht lot tnd rings es olurly et t\nbill. Tht only dsfiett thtt tpptir\nIn tny tf tht ertlolu in tuth u\nwtuld   naturally  bt  tllmlntted\nthrough bttttr tcquilnUnct with\ntht pr ptrtltt ef tht tlty.\nThtre trt sound reuoni tor hoping that good use mty bt made oi\nthlt natural resource, Regardleu ot\nthe extent to which it mty ultimately bt utilised In utsntils IU\nsuitability for vetrlfled Ult hu already  bttn  imply  demonstrtttd.\nTht supply htrt should bt able to\ncompete on rgtsomble ttrmt with\nthost now ln Use. Tht potteries tre\nin Albert! but they obtain their raw\nmateriel   f.1>m   Sas litchewan   is\nthey htvt no loctl supplies.\nMAY Bl SUPIRIOR\nIt, u seems to be the cut, a superior article can ba produced by a\nmixture there ihould be t demand\nfor the Pernio city. In ftct, one of\ntht pottery conipanlu writing to\nMr. Shorthoutt made the satement\nthat tht dtpotita might be used to\n\u2022dvanUge.\nQuite recently the Alberta potteries entered the eastern field and\nare shipping to Ontario msrkets.\nSome ot the bentfiU of thU enlarged\ntrade mty be brought to Fernie lt\ntufficitnt well-directed tfforU trt\nmtdt to stcure thtm. Tht loctl de-\nposiU extend tor several miles and\nthtn stems to bt no quutlon of in\ntmplt supply for a long timt.\n24 NEW NAMES ON\nMUNICIPAL UST\nHouseholders and Licensees\nHive Until End of Month\nto Get .on List\nSix mort ntw namei htvt bun\nidded to thi munlclpil voten' Hit\ntt tht elty hill llnet wednetdty,\nthtn now btlng st ntw unw\npotted up. Only householders or\nllctnuu who win not on the lltt\nlut yur, but who in tllglblt to\nvote thlt ytar. need ttkt a declaration, all othar who havt paid thtlr\nUut automatically go on the Hit\nKouttholden tnd llctnuu htvt until tht ind of tht month to gtt on\ntht Utt.\nBiihop Adams to Hold\nConfirmation Services\nBlthop Wtlttr Adams, Bishop et\nKootensy srrlvtd In Nelson Fridiy\nmornlni. He wll officiate at thru\nservioM it Church ot Bedumir\nSundiy, conflrmitlon urvlcw being\nheld In tht tvtnlng.\n,     li   UL*!,      (Ol      I\nI   I   ,'I<1\nBURGESS\nBATTERIES\nCIVF.\nMOST   POWER\nAND\n1  LAM  1 ONUKR\nfltJItGI \"iS\nBurgtu\nDry telle\nllultt-\nWiaalfef\nT\n\u2022eMey\nDtt Itn\nA herd of 70S buffalo bought in\n1907 by Canada and Introduced In\nthe Fort Smith district of the northwest, now numbtr more thtn 17,000.\nThe animals ire protected by the\nDominion of Cantda.\nCHRISTMAS SAILINGS\nTo tkt OLD COUNTRY\nTAKE advantage ol (educed Itra to mike\n.  '   thtt long-promised trip  Splendid accom-\nnedtlloni ire available In ill ciuses.\nIFROM SAINT JOHN AND HALIFAX\n'See, 1. Ducheaa ol York lot Glastow, Itlfut tl\nLlvtrpool.\n\u2022Pet. II. Duehett  ol  Richmond  lor  Havre  rat\nSouthampton.\n\"Dtt. 14, Duchttt ol Atholl lor Glgtgow, Btliott\nLiverpool .\n\u2022Ptt.ll Monixoae lor Oloatow, Btllaal, llvtrpool\n\u2022Sulla Ina Holilat doy lollowlntj\ntm funbti infrroiti,*** \u00abpptv mmt local tpttt **( \u00bb*'.< tltuttt\nH. |. wwn\nQlY Ticket Heart     \u2022     Ntlton. I. C\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\n ^\u2014\n\t\n,VWM\nIM\n\u2022 THI NILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. 27. 1934\u25a0\n\u2022PAOI THRU\nOty? (Hfttrrffea Ktf \u00ae^n fur Itoralfip\nS\"l maa glaii mljrtt tftrg mill untn mr.\nCrt na go intu tyr fotur of tltt tort).\"\nPa. cxxn i.\nSt. ftrolair'a (Eljurrfj\nIjarupat ^anksghrtng\n8:00 a.m.   Holy Communion.\n11:00 a.m.   Matins and Holy Communion.\n(The children of the Sunday School\nwitt attend the morning service\u2014\nNo Sunday School chutes.)\n7:30 p.m.   Evensong.\nKottrmbrr let. illjiiraltag, Ml \u00a7atntn'\n7:00 a.m.   Holy Communion.\n{Trinity\nUttitri CEIjurrl]\nof (Hauaita\nW. C. Mawhlnney, Mlnllter\nI 10:00 ajn.\u2014Church School\nI 11:00 am-\"MIN LIKE MOUNTAINS.\"\n7:30 p.m.-~\"PATHI OF PROGRESS.\"\nMonday, 8 p.m.\u2014Service Club,\nMri. A. C. Emory, 220 Victoria Street.\nTueaday, 3 pjn\u2014United W.M.S.\ntn St. Paul's Church.\nfirat\nPresbyterian\n(Elntrrl?\nMlnlater: Rev. Wallace McClean\n10:00 ajn.\u2014Sabbath School\n11*00 am.\u2014\"Backbone!\"\n7:30 pjn.\u2014\"Men ai Treei.\"\nThe weekly meeting ot the WA.\nwill be held at the home of Mrs.\nH. H. Currie, 822 Baker St., on\nThurdsay, Nov. 1 at 3 p.m.\nQHjttrrlj of\n\u00aelj* JUtom* r\nW. J. Silverwood, Vicar\nSunday School 10:45 a.m.\nHoly Communion  8 and 11 a.m.\nConfirmation  Service   7.30 pjn.\nThe Bishop of tbe Dioceae,\nBiihop Adams, wlll officiate and\npreach at all services.\net. $aula\nttuitrfc (Hljurrl?\nRev T. J. S. Ferguaon, B.A.\nMlnllter\n10 i.m\u2014Sundiy School Rally\n11 ajn. and 7:30  p.m.\u2014Public\nWonhlp.\nMorning Theme: \"The Value of\nThanksgiving and Praise.\"\nEvening Theme:  \"The Armour\nThat Gives Victory.\"\nMonday, 8 p.m.\u2014Excelaior Club\nat Mrs. W. A. Talbot's, rair-\nview.\nSunday,   Nov.   4 \u2014 Anniversary\nGueet   Preacher,   Rev.   H.\nAshford of India.\nMonday,   Nov.   5\u2014Anniversary\nTurkey Supper.\nTueeday-Unlted W.M.S. in St.\nI      Paul'i vestry.\nYouths Give Up Cigarettes\nSo That Russians May Read\nGovernment Can't Keep Pace With Demand\nfor Books in Soviet; Boom\nTakes Place in Moscow\nON TH* AIR TONIGHT\nIS YMIR GUEST\n.    YMIR. B.C., OcL 28-Mri. Han-\naon had as her guest her daughter,\n' Mrs. Woolers, of Wild Horse camp.\nYmir school has remained closed\nbecause of the diphtheria cases.\nS. A. Curwen was a Nelson visitor.\nMr. Jarvis visited Nelson.\nSnow has covered the ground\nhere most of the week.\nAndrew Burgess was a Nelson\nvisitor.\nY-ilr is soon to be wired for electric lights.\nMrs. Carl Nystrom, who has been\non the sick list, is improving.\nftnt\nlaptiat Olintrrii\nHerbert W. Guscott, Minister\n11:15 ajn\u2014GOD'S  MINORITY.\n7:30 pjn.-FORGETFULNESS.\nSoloist: Mrs. J. M. Mac-\nLean of Vancouver.\n10:30 am\u2014Church School.\nIf you have no church home\nworship with us.\nJirat (Eljurrlf ni\n(Eljrtst $rir nttat\n*    Ut BAKER STRUT\nA branch of Uie Mothei Church\nThe   First   Church   of   Christ\nScientipi in Boston, Mass.\nSunday School 0:40 ajn.\nSunday Service 11 ajn.\nSub leet Lesion Sermon\n\"PROBATION AFTIR DEATH\"\nWednesday Tesiunonial Meeting\nS pjn.\nFRIt READING ROOM IN\nCHURCH   BUILDING-\nAM Cordially Welcome\nINDIANS PLANNED\nTURN ENEAS IN\nSo States  Joseph  Ceorge  In\nCoast Case; Says Carr\nDrew Cun\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NITWORK\n6:00 Acadian Serenade\n8:30 Harveit Hoedown,  Toronto\n7:00 Prog, of the Nations\n7:30 Charlei Dornberger's orch.\n7:45 News and Weather Forecast\n8:00 Melody Moodi\n8:30 Music Book Shelf, Calgary\n8:30 Newi (B.C. Net)\n8:45 Norris Brothers Trio\n9:00 Vernon String Trio\nN.B.C.KPO NITWORK\nRadio City Party\nThe Gibson Family.\nDanny Malone, tenor (KHQ)\nSiberian  Singers\nNational Barn Dance\nFloyd Gibbons\nCarefree Carnival\nBlue Moonlight ^L\nTom Coakley's orch.\nPress-Ridlo News\nOrville Knapp's orch.\nFio-Rito's orch.  (KPO, KFI)\nDwlght Johnson's orch.\nOrgan Concert (KPO)\nC.B.S.D0N Lit NITWORK\n8:00 Grete Stueckgold, Andre Kos-\ntelanetz, orch.\n7:00 Band dir.; Edward D'Anna\n7:30 Saturday Revue\n8:00 Richard Himber'i Champions\n6:30 Benjamin Franklin, drama\n9:00 Orchestra\nSUNDAY NIGHT\n6:00\n6:30\n7:30\n7:45\n00\n9:00\n9:13\n10:00\n10:30\n10:55\n11:00\n11:00\n11:30\n11:30\n8:45 Harry Leifer, pianist, Winnipeg\n(Exc. CRCV)\n9:00 Prairie Pastorale\n9:30 Frank Chapman, tenor\n9:45 Phyllis Trenwlrth, soprano\nN.B.C.KPO\n8:00 Manhattan  Merry-Go-Round\n6:30 Album of Familiar Music\n7:00 Hall of Fame\n7:30 Jane Froman. Modern choir:\nOrch. Don McNeill, m.c.\n8:00 Wendell Hall, Music Maker\n8:15 To be announced\n8:30 Jack Benny, Mary Livingstone,\nFrank Parker, Orch.\n9:00 Silken Strings, Orch.\n9:30 The Philistine. (KPO, KFI)\n9:30 Coakley's Orch., (KGO to Net\n9:43 Souvenirs, E.T. (KPO)\n10:00 News Flsshes\n10:15 PoliUcal talk, (KPO)\n10:15 Bridge to Dreamland\n10:30 Slmon'i  >rch. (KPO, KOA)\n11:00 Press-Radio newi\n11:05 Midnight Melodies (KPO)\n11:05 Tom Gerun'i Orch.\nSTRIKE IS HADE\nON UTICA MINE\nKASLO, B.C., Oct 26-Believed\nto be an important itrlke the high\ngrade ore shoot sought all summer\nat the Utica mine, hu been encountered, says the Kootenalan. F.\nPardoc Wilson, manager, was at thn\ncoast at the time and wu wired\nthe news. It Is believed the mine\nwill be operated throughout the\nwinter.\nThe Kootenalan also reports that\nWUUam M. Orr, who with associates,\noperates a, placer claim on Hall\ncreek, brought in five ounces of\nwhat is aald to be the best looking\ngold ever brought to Kaalo. It was\naU course gold, one nugget being\nworth |\u00ab.30. The claim hu about 40\nfeet of sluice boxes.\nCRC\n:00\n6:30\n7:00\n7:30\nTV\n00\n30\n8:30\nFootllght Highlights, Toronto\nPastel Panels, Reglna\nOttawa Temple choir\nLeopold Monn. pianist\nNews and weather forecast\nAtlantic Nocturne, Halifax\nIsaac Mamott, Wilfred Davis,\nIrene Fairfield (exc. B.C.)\nNews (B.C. Net)\nCBS-DON LSI\n6:00 Town Crier\n6:30 Salon Moderne (Dan Lee)\n6:30 Danny Russo's Orch.\n7:00 Wayne King's Orch.\n7:30 Tile Merrymakers (Don Lee)\n8:30 JL.eon Belasco's Orch.\n8:30 Hal Grayson's Orch. (DL)\n9:00 Red Nichols and Orch.\n9:00 Hi Jinks (D.L.)\n9:30 Frank Dalley's Orch.\n10:00 Frank Jenk's Orch. (D.L.)\n10:15 Joe Sullivan, pianiit (D.L.)\n10:30 Vincent Lopez's Orch. (D.L.)\n11:00 Dick Jergens' Orch. (D.L.)\n11:30 Midnight Moods (Don If e)\nCalmer R. Griffith of Hiawatha.\nUtah, recently caught a rainbow\ntrout weighing 23'i pounds and\nmeasuring 41 inches in length and\n18 Inches in girth, in a stream near\nhla home.\n-  DODD'S\n^KIDNEY\nk PILLS ,\n< l lt>xxxVD'st,\/\nLL Kiom\n%J \u2022__* He ii M__T i*.. Hi i.\/\nHARROP LADY1S\nGIVEN FAREWELL\nMrs. j. F. Stevenson Guest of\nHonor at Women's Institute Affair\nFairview\nFuel Co.\nMIDLAND COAL:\nLump  ~ 10.50\nStovt       f9.00\nSTANDARD\nLETHBRIDGE:\nLump   flO.50\nStow      18.00\nHILLCREST:\nLump    f 10.00\nCarload  Pricei  on\nApplication\nPHONE 701\nHARROP, B.C., Oct. 28-Honor-\ning Mrs. J. F. Stevenson Thursday\nmembers of Harrop Women's institute entertained tor her at a tea\nat thi home of Mrs. W. J. McConnell.\nMra. H. Fairbank presented the\nhonored guest with a gift from the\nmembers in recognition of services\nu president of the local institute\nas well as a parting remembrance,\nas Mrs. Stevenson leaves on Sunday\nwith her husband to spend the winter with Mr. Steven' >n's mother,\nMra. G. M. Stevenson, at Victoria.\nRecovering her surprise. Mrs. Stevenson expressed her thanks and\nappreciation for the thought and\ngift.\nThoae present were Mrs. Stevenson, Mrs. Fairbank, Mrs. A. R. Johnston, Mrs. J. Berry, Mrs. F. Andrews,\nMrs. J. Mackereth, Mrs. C. D. Ogilvie, Mrs. L. Howard of San Francisco, Mrs. I. Sparks, Mrs. W. S.\nAshby, Mrs. F. Littlebury ot Char-\nnage, England, Miss Katherine Ran-\nton of Nelson, Mrs. C. S. Price. Mrs.\nR. Quln, Mrs. R. G. Pooe, Mrs. E.\nHarrop. Miss Sadie Mcintosh and\nMrs. McConnell.\nTen carloads of friends ot M*.\nand Mrs. R. Stevenson, who were\nrecently married in Nelaon, gave\nthem a charivari Thursday on thjjr\nreturn home from a short honeymoon. The toast to the bride was\nproposed by Mrs. L. C. Piper, and\nthe same honor was extended the\ngroom by H. Falrbank.\nThe new zoo in Paris, France, Is\nsaid to be one of the lrrgest .ind\nmost complete in the world. It\ncovers 33 acres in the heart of the\nBois de Vincennes. It Is larger than\nthe London. Amsterdam, or Antwerp zoos and contains 2000 animals, including specimens from\nevery part of the globe.\nOJljtiatmas Apples\nFor GREAT BRITAIN\nWe wUI deUver for you to any address in England, Scotland,\nWales or Northern Ireland, a box of specially selected and\npacked O.K. Apples. These arc picked and packed whUe in their\nprime and cold stored until shortly before Christmas when\ndelivery wUI be made.\n\u25a0 PER BOX\nDELICIOUS . . .\nNEWTOWNS . .$\nMcINTOSH RED ^\nJONATHAN ,1\nExtra Fancy Special Pack  (Xmas Wrapped)\nOrden muit reach our office not later than Nov. 25th, accompanied by remittance at par in Nelion. Namei and addresses\nihould be typed or plainly printed.\nAssociated Growers of B.C. Limited\nNELSON, B.C.\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP)-The\nthree slwash brothers of Eneas\nGeorge had agreed, before police\nappeared at the Canford reserve to\narrest the Indian, to take him to\nMerritt, B.C., the foUowlng day in\nconnection witb the wounding of\nhis wife, Joseph George testified\ntoday when he appeared in the appeal of his brothers against conviction of the murder of Dominion\nConstable F. H. Gisbourne.\nBritish Columbia court of appeal\nis hearing Joseph'i itory ot events\nleading up to slaying of Gisbourne\nand Provincial Constable Percy Carr\non May 23 before deciding on a\nmoUon of Defence Counsel Stuart\nHenderson to Introduce his evidence\nin support of the appeal.\nRichard, Eneaa and Alex. George\nwere under sentence to hang today\nbut they have been granted a reprieve to February 27.\nThrough an Interpreter, Joseph\ntold the court he had core to the\nCanford reserve from Coldwater,\nB.C., on account of Eneas' small\nchildren and after hearing that\nEneas and his wife were in trouble.\nHe said he met Eneas' wife u she\nwu being conveyed to Merritt and\naaid she told him that Eneas had\nhurt her.\nEneai' three brothers stayed close\nbeside him because Eneas wu downhearted, Joseph stated.\nIn the afternoon of May 23, the\nbrothers made repairs to a fence\nnear Spence's Bridge, B.C., he testified and, after agreeing to take\nEneas to Merritt the next day, they\ndecided to return to Chief Billys\nhouse on the reserve. It was quite\ndark, Joseph said.\nThis led to the meeting with Gisbourne and Carr on the reserve that\nnlfht\nJoseph testified that, u they came\nto the houae, they saw Gisbourne\ncarrying a flaihlight and going very\nfut, and that Gisbourne said, \"I\nwant En&s.\"\nRichardson, the witness stated,\nanswered, \"Who sent you?\" to which\nGisbourne allegedly replied. \"Mr.\nBarber\" (Indian Agent A. H. Barber of Merritt).\nJoseph stated that Richardson\nthen said, \"If you want Eneas we\nwill deliver him to you tomorrow.\"\n\"There and then, ne (Gisbourne)\nreached out to take hold of Eneas,\"\nJoseph testified. \"He put his light\ndown on the ground. He reached in\nhii rear pocket and pulled out a\nsmall gun. He handled It with both\nhands, wu likely loading it I heard\na noise, the report ot a gun, and\nafter that I don't remember any\nmore.\"\nThe Indians wert Juat \"standing\nthere\" at the time, Joaeph stated ln\naniwer to a question ot Mr. Justice\nA. E. McPhiUips, and they did not\nhave any sticks or weapons.\nJoeeph ii alao charged with,the\nmurder ot Gisbourne but he has not\nyet been tried becauae of injuries\nsuffered on the night the constables\nwere slain. He hu been deaf but\nhu partially recovered hli hearing.\nJack Raper Visits\nKaslo\nKASLO, B.C.. Oct. 26-Jack Paper\nof Johnson's Landing wu a city\nvisitor Tuesday.\nGeorge Abey, wh had been confined to his home by illness, Is out\nagain.\nMalcolm Greenlaw ot Lardo was a\nrecent city visitor.\nOwing to inclement weather the\nKulo Liberal association meeting\nscheduled for Monday evening dld\nnot take place, necessitating an executive meeting which wu held\nst the home of the secretary Wednetday. All memben of the executive committee were in attendance\nmd important business wu disposed of pending the November\nmeeting.\nW. M. Orr hu lett for Ml home\nin Howser after spending a few\ndayi In town.\nM. Romenak of Deer Park wu a\nvliitor here.\nA TRIP TO RUSSIA\nWlfa of Pierre van Piauen, noted European mwipapir correspondent, and an experienced journalist In hir own right, Coral\u00ab\nvan Paassen, Nelion Dally News European corretpondent, It visiting Ruula, Om of hir series of articles deKMblng vividly whit,\nthe leu there, follow. The artlclu are written Tn an Informal\nway from material gathered from penonil contact with thi peepli\nof the oountry.   Don't mlu a tingle one.\n(Flnt of a Serin)\nBy CORALIE VAN PAASSEN\nCentral Preu Canadian Writer\nMOSCOW,  Oct.  28.-So  this is\nMoscow?\nThe gray sky, laden with heavy\nrainciouds, which hung over the\nflat, monotonous landscape at which\nI had been looking through the\ncarriage window since the first\nstreaks of dawn, answered exactly\nto the mental picture I had formed\nmyself ot Russia. But that was all.\nNothing else came even remotely\nnear the preconceived notions which\nI had on the most-talked-of city in\nthe world.\nWhei I was whirled away in one\nof the 60-odd limousines which\nwere required to transfer our party\nfrom the Warsaw station to the\nGrand .iotel, I Imagined \u2022 I had\nlanded in  some American  boom\n-I\nThere are only 12 women veter\ninirims in the United States,\ntown. Buildings are going up\nerywhere, rows upon rows, in all\nstages of construction. Batteries of\nheavy trucks were roatlng through\nthe streets. All contained building\nmaterial, window frames, door\nauhes, radiators, bricks, tarpaper,\ntiles for roofs, cement sacks, sheets\nof metal, chimney pots, I don't\nknow what else.\nHeavy wine-colored street cars\none motor car and three or four\ntrailers, Jammed with people, rumbled by. White-gloved cops were\ndlrecUng traffic. One of them, who\nhalted us, I noticed to my surprise\nwas a tall blonde girl. She walked\nover to a truck-driver who had\ndrawn up a little too far under the\nred signal light and gave him a\ntalking to which made our chauffeur smile. But the offending\ntruckman duly backed up, believe\nme, without so much as a word of\nprotest, right t- the spot which she\nindicated with her club. Then\nwhen the female police officer\nlooked up and saw us, saw that\na earful of strangers had witnessed\nher show of authority, she blushed.\nNC CRIME PERIODICAL\".\nAfter we had lunch, the sky\ncleared and I went out for a stroll.\nI don't know the names of the\nstreets I traversed and it does not\nmatter. I stopped at the newsstands to see what they had to offer.\nNo detective stories. No purple\nmagazines. No crime specials. Nothing but serious books, pamphlets\nand periodicals, several of them Illustrated. Do you know that Moscow, among the mass of newspapers and technical journals, prints\na daily magazine of 20 pages devoted exclusively to the theatre and\nto new books? I didn't know and\nI wu surprised, tor there is not another city in the whole world which\nhas anything approaching it. And\nyet these people here are called\nbarbarians! \u2022\nSeveral thousand kiosks throughout the city dispense lemonade,\nsirups and other kinds ot soft drinks,\nThis year the flower-stands are an\nInnovation. They were doing a\nroaring business on violets, asters,\nmarigolds, dahlias and even roses\nLater in the evening I noticed many\nyoung people strolling in the streets\nwho carried a flower in their button-hole or pinned on their rou-\nbashkas. \"Are you trying to Imitate\n\u25a0 the English?\" I asked a boy-student\n|_9y the name of Koska Pankoff, who\nwu kind enough to show me the\nway to the Second Moscow Art\ntheatre in the evening. I wu referring to the gardenia in his coat-lapel.\n\"Not at all,\" he uid. \"Wc are simply\nbeginning to make life more beautiful. We take advantage ot every\nbit of color to brighten existence.\nDid you notice all the gardeners\nat work tn Miecow? That's something new this year. We are getting\na beginning ot leisure. We are\ngol g to make Moscow as pleasant\nand u beautiful u Paris or Viena.\nWe never had a chance before. . .\"\n\"Were there no flowers and parks\nln Moscow in the old days then?\"\nI, asked.\n\"Certainly,\" he replied, \"but not\nfor the people!\"\nI bough^-somc flowers myself be\nfore going Into thc theatre. I took\nviolets, but a priest next to mc purchued a large bouquet of roses. He\nstood sniffing at them with evident\ndelight, nodding at them with evident delight, nodding his head u\nif he wanted to say. \"Well, well,\nthat's how roses smell, is lt?\" A UtUe girl walked up to him and uked for a flower. He gave her several\nand laughed happily.\nAre these people Just children, I\nthought by myself, that they behave this way u a baby with a\nnew toy?\nNO BREAD LINES\nMy first day in Moscow I naturally looked for the famous line-ups\nof which you hear so much. I mw\nnone in front of the bakeries and\nfood shops, but I saw several queues\naround five in the afternoon In\nfront of the news-stands when the\nevening papers were being delivered. This certainly is the land of\nthe newspaper and of the book.\nThey can't print books fast enough\nto keep up with the thirst tor\nknowledge. Every two or three\nmonths a new paper-mill goes into\noperation, and still there is a shortage of paper. The third volume of\nTolstoys private diary was published during the days when I was\nin Moscow\u2014three milUon copies-\nall sold within 24 hours. Ana that\nwasn't the only new book published\nAlexis Tolstoy, who is no relative\nof the great sage ot Yasnaya Polly-\nanna, who is also a renowned man\nof letters, although no longer a\ncount, showed me 19 new books\npublished from July 1 to Sept 1.\nSeven were translations from the\nFrench and English writers. All\nsold out in a few daya. \"There is\nno coping with the demand for\nbooks,   said Tolstoy.\n\"Three million members of the\nyouth league have voluntarily given\nup smoking cigarettes in order to\nmake more paper available for\nprinting and still there is no immediate hope ,0 supply the demand,\"\nhe said.\nSECOND LARGEST LIBRARY\nAnd not only new books are\nbought. Every nook and corner of\nRussia is ransacked for old books,\nthe old chateau librari \u25a0 the old\nmuseums, the garrets, the cellars of\nold houses, everything in printed\nform is seized upon as a treasure.\n\"But some of the old books must\nbe considered dangerous,\" I uid\n\"Can people be trusted with what\nyou would call reactionary literature'' I asked. \"Does the government permit it?\"\nAlexis Tolstoy laughed heartily at\nmy quesUon. \"We don't burn books\",\nhe said. \"We are not afraid at all\nto have the young people compare\nlife as it was in days gone by with\nthe new lite they are living themselves.\" And so I learned that thc\n,'oscow public library became last\nyear the second largest in the world,\ntopped only by the Brit' li Museum,\nand that 480 branch libraries have\nbeen opened in the city, and that an\naverage of 900,000 booki are loaned\nout per week in Moscow alone, and\nthat 13,000 travelling libraries are\ncirculating in the country at present.\nIf they really are children, I\nthought, they'll soon grow up at that\nratei\nRev. Mr. Silverwood\nWho Has Been III, Is\non Road to Recovery\nRev. W. J. Silverwood, who hu\nbeen confined to hit bed tor the\nput tew days, is on the road to recovery, but it will be several days\nbefore he ii able to resume hla\nclerical duties.\nA Birkenhead widow, aged 70,\nwho Uved alone, nearly starved to\ndeath when her spring mattress collapsed, leaving Iter trussed up in\nsuch a position that she could not\neicipe.\n.;   ftoltenife LW (Eamprtitn. :-\nSALE\nON SALE TODAY\nMORE WOMEN'S BATHROBES\nFigured bathrobes of heavy beacon cloth, roomily cut. Finished with \u00a34^ mtm\nlong roll collar, pockets and silk cord. Many patterns. Sizes 34 to 44 \u25bc_^*'-*\nHARVEST SALE      ~\nWomen's\nWool and\nRayon\nPanties\nand Vests\nJust the weight for now\nthese fine undies of wool\nand rayon mixture. Vests\nhave the shaped top and\npanties are finished with\nelastic band at the waist\nand fitted knee cuff.\nSmall, medium and large.\nHARVEST SALE\u2014\n49'\nPatterned Velvet\nBERETS AND SCARF SETS\nHarvest Sale $2*95\nAbsolutely the last word in headwear and they are\nunusually smart at this low price. Come in and see\n' them on yourself. Wide color range.\nSALE OF WOMEN'S\n$3.95, $5.00, $6.00 SHOES\nHarvest Sale $3,15 Pair\nThe finest selection of women's black and brown kid\nand calf oxfords, pumps, ties and straps to be sold at\na special price.\nCELANESE HOSIERY\nSplendid wearing, dull  finished  celanese\nhose,   showing   new   shades.   Sizes   8',\u25a0'_.\nto 10.\nHARVEST SALE, PAIR\t\n29'\nWOMEN'S SUEDE\nFABRIC GLOVES\nRegular lo 79c\nBeautiful glove for Fall\nwear, smart and right in\nfashion, slip on style,\ngood shades, sizes 6 to\nVh. HARVEST C*)C\nSALE, PAIR   *****\nWABASSO\nBLEACHED\nSHEETS\nSize 72x90 pure white\ncotton sheets.\nHARVEST SALE,     QA^\nEACH    \u2022*\"\nLADIES' HANDBAGS\nRegular Price $2.95\nFine leathers, beautifully lined and fitted.  Envelope\nand pouch style. Smart bone and metal\ntrimmings. Colors, green, navy, brown\nand black.\nHARVEST SALE, EACH \t\n$1-95\nWOOLCOTT BLANKETS\nBeautiful blankets in striking paste\nplaids or plain shades,  sateen bound, A\ngood size. These are 25% pure woo!. \u2122\nHARVEST SALE, PAIR\t\n3.95\nSPECIAL SALE OF ENGLISH TOWELS\nStriped towels of good quality and size\u2014\n20x40, in assorted colors. A real bargain!\nitem for\u2014\nHARVEST SALE, EACH\t\n25'\nHarvest Sale FOOD\nSPECIALS\n193\u2014PHONES-194\nFREE DELIVERY\nHBC Luxurloui Coffee At*\nFreih ground; per lb. *m~\nCranberry Bauoe\u2014 M\u00abJ\nEmpress; 12-oz. bottle m-*~\nOranga Marmalade\u2014 20<_\nEmpreis; 16-ot globe   mw\"r\n4 eakes LUX TOILET SOAP\nand 1 ragular ilze pkg.\nRIN804^^^K 25\u00a3\nTha 5 tor\nDill  Picklei\nquarts; Jar\n-Argood,\nm\nBordin'i   Chocolate   Ma fted\nMilk\u20141\u00ab;\nper tin \t\nRlnso\u2014\nUrge pkg. \t\nLifebuoy Soap\u2014\n3 cakes \t\nC. k\\ B. Ketchup\u2014\n14-01. bottle\nCut Mixed '\u25a0eel-\nRobinson's; 1-lb. carton\n390\nam\n*H\nw\n\"FORT   GARRY\"   TEA   AND\nCOFFEE   MAKING   FRIEND8\nEVERYWHERE!\nMen's Sweater'\nCoats\nMen's wool mixture\nsweater coats in heather\nshades. Ideal for house\nEACH    $1.4\"\nMen's    \u2022\nWindbreakers\nMen's  heavy  doeskin\nwindbreakers with^ neat\nbuckle fasteners\nat waist. EACH .\nMitts\nBoys' Capeskin\nmitts.\n$1.95\n*r\n r\n\u2014\nPAOI POUR\nTRAIL SKIERS\nREADY TO GO\nWorking on Hillsite;\nto Clear Trails of\nUndergrowth\nTIIAIL, I. C. Oct. 36\u2014Membtn of\n\u00a31 mil-Remind tkl club already\nve itarted to mike prepirttlons\n(or winter actlvltlei. Bert Bothun\nand BOb Lynburne, together with\nmtmbtrs of tba Junior club ban\nbttn getting a tmiller btll Into\n\u2022bipt tt the \"Nala Nelsen* hillsite.\n\u25a0owtrar. tba elub'a ikl trills hive\nfcun aomtwhat neglected and a gang\nEly be out aoon doing a Uttle slssh-\ng.\nTbt dub bu t iplendld cabin at\nttt Nairn blllalte, but tha Rouland\ngUMIlllr location hu bten licking\na abtltar. An old lot cibln to that\ntlctolty will bt renovated and made\nlit for occupation thli winter. If\nthe teuton It successful, la is anticipated, t clubhouse will be erected\nnext year at a convenient location\n\u2022omiwhert neir tht reservoir.\nTbt Kill Nelsen hill trip provide!\naa excellent thort tvenlng run but\noould not be uud lut yetr owing\nto th* Uck of mow.\nThl moit popular run of thi club's\ntl thl one dowa from Rossland to\nthi golf oouru ubln ind from there\nto Trill. In the daytime thi \"Long\nTrail\", a dlitance of about thru\nmiles, li uied ind sometlmei the\n\"Short TnU\" which cuti off about\na mUa aad one hilf, makes i fut\nrun to the cibln, wltb plenty of\nthrills.\nA new route U being plsnned\nto the reservoir cibln, ind wlll\nprovldi sn excellent run for night\n\u2022Icllng, u well u t central but\nfor Bunday outlngi. Thli new rout!\nwill be tble to be put ln uie earlier In the lesion thtn the othen,\nprolonging tht cabin season con-\nllderibly.\nOfficen thit will be ln chirge for\nthe 1934-36 sesson ire: Jamei Calder.\npresident; W. H. Hmmy, flnt vice-\npresident; H. T. Ommanney. second\nvice-president; N. o. Randall, treasurer; Miry Anderson, treuunr; Bert\nBothun ski captain; Mlas Nora Smith\nand Mlu AUce Houston, cibln committee. '\nThen wlll bt five or ilx assistant ill csptilns to bi appointed by\nBert Bothun. Theu appointees wlll\nbin chirge of group ikl parties over\nthe week-ends. I MB\nWHAT TO DO\nABOUT\ncid Indigestion\"\npeople who Minis' they have\n1 atomachs\" or \"indigestion,\"\ni say, suffer in realtti\/ from\nI more serious than aad stom-\nI this common ailment can\nUsually be relieved now, in minutes.\nAll you do is take familiar Phillips'\nMUk of Magnesia after metis. This\n\u2022cts to almost immediately neutralise\nthe itomach acidity that brings on\nyour trouble. You feel like a new\npenoni\nTry this just once. Take either the\nfamiliar liquid \"PHILLIPS'\", or the\nnew Phillips' Milk of Magnesia\nTablets. But watch out that you get\nthe Genuine PHILLIPS' Milk of\nMagnesia. Made in Canada.\nALSO IS TABLET FORM*\nPhillips' Milk of Msgnesia Tib-\nlets sre now on ssle st sll drug\n\u2022tores  everywhere.   Esch  tiny\ntablet  is tht\ntquivslent of\n\u25a0 trsspoonlul\nof Genuine\nPhillips* Milk\not Magnesia.\nPhillips\nCanon Gould Goes\nEast by Main Line\nCanon oould, of tht Anglicin foreign missions, who wu to iddreu i\nluncheon In NtUon Frldiy. chinged\nhli itlnenry when ht leirned then\nwas i bin on NeUon githerlngs,\nind he went eut on the mala line\nPrldiy night Initeid of coming\nthrough by wiy of thi Kettle Villey.\nGERRY LAUDER\nLEAVING TRAIL\nResigns From Sports\nAssociation; Did\nGood Work\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. J6\u2014The munition of O. A. \"Gerry\" Lauder\nfrom the president's office of tht\nTrail Amateur Athletic auoclttion\nwaa accepted with regret it tn extensive meeting of thit body In\nthe Memorlil hill Friday nltht.\n\"Re will bt mined \u2022 great dell,\"\ntald W. O. \"Windy\" Wllllimi, vice-\npretdlent, who occupied the chair.\n\"Hi wu in energetic president ind\nI im sure, i mon popultr one.\"\nSecretiry J. Curtu wu Initructed\nto lend Mr. Lender i letter of\nappreciation for hli put lervlces.\nMr. Lauder hu been transferred\nfrom Tidinac to offices of the C. M.\ntt S. compiny it Klmberley.\nA flaiaciil report by Treuunr\nJ. R. McLenin dlacloied the tnuury\nof the T. A. A. A. to be In a\nhealthy atate.\nAuthorization to purchau iweiten\nfor the junior hockey tetm wu\ntlven. ThU winter the Junlon wlll\nshed thit ntme ind be known u\nthe Tlgen, ind wUI weir t tlgir-\nlieid crest on their iweiten.\nTRAIL CHAPTER\nHAS BIG DANCE\nDecorations Elaborate for the\nHallowe'en, Event\nTRAIL, B.C.. Oct. 26.\u2014A huge\ncrowd of people enjoyed the first\noutstanding venture of the J. H.\nSchofield chapter, 1.0. D. E. toward\nwelfare assistance, when they attended the Hallowe'en dance In the\nElks hall Friday night.\nAn elaborate display of decorations presented t true Hallowe'en\nspirit. Hoot owls, bltck cats and\nwitchei were liberally placed about\nthe walls ln symmetric design and\nstreamers spanned the chandeliers.\nEvidence of painstaking preparations by the new chapter which wu\norganised but a few months tgo predominated in the lavishly decorated\nhall.\nMiu Mary Bishop was convener.\nMiss Agnes Rossman and Miu Dorothy DockeriU were chairmen of\nthe decorations and refreshments\ncommittees.\nTrail Discusses\nVancouver Entry\nWill Refer Matter to West\nKootenay Hockey\nOfficials\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. J6\u2014Possibility of the organlutlons of a\nB. C. amateur hockey league Including a team or teams from\nVincouver wu disclosed at the\nmeeting ot the hockey elub executive lut night.\nFollowing Is the test of t win\nreceived from Oeorte Irvine, of\nVancouver: \"I am representing the\nrubs senior hockey club. No tenlor letgue here thli winter.\nThought It possible jou would\nlike to have ui play i gime or\ntwo In your territory. Think It\nmight he great opportunity to put\nimtteur hockey over In B. C. If\nwe cin get a league with you.\"\nWhile no action was taken on\nthe matter, It km felt that the\nsuggestion was worth examining\nfurther. Mr. Irvine wu referred to\nthe Kootenay Hockey league executive for further particulars, hs\nthev would hire to be consulted\neventuilly.\nFaster Way Found\nto Relieve Headaches\nNOW PAIN OFTEN RELIEVED IN MINUTES I   '\nRemember the pictures below when\nyou want fast relief from pain.\nDemind and get the method doctors prescribe\u2014Aspirin.\nMillions bave found that Aspirin\neases even t bad headache, neuritis\nor rheumatic pain often in a tew\nttinutesl\nIn tbe stomach as in the glass\nhere, an Aspirin tablet starts to dissolve, or disintegrate, almost tht\ninstant it touches moisture. It begins \"taking hold\" of your pain\npractically is soon as you swallow it.\nEqually important, Aipirin is\nsafe. For scientific tests show this:\nAspirin does not harm the heart.\nRemember these two points:\nAipirin Speed ind Aipirin Safety.\nAnd, see thtt you tet ASPIRIN. It\nis made in Canada, and all druggists\nhave it. Look for Uie name Bayer\nin the form of a cross on every\nAinirin tablet.\nGet tin of 12 tablets or economical\nbottle of 24 or 100 it my druggist's.\nWhy Aspirin Worki So Fair\nDrop in Aspirin\ntablet kn t gloss of\nwtter. Note that BEFORE it tmichn ttn\nbottom, it k disintegrating.\nIN 1 SKONDI BY STOP WATCH\nAn Aspirin tablet starts to disintegrate tnd go lo work.\nWhtt happens In these lime*\nhamm in your itomach\u2014AS PIRIN\ntablets start \"taking hold' of pain\nt few minutes ifter taking.\nWOMAN SENT\nHIM THREAT\n\"You're Going to Pay\nDarling\" She Wrote\nto Wealthy Man\nLOS ANGELES. Oct. 2U (AP).-A\nwomen giving the nunc of Miss\nMsry Murray wis trrested here todty by Postal Inspector C. D. Lowe\nand Police Detective Chester Lloyd,\nwho said ihe admitted writing \u25a0\nthreatening letter to Jamei Gordon\nRoss, wealthy Montreil mtn.\nMiss Murray claims, the officers\nsaid, thtt she is t sister to Ross' deceased wife, who wtt divorced\nfrom him several yeirs tgo.\nTht letter, the officer! itld, commented on \"how you millonilrei do\ncarry on,\" and slid, \"I'll tell you in\nmy next letter whtt I'll .t if I don't\nget i satisfactory reply to this\nletter.\"\n\"You're going to piy. darling. I'll\nforget I ever heard of the Rosiei it\nyou do your ihare and don't forget\nyou art 1 gentlemen.''\nRoss issertedly turned the letter\nover to authorities in Montreal. The\nletter was mailed from Los Angeles\nOctober 3 and tddressed to Ross it\nOld Orchard avenue, Montreil.\nSAFEWAYS WIN\nTRAIL BOWLING\nHornett and Weir of the\nTimes Are High Men\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. ae.\u2014.Safe-way\nStoru defeated Trill Tlmei two out\nof three jamea of the Trill Ten*\npin Bowling leigue played at thi\nMemorial hill Prldiy night. L. Hor*\nnett of the Times bowled high\ntingle of ITS and W. Weir of the\nume team made high aggregate\nof 471.\nTeams ind (Korers were:\nSafewayi: lit   Und   3rd   Tot.\nO.   Economy   ....   84    134    ISO- 368\nJ. Dty   148   137   184- 434\nA. Romano   lit   108   131\u2014 344\n8. Orthtm   ISS   133   151\u2014 41S\nJ.   Mallec     133    1S3    148\u2014 403\nSpot    _    73     78     78\u2014 318\nTotlll\nSS4   888   783\u20143174\nTrtll Tlmu:        lit 3nd 3rd   Tot.\nW.   Weir    : 188 148 J87\u2014 471\nL. Hornitt   178 104 138\u2014 418\nJ.  Thorndale   .... 137 144 134\u2014 385\nD. Balfour  141 141 141\u2014 438\nM. Cummlngs ... 158 115 134\u2014 387\nTotlll      770 848 883\u20143101\nCOMPLETE HOLES\nON POWER LINE\nRapid progress is now being made\non the new city power line between\nthe Bonnington power plant and the\nsubstation on Victoria street. Pole\nholes have been completed to tbe\nsubstation, the lttt few holes on\nJosephine street having been dug\nlite Fridiy afternoon. Pole raising\nmd wire stringing is ilso in full\nswing tnd is well idvinced.\nNames Players for\nTrail Hoop Team\nTRAIL. B.C., Oct. M.\u2014Tratl'i rep\nbasketba I.ers will start on their long\nmtrch which they hope will letd\nthem to the B.C. pltyoffs Mondty\nnight when they hold their first\nworkout\nIt his been impossible to obtain\nthe names of those chosen to try\nout for the teim from ill four senior\naggregations, but lists have been obtained from Elks and Buffalos.\nFollowing are the lucky onei from\nthese teams:\nElks\u2014L. Nicholson, L. Williams,\nD. Hartley, W. O. Williams, D.\nAskey, P. Halliwell, A. Morris and\nEd. Haley.\nBuffs\u2014J. Curtis, Ken Chandler,\nW. Westwood, J. Burrows, A. Grip-\nich and C. Bradbury.\nCoach Nicholson, of tht Elks, did\nnot feel Justified in letving tny of\nhis teem off the list, md Phil Williams, Buffllo cotch, only omitted\ntwo ntmes.\nA cotch ind manager for the\ntetm will probibly bt chosen by\nthe reps it their first workout, but\nJust who they will be is extremely\ndoubtful. Phil William! tnd Laurie\nNicholson seem to be the popultr\nChoice of the ftns, but the players\nthemselves may have different ideal.\nTHt NILSON DAILY NIW*. NILSON. i.C-SATUADAY MORNINO. OCT. 27. 1JJ4-\nPAVING ABOUT\nCOMPLETE END\nVERNON STREET\nOnly a small section remtini to\ncomplete the paving on Railway\nitreet between Vernon md Baker\nstreets. Fridiy t big gang ot city\nworkers advanced the paving from\nVemon street along Railway, to\nwithin a few yardi of the concrete\non Biker.\nHOOP LEAGUE\nPROGRESSES\nTwo of Three Games\nfor Saturday Look\nPromising\nLKAQl'E STANDING\nSenior men'i division:\nP W L\nColombo!    \u201e    3 8 0\nButfiloi     4 8 1\nAdintci     8 13\nBib       4 0 4\nIntermediate Men'i dlvltlon;\nAcm         4 4 0\nComiti    4 3 3\nHlth  School    8 1 3\nLadlei' dlvltlon:\nOrlom    4 4 0\nJimmlet       .    8 3 1\nSchooli <    3 1 1\nCinucki    4 0 4\nTRAIL. B. C, Oct. 38\u2014Of the\nthree buketbill gimei of thl Trill\ncity leigue scheduled for Siturday\nnight, thoee of the men'i lenlor\nind Intermediate divisions, no doubt,\nwill prove the moit spectacular, the\nthird game, between the Jimmies\nand Schooli, having a definite anticipated   result.\nThe flrtt time of the nlght'i prognm will be tht Intermeditte battle\nbetween thi Rovera ind High ichool,\nRoven hive lott three gtmu out of\nthret played and tht High ichool\nhu won Hi only gime of three\nfrom thi Roven: but by only t until\nmirtln. with the tld of ume new\nrecrulti Roven hope to iurpaat thl\nliteral meaning of their nimi md\ndirect their play to win.\nThe aenlor Jpen's game, Colombos vs. Adanacs will reveal the same\nteimi that battled a wwk tgo Saturday night, -which gamt ruulted\nln a win tor Colombo! who hive\nwon their three tames ot the leigue\nplayad. Adama, however, have ilnce\nthen had the experience of a win\nover the Elki on wedneidiy night\nand thlt victory may have tlven\nthem tn Incentive to itrlve tor t\nlike remit Saturday.\nVOTERS' LISTS\nARE PLACED OP\nNELSON SENIOR\nRUGBY IS OFF\nToo Late for the Boys\nto \"Start Training\nNow\nNelion, it hti been definitely\nittted here, will hive no lenior\nrugby teim thli year. According to\nt itory in the Trill Timet Fridiy,\nlt wtl ittted thet the Trill seniors\nwould be willing to pliy Nelson at\nTrtll Sundty if the like city could\nget t iquid together.\nNelion wti preptred to go over\nlist Sundiy but wu informed thit\nowing to heelth reitriction in Nelaon Tt wit deemed advisable for\nthem to remtln tt home. Although\nit wu to be t tenlor teem, in retlity\nit wu to be composed mainly of\njunlon. With the Junlon pitying\nhere Sundty it would be impossible*\nfor tht lenlon to field t tetm. The\nidei of \u2022 teim hu fallen through\ncompletely here within the list\nweek. It is too lite to start training\nnow ind u no practice! hive been\nhtld tht boyi feel they could not\nprovide the competition thtt Trail\nwould have a right to expect\nSENIORHOCKEY\nLOOP AT TRAIL?\nPre-Season League\nIs Pracitcally\nAssured\n40!  Names Listed at Kaslo\nExpect Figures From Each\nPoint by Monday\nCLEAN LEAVES\nOFF SIDEWALKS\nCity employees an now bruihint\nup the upper itreeta, and luvw\nwhich cover aldewilki ln mmy mc-\ntlona an being gathered before mow\ntilli. At preient Silica etnet slde-\nwilki are being cleaned off.\nFormer Smelter\nHead Is at Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 26-H. H. Stewtrt, former general mimger ot tbe\nConsolidated was visiting ln Trill\nmd Tadanac yeiterday, Mr. Stewtrt\nIt now t consulting mining engineer\nin Vincouver, hiving been succeeded is general mantger of the CM.\n& S. compmy by S. G. Blaylock.\nMetallurgy   Secretary\nVisits in Trail\nTRAIL, B.C. Oct. \u00bb-.. R. Smith,\nsecretary of the Rocky mountain\nsection of the Ctntdltn Inatitute ot\nMining md Metallurgy, ii in Trail\ntodiy.\nWhen in Pain Remember Thete Pictures\nASPjmiN IS THt TRADE MARK OF THI BAYER COMPANY, LIMITED\n.ENDS\na Cold\nSooner\nMOVED BY 2 GEMMATIONS\nVoters' lliti htve been pltced up\nin Nelion md Trail for scrutiny by\npeople concerned, md they will remtln there until the dites ot re\nvision, November 13, 14, 19. Lilts\ntre posted outside each point of revision throughout the entire riding,\nWord received from Kulo statei\nthlt 401 ntmes have been placed on\nthe Ulti there. H. D. Ramsden. registrar of voten for Kooteniy West,\nexpects to hive figures on the num\nber of voter! at each point by Mon\n\u25a0sty-\nWadsworth Coming\nOut for Alderman\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. \u00bb-Although\ntwo full month! still remtln before\ncivic elections tike plice, the city\npolitical pot is alretdy beginning to\nboll. Ctuse of the first ebullition is\nthe rumor thtt J. A. Wedsworth\nhis definitely decided to enter the\naidermanic race.\nThree seats on the city council\n\u2022nd the miyor'i office ire to be\nfilled it the civic election in January. Alderman C. A. Newmm.\nJohn (Ice) Young md F. J. Writt\ntre the three retiring councillors.\nScout Commissioner\nto Visit Nelson\nA visit from W. Sollwiy, executive commiuioner for scouting in\nBritish Columbit, is expected by\nthe local scout organization in the\nnetr future. Mr. Sollway visited\nTrail recently but did not come to\nNelion owing to the bin thtt his\nbeen -placed on the city.\nTRAIL. B.C., Oct. 2J.-rormttion\nof i three-teem pre-ieuon hockey\nleigue li virtually assured Trail's\nfollowers ot the puck-chasing game\nwtth the appointment of i committee of three by the Trail Hockey\nclub executive laat night, to go into\nthe proposition md report back to\nthe executive. P. F. Mclntyre, Coach\nFrank Wtlte md Percy Hellett ire\nthe members of the committee.\nOpening date of the proposed pre\nseison league ctnnot be stated det*\ninitely yet, but it is hoped the rink\nwill be open by the middle of next\nmonth in order that the playera will\nget a chance to get the feel of skates\n.ni show the stuff they are mide of\nbefore the Kootenay letgue gets\nunder way around Christmas.\nThe Hockey club's annual earn!\nval. also ctme up tor discussion ltst\nnight, but no dtte could be set until\ndefinite innouncement of the open*\ning dtte of tht rink had been ob*\ntuned md irrmgements with other\norganizations using the rink had\nbeen completed.\nThe foUowlng committees were\nappointed for the ctmivil:\nEntertainment\u2014J. A. MicKlnnon,\nchilrmm; Frank Walte, C, W.\n(Curly) Wheatley, and P. B. Hallett.\nTickets, advertising and doors\u2014\nJ. A. Wad-worth, chtlrmtn; W. J,\nWagstaff tnd A. W. (Gus) Mc\nDomld.\nBooths tnd hot dog itand *\u2014\nCharlei Rommerdahl, chairman;\nSam Stewart, \"Rusty\" O'Sulllvan,\nmd Pat Norrle. The Booster club\nwill work in conjunction with this\ncommittee.\nMile rice\u2014C. Kendall md Elliot\nCrowi-.\nPlans will be made to make the\ncarnival bigger md better than ever\nthis year, ft is hoped to obtain the\nopening night of the rink for the\nctrnlval it hit been the case ln previous yeirs, is this gives the skating\nmd hockey season an extra fillip it\nthe start.\nHepburn Cuts the\nInterest Rate\nTORONTO Oct. 39 (CPI\u2014Reduction of one-half per cent ln Interest\non loins mide by the Ontario agricultural board, wai announced to-\nday by Premier Mitchell p. Hepmirn\nThe Intereit in futurt will be only\nfour per cent.\nSet Date for Meeting\nof Bank Shareholders\nOTTAWA, Oct W-Fint general\nmeeting of ihtreholderi of the Bmk\nof Canada will be held January 23,\nwhen seven directors will be selected, Minister of Finance Rhodes innounced todty. \u2022\nLONDON, Oet. se (CP cable)\u2014\nJapanese naval negotiators, leaking\nrecognition of thi principle of equality of thetr toroea with Britain md\nthe united Statu, bad itlll failed\nto lay down a concrete scheme tonltht\nFlashes From the Wires\nSINGAPORE (Saturdiy) (AP)\nIt wai reported here thit King\nPrtjadhipok of Slam hai abdicated\nhii throne tt Bangkok.\nSEWARD, Aliski-The body of\nMrs. Ed Andenon and one ot her\ntwo small children, ill of whom\ndrowned when \u2022 smsll fishing bost\ncipsized when hit by a breaker in\nHomer slough, were recovered.\nSTEVEN8\nTORONTO (Stturdiy)\u2014An Ottawi dupttch fo tht Mill ind\nEmpire uld todty thlt mother\nmeeting of ctblnet council hn\nbun called for today at 10 a.m.\n\"Tht expectation ll,\" the dmpttch\nitld, \"thtt before tht diy ll ever\nill tht formtlltlti Incidental to\ntny ehtnft in the mlnlitry wlll\nhtvt bttn fulfilled.\"\nVICTORIA-Hen. A. W. Gray.\nminister of ltnds snd municipal affairs will take up residence in Vic-\ntortt.\nBERKLEY\u2014Thtt mm cm be restored to life md norms! mentality\n\u2022fter clinically deid u long tfter\nti 30 mlnutei it claim of Dr. Robert\nE. Comlth.\nSEATTLE\u2014Three weeks igo John\nDull, t I7-yeir-oId Eskimo lad from\nBethel in northern Alukt, had\nnever talked over a telephone or\nseen a motion picture or ridden in\nan elevator. Today he made a tolo\nflight ln an airplane after only one\nhour and 26 minutes in the tir.\nSTEVENS\nTORONTO (Sturdiy (CP)-Tht\nMill ind Empire todiy publlihid\nthe following deipttch from Iti\nOttawi corretpondent:\n\"The rtport thlt Hon. H. H.\nSteveni, once he hu formilly re-\nilgned it mlniiter of trade tnd\ncommerce, Intend! to icek hli political futun with tht C.C.F.,\nciuied wide lnterut when It wu\ncirculated in political circlet In\nthi capital tonight (Prlday night),\nEVERETT, Wash.\u2014Motorists md\nnearby gas station owners htd t\n\"gasoline feast\" when a Pacific\ntransport truck waa ditched and\nsprang a leak. Tin pans. JO gallon\nbarrels and jugs were used, as some\n.1900 gallons of gaaollne trickled\nfrom the traniport.\nBOSTON\u2014Id Don George, 220,\nJava, N.J., defended hit wrutllng\ntitle claims by defeating Jim Browning. 239, Verona, Mc, ln a two-out-\nof-three falls match.\nTORONTO\u2014Contention that former Premier Oeorge S. Henry md\nSenator Arthur Meighen, rulgned\nmember of the Ontario hydro elec-\ntrl power commission, beciute of\npenonil lnterut should hive remained outside negotiations by the\ngovernment end the commission for\npurchue of Ontario Power Service\ncorporation assets is contained in\nfindings of a royil commission thit\nexamined the purchases lut summer. *,\nENTOMBED FftOG\nLOUD IN CROAKS\nFOR FLOOD TIME\nHOOUIAM, Wuh., Oct. 36 (OP)\u2014\nRains and floods have not discouraged Hoqulim'i fimom entombed\ncity hill frog\u2014in fact, lt la In more\nand better voloe than ever, uyi City\nClerk Ola Hall.\nIt'i   singing   ln   the   riln   ind\nflood.\" uyi Mlu Hill.\n\"It'i luppoeed to bi up ln thi\nwill, twty from the flood, but maybe It hu ume wiy to get down ind\nenjoy the witer. Anywiy, tn never\nhurd him crou my louder.\"\nEDDIE SHORE\nGETS $7009\nDons Uniform of the\nBruins; Four New\nPlayers Sign Up\nQUEBEC, Oct. 26 (CP)-Eddie\nShore, Alberta farmer md star Nitlonil Hockey letgue defencemin,\ntodiy arrived at the Boston Bruins\ntraining camp here, signed his contract for the limit allowed by the\nleague, 97000, and turned out for\ntwo practices. His appearance completed the club's roster.\n\"Red\" Doran, burly defenctman\nof New York Americans, came to\nthe Bruins on lorn and also got into\npractice.\nBusiness Manager Art Ross stated\nthat four amateurs had agreed to\nterms md would sign Bruin contracts during the week-end. They\nare P. Hergescheimer, Winnipeg;\nToe Blike, Hlddlng, Minn.; P. Bess-\nler md A. Motter of Melville, Sask.\nIt-was expected these playen would\nbreak in with Bruins Cubs of the\nCanadian American league.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B. C., OO** ja-MTI. _. Mlt-\nthews, RlverslBi, who hu been visiting ln Spokane, hu returned home.\nIll\nMr. lnd Mn. Edward M. Stllu,\nTidinac, have returned home from\na trip to Calgiry.\ni   \u2022   i\nMr. md Mn. A. J. McDoneil,\nOovernment roid, hive nturned\nhome from Boswell, whtre they vUlted at the home of Mrs. McDonell's\nmother, Mrs, i. Lewis.\nI  m   l\nRobert Colllnt of Calgary hu tak*\nen up residence ln Trail.\n.ttt\nMr. tnd Mn. Howard Parker were\nreoently guute of relatives at Slo\nctn City.\n*_ *   '   '\nMn. I. jonei hai returned to bir\nhome it Johnson's Landing ifter\nviiltlng ln TnU.\n.   .   .\nMr. md Mri. WHter Bronn md\n(laughter Monica ipent t ihort holiday recently it slocan City when\nthey were guuta ot Mn. Brown's\nmother. They were accompanied\nhome by their aon Walter who hai\nbeen vlaltlng hit grandmother.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. M. L. Barnu, Bay avenue, wa*\nhosteia yuterday afternoon to Circle\nNo. 1 of the Women'i auxiliary to\nSt. Andrew'! church. A bake ule\nWu held wedneidiy afternoon by\nCircle No. 2 at the home of Mn. T\nH. Ollla. and Mrs. W. Hudson, Dockerlll strut, entertained Circle No. I\nyesterday afternoon.\nCircle No. l ot thi women'i it*\nloclitlon of Knox United church wu\nentertained yesterday afternoon by\nMrs. w. E. Wilson, Bay avenue.\nEntertaining Circle No, 2 wu Mn,\nWalter Douglu, Government road.\nMeeting of Circle No. 3 wu held\n*,', ttw home of Mn. WUUam C,\n.\\c<m. Topping itrwt.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. A. Vannucchl wu hoeteu\nyeiterday ifternoon it ths tea hour\nto memDeri of NeUon avepui circle\nof TnU lubdlvlilon, cithollc women'! luue.\n.   .   .\nMn. J. Brown entertained Riverside circle.\nill\nCentrtl circle met at the homt of\nMn, A- J. McDonci. oovernment.\nEntertaining for Trail women'i Institute, Mn. J. T. Newmin, Bay avenue, wu a charming hoitew at one\not t bridge Krles lut night. Mn\nHerbert Clark wu winner of high\nscon and Miu Verna atlnson received thl low.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMemben of the Women'i mxllliry\nto East Trail mission entertained at\na card party and dmce ln the mlaaion hall lut night. Mn. o. Hill\nind W. Cooper ume high score for\nflnt prim, Mn. Casey jonei and\nDtvld Stuart winning consolation\nawards. Dancing followed refiesh-\nments. Mn. Herbert Jobnston htd\ncharge of the entertainment. Mrs.\nCharlu T. Conry and Mn. J. T.\nWilkinson serving refreshments.\n9      .      *\nMr. snd Mn. F. w. Stevemon havi\nreturned from vlaltlng friendi it\nKlnmlrd.\n\u2022 t   \u2022\nA niceenful cud pirty wu held\nlut evening In the Catholic parUh\nhall, memben ot tbe Trail tubdlv-\nlilon, Cithollc Women'a league as*\ntertalning. Rev. Pather J. C. McKenzie of Nelson was master, of\nceremonies. Mn. Reginald Varcoe\nwas winner of ladlu' Ilrst prize, and\nMr. varcoe made high scon for\ngentlemen, conaolatlona were awarded to MIm Bernice Enterbrook and\nClark. At Five Hundred. Mn.\nOeorgt Bergeron waa winner ol high\naeon award. Hallowe'en decoration!\nwere uied throughout the hill. Black\n\u25a0nd onnge garlanda and itreimen\ndecorated the walU. black cits, am-\nuilng wltchu and other novelties\nadding attraction to the scheme,\nTilllu wen imm pumpklm ind\nicore padi wire covered wtth onnge\npidi with bltck decontlom.. Serv-1\nIng on Ule committees were Mn.\nOeorge Platt, Mn. Archibald Mill.r.\nMrs. Ivan Jeffery. Mn. m. R. Lm-1\nduccl, Mn. Wllllim oenrd, Mn.\nErnest Levesque, Mn. Thomu fames i\nand Mlu Jeanne Butonc. Mn. Eimei J\nhid charge ot tallies.\nRev. J. C. McKenzie of Nelion '\nli vuitlng ln Tnll.\n\u2022 li\nRowland ivenue circle of tbe\nTrail subdivision. Catholic Women'!\nleague, wai entertained last night\nby Mn. prtnk Roumtn, Roulind\n\u25a0venue.\nEASTERN CAPITALISTS OPENING\nTHE FERN MINE IN YMIR CAMP\nOld Timer Produced\n$300,000 in Its\nOperations\nThe Fern  Mine,  an early  -cold\nproperty of the Ymlr ramp, whwe\n10-Mump mill In reported to have\nturned out more than 1300,000 In\nthe heydays, Ih due to hum with\nactivity   onre   more.   Now   ln   the\nhands of the Oold Fern Syndicate,\na group of Buffalo, N.Y-, and Toronto,   Ont.,   Interests   headed   by\nManager    Leonard    L.    Adams   of\nBuffalo,   who   lit   now   In   Nelson,\nthe  Fern  wlll  he reequlpped  and\na  start   made  at  oure  on  a  new\ntunnel 1000 feet below the present\nworkings,   to   cut   the   Fern   and\nother parallel veins.\nW. M. Myers has been appointed\nas the  syndicate's consulting engineer and  a contract haa been  let\nto   the  A.   H.   Oreen   company   for\nthe   construction   of   new   camp\nequipment to accommodate 13 men,\nbunkhouse, blacksmith shop and  a\ncompressor houae, A compressor, 216\ncubic feet capaqlty, and a complete\ndrilling equipment, have been order-\ntd and wlll be Installed by November 15.\nTwo ahlfts will advance undtt\nMine Foreman Bob Eunson and thc\nmen wilt be housed in tents until\nthe new buildings g<r up.\nThe Oold Fern Syndicate, financed by Canadian brokers, holds s\nlense arid option of purchase covering the property, mada by Lloyd H\nHawley ns lessor In favor of Jamea\nFisher as leasee, which lease and\noption wu acquired by Leonard L,\nAdama, and which have been assigned to the syndicate.\nThe board of managers Includes\nLeonard L. Adams, Buffalo, N.Y.,\nmanager; H. M. Dignam, Toronto,\nOnt,, secretary-treasurer; Norman C.\nWeser. Buffalo, N. Y\u201e and Ivan\nMarks. Richmond Hill, Ont.\nThe Fern property, comprising\nsome five crown-granted claims Chl-\ncora, Etrura Fraction. Eureka, Fern\nand Hidden Treasure, was first located by Captain Duncan, who staked the first claim ,in 1807. He later\naold   tt   for  the   reported   sum   of\n160,000. The property wu then operated by the Fern Oold Mining an!\nMilling company, which company in*\nstalled a complete milling plant and\ngravity train at a cost of soma\n$50,000. A chute of free milling\ngold ore was opened up at a depth\nof 360 feet on the dip of the veltn\nThe oompany profitably mined and\nmilled a considerable tonnage from\nthis chute. Much of the ore carried\ngold values up to $160 per ton and\nwaa ahlpped directly to the smelter\nwithout local treatment. One car*\nload of about 20 tons of shipping\ngrade of ore wu estimated to havt\na value of $3000. In late years tht\nmill and camp were destroyed by\nfire.\nRecords show that the production\nof this mine wu 750 tons per month\nwith a recovery of #14 per ton and\na loaa of $-3 to $7 per ton ln tailings. Some very high grade ore wat\nshipped to the smelter which earrt*\ned values from $70 to $1331 per ton\nIn gold. The total production of tht\nmine Is reported to have exceeded\nmore  than   $309,000.\nINTERIM RECEIVER\nFOR FLIN FLON MINES\nTORONTO. Oct. M (OP)-F. Gordon Cook, registrar In binkruptry at\nosgoode hall, today sppolnted F. O,\nTidy ss Interim receiver of tho\nproperty ot Manitoba Flln lion\nmines, Limited, Toronto.\nBABYS\nOWN\nSOAP\nWay.*.\n\u2022EfWyl.\nThe Tyranny of Nerves\nMakes You Unhappy\nWhen th* nervous system becomes undermined,\nYou become a victim of many fears.\nYou are afraid to be alone, afraid to be In\ncrowds.\nYou are afraid of what is going to happen,\nAnd are consequently always.worrying.\nSoon you become irritable and unreasonable\nAnd make life unpleasant to those around you.\nHeadaches, sleeplessness and digestive troubles\nAdd to your worries.\nThe clouds grow darker and the fears multiply\nUntil such time as you restore vigor to ths\nnerves.\nAs you know this can readily be done\nBy using Dr. Chase's Nerve Food.\nAs new strength and confidence are restored,\nYou regain control of yourself\nAnd fears and worries disappear\nTo be replaced by good health and happiness.\n\"Sib, Betty! \u2014 You're much loo big to cry. Let's get Aunt Alice\nto tell ua why t nice little girl feels so weepy ,\nend crosi all of a ludden.\"\nThis little girl says ihe doem't want to play either, Mother. I'd\ngive her Castoria tonight. Perhape it'a ceaatlpatlon\nthat'a making her ao lietleei.\"\n\"Oh Aunt AUce! - I'm juat fine today! \u2014 Yes, I hsd my Cssteria\nlaet night \u2014 and Mother aaya to tell you that the\nthinki it'a simply wonderful!\"\nF4 \"\u2022'*\" \u2022\u00ab (\u25a0><) you're better, Betty dear!   Yoa tell your\n**-\u00a3\/ Mother that Caatorla la made especially for children just\nlike you. And It hasn't a thing In it that would hurt your little baby\nbrother either.\u2014Hell love tha\ntaate of It Jut aa much aa\nyou do. \u2014 And don't forget that\nit'a a aplendld thing te lake if\nyou fee] a little iniffly cold\ncoming on.\"\nCASTORIA\nThe children's laxatlrs\nfrom babyhood to 11-cm\n __________\n\\act>\n-THI NILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. I.C-IATURDAY MORNING. OCT. V. 1IJ4-\ni boqueit of itock, worth at the\nit \u00a3100,000. to a Wiltihire cotute\nipltal had Increued in value to\nirly \u00a31*1,000 at tha tlmt ot tht\n\u2022tor's deith.\nia M. Mitchell, a Negro, recently\ntbrated her 87th consecutive ytar\na teacher In the public Khooli\nRaleigh, N.C.\nLet Smart\nFootwear\nAdd the Finishing Touch\nGood\t\nHousekeeping\nBy MBS. MARY MORTON\nMenui, RMlptl and Hints\nThat charming evening\ndress can only look its\nbest when chic evening\nfootwear from  Andrews\nit worn\u2014\nOUR SELECTION  IS\nLARGE\nOur styles are ultra modern in every detail.\nI. ANDREW\n& COMPANY\nLeaden in Footfathion\nMimi Hint\nCream of Spinach Soup     Cracktra\nPotato Souffle     Stewed Tomatoei\nColeilaw   .\nPetri Baked With Honey\nMilk Tea or Coffee\nThis ii a menu made up largely\nof dishes suitable for children. II\na good one tor people with delicate\ndigestions, and may also be wrved\nto the youngsters.\nToday'l Reelpti\nCream of Spinach Soup \u2014 One\ntablespoon butter, one onion, chopped; one cup cooked iplnach, one\ncup water ln which iplnach cooked,\ntwo tablespoons butter, one iable-\nipoon flour, two cups milk. Melt\nbutter, add onion and saute a ttw\nmlnutei. Add ipinach, wattr and\nlastly white sauce made by blending\nbutter, flour and milk. Heat through,\nseason well and serve piping hot.\nPotato Souffle\u2014 One cup hot\nmashed potatoes, one teaspoon butter, two tablespoons hot milk, ont\negg, one-fourth teaspoon salt. Whip\npotatoes, add butter and milk and\neggs. Beat until light. Turn Into a\ngreased baking dish, making the\npotato stand up ln peaks. Have\nready one slice broiled bacon cut ln\nsquares. Fit these squares into the\ntop and bake altogether until the\nbacon Is crisp and tht potato Irown-\nPeirs Baked With Honey- Peel\npears, halve and core. Arrange In k\ngreased baking dish, put a spoon of\nhoney in wen, and jutt a bit ot\nbutter. Add a small amount 'of water or orange juice to the bottom of\nthe pan and bake until peari are\ntender. Serve hot or cold, plain, with\ntop milk, cream, of a soft custard\nsauce.\nPACTS AND PANCIIS\nEconomy\n\"When making waffles, pancake!\nor noodles, I never use my egg\nwhites,\" iay\u00ab a houiewlfe. \"1 put\nthem in a glau meaturing cup and\nkeep ln the refrigerator for a week\nor more and when I get a cupful we\nhave angelfood cake. My family\nla very fond of lt tnd ln thii way it\nii not expenilve.\"\nQulnci PrMtrvii\nWuh and part quinces, cut In\nquarter! and remove corn. Cook\nskins ln wtter to cover until toft.\nStrain off thli wtter and in It cook\nthe qulncei and half as many ap\npies, pared and cored. Cook untl!\nruit Is tender. Drain from water,\nmeasure and add tq tho liquid in\nthe pan three eupa tugtr for each\nfour cupi trult. Boil lyrup ten mlnutn. Add fruit and cook slowly\nuntil fruit is a delicttt pink. Turn\nInto hot, ittril? Jan, cover with\nboiling syrup and seal at once.\n\u00a7\/UEW\/Uf\u00a7YORF\u00a7\nMORE PEOPLE THAN\nEVER BEFORE!\nire buying ALL their food supplies at their SAFEWAY ttttt becauie they have\nfound from experience that SAFEWAY'S\nSATURDAY    conslttently low pricei enable thsm to     MONDAY\nmake regular monthly tavlngi In their\nPHONE 153^ household budget! 'ME DELIVERY\nCOFFEE\nNABOB GLASS JAR\nLimit S Lbi.\nPer Lb 421\nBUTTER\nHIGHWAY lit GRADI\nLimit I Lbi.\n3 Lbs. 69*\nTEA\nBLUI RIBBON\nPer Lb.\n45*\nFREE with $2 purchase\u20143 bars Pearl Laundry Soap\nBIRD SEED, Spratfi pkg. 18c\nPEAS, Orchard City, sieve 3 2 tint 25*\nPUMPKIN, Llbby'i 2V_i tin 13c\nSALT, Windior (limit 2)  24 os. pkg.   5*\nOXO 10\u00bb (limit 2)  tin 21c\nCORN FLAKES \u00bb?'    1 Pkgi. lft,\nPOTTED MEATS, Libby's 4 tint 25c\nPORK AND BEANS. Libby's li, tails .... 3 tins 23*?\nPINEAPPLE, Singapore 2 tint 19c\nCORN, Aylmer 2i,  Bantam       2 tlm 25*\nSOAP, Corbolic 6 cokes 25c\nSODAS aft?ol\"r\"* Box29*\nCUT GREEN BEANS, Libby's 2 tins 23c\nLARD, Swift's     3 Ib. tin 47*\n4 LUX SOAP (1 Rinso Free) 4 bars23c\nCRISCO   3-lb. tin 67*\nQUAKER OATS, Plain pkg. 18c\nTOILET PAPER ,\u201e.-      8 Rolls 25*\nHALLOWE'EN SPECIALS\nFRESH BUTTERED POPCORN\nFRESH ROASTED PEANUTS\nFRUITS\nAPPLES\nCOOKING\n8 Lbi. IH\nGRAPES\nIMPIRORI\nPer Lb.        151\nAPPLES\nMelNTOSH\n6 Lbi. 251\nVogotablos\nLETTUCE\nOKANAGAN\na Headi      15<\nCELERY\nARMSTRONG\nPer Lb. 19*\\\nSPINACH\nFRISH  LOCAL\n3 Lbi. 191\nPUMPKIN\nFRISH-NICI 8IZI\nPer Lb.   4*\nTOMATOES\nHOT HOUSE\nPer Lb. 2**\nFREE\nDELIVERY\nQUALITY NEAT VALUES\nPHONE\n153\nPOT ROASTS\nNO WASTE\n** .- H - io*\nROUND STEAK\n2 Lbt. 291\nVEAL STEAKS\nMEATY\n2 Lbi. 220\nSPARE RIBS\nFRESH\n2 Lbi. 230\nBOILING BEEF *  4 lb*. 25*\nPORK OVEN ROASTS   Ib. 18*\nBONELESS VEAL OVEN ROASTS    Ib. 18*\nBEEF, Rump Roait    Ib. 15*\nLAMB SHOULDERS, Choice Ib. 12*\nLAMB LECS, No. I Quality  Ib. 23*\nFRESH HAMBURGER   2 lbi. 19*\nBREAKFAST SAUSAGE      lb. 10*\nBONELESS BEEF STEW AND KIDNEY      2 lbi. 19*\nLAMB STEW, Rib   2 Ibs. 19*\nPURE PORK LITTLE PIG SAUSAGE   ....   Ib. 20*\nVEAL CHOPS, Tender 2 lbt. 29*\nIPORK TENDERLOIN, Freih Ib. 28*\nBABY BEEF LIVER, Sliced   2 lbs. 23?\nSWIFT'S BREAKFAST BACON, Sliced Ib. 39*\nSUGAR CURED CORN BEIF   Ib. IB*\nSMOKED PICNICS, Mild  Ib. 20*\nWS    ftCtfHVI    THS    RISHT    TO    LIMIT   CUANTITISS\nDISTRIBUTION fcSl WITHOUT WASTE\nSymphony Concert\nPleases Cranbrook\nCBANBROOK, B.C.. Oct M.-One\nof the moit lucceuful of the concert! staged by the Cranbrook Sym-\nXhony oreheetra wu thtt In the\n\u25a0udltorlum Wedneedty evening\nwhen t good eudlence. In point of\nnumben end enthutium, meted\nthe playen under their leader William Haven.\nTh* program preaented waa well\nchoien and varied and the ttiiit-\ntng talent wu given a splendid\nhearing u will u the cltiical number! rendered by th* muilciani. Of\n\u2022pedal lnterut wu the teat piece\nwhich the orcheitra hu choien to\nplay at the Blalrmore ftttlvtl Sat*\nurd*y, \"The Magic Flute.\" Thli wu\nplayed with the feeling and flnlih\nuiually evoked from till muilciahi\nby Mr. Raven.\nOthar old favorites, played at\nother festival! and concert! wero\nwelcomed by the audience, \"Pomp\nand Circumstance\" alwayi receiving\nan enthusiastic ovation when played by th* group. Th* \"Death of\nAie\" from the Pere Oynt wu a new\nnumber beautifully don*.\nTwo solos by Mr. Ian Douglu of\nKlmberley received a moit enthui-\nlaitlc reception. Hli numben ware\nparticularly mlted to hli voice tnd\nwere heirtlly encored.\nThe double quartet numben wert\nalio really enjoyed, the blend of\nvolcu being harmonloui tnd tht\nlong! chosen ptrticularly plculng.\nThey sing \"0 Mom of Bouty\" and\nthe \"Qypiy Chorui'1 from Bohemian\nOlrl. The ilngen were Mn. Raven,\nMlu Jean Glendenning, Mra, Paxton, Mri. 0. MacDonald, Messrs.\nHinton, Crawford, Evani and Man-\nton.\nMlu Barbara Pink, t youthful\nviolinist, pupil of Vincent rtnk,\nmad* the hit ot the evening with\nher rendering of t number idvinced for her yeirs, pitying Monti's\n\"Cnrdu\" with th* duh tnd verve\nuiutlly expected of 1 much mort\nleuoned pliyer. At ia conclusion\ntht received t decided ovation.\nC. V. Edwtrdi wai t pitnlst for\nthe orcheitra numben tnd concert\nnumben.\nMr. tnd Mn. E. MicKlnnon htvt\nreturned from Spokane. They will\nvlilt here with Mr. tnd Mn. A. A.\nMicKlnnon before returning to\nthtlr horn* in Calgiry.\nMr. tnd Mn. E. s. Jonu htvt re-\n\"Mikes With Dty Ittltr\"\nIt'l\n100%\nPure\ns\nMidi\nIn\nB.C.\nBLEACH\nUse it for your household cleaning and laundry work.\nMtnuftctured lolely by\nIUPREMA  P0LIIH  CO, LTD.\nVtncouvtr, B.C.\nturntd to thtlr home htr* tfttr t\nviiit ln Ntlton.\nVtry Rev. D. Finnegin, Ok M. I.\nind Rtv. Joaeph Sctnnell htrt been\nviiltlng th* ObUtt I-then.\nMr. aad Mn. R. Btvln tnd amall\ndiughter, of Invtrmere, htv* bwn\nviiltlng with Mr. Btiin'i ptreoti,\nMr. tnd Mn. Bertie.\nMrt Doollng hu hid u h\u00abr guut\nMiu Phyllis Ruftl*.\n* Mr. tnd Mn. W. I. Wtrdtn hive\ntrrlved home tfter spending th*\nlummer in th* Old Country.\nMn. Fortier, ot Kimbtrlty, wit t\nCrinbrook vliltor.\nJudge ind Mn. Thompton hivt\nreturned from Fernie, where they\nwere viiltlng.\nMr. tnd Mn. K. Oreen tnd Mlu\nRuth Ort\u00abn, of Wycllff, wtr* Crinbrook visitors.\nAt th* ctrd ptrty given In tht St.\nMtry'i htll J. Getves tnd Mn. Oi-\nborne won thi high Koru in bridge.\nMri. Strange tnd Mr. SUnley won\ntht high scores in whiit, tht door\npriie being won by Mn. Btrnltr.\nMr. Jotttd doing tht drawing. Tht\nconvenen were Mn. D. Himllton,\nMn. J. Mtrrt tnd Mn. Doree.\nAt tht mettlng of the Crinbrook\nRotary club, Preildent Sulllvtn\nmtdt t presentation to A. J. C.\nChliholm, tecretiry for the put\nleveral years, who hu bten luper-\ntnnutted from the customs urvlct.\nHe stated thtt tht mettlng wu ont\nof Joy In the knowledge thit Mr.\nChrlsholm wu retiring from tctjvt\nwork, tnd sorrow it hli leivlng\nCrinbrook. Mr. Chliholm wu presented with a htndiome piece of\nsilverware u t token ot ippreclitlon ot hit valuable ttrvlce u club\nsecretiry. Mr. Chliholm mtdt t\nbrief reply thinking the club for\nthetr remembrance tnd for their\ngood fellowship prevailing in tht\nclub. Two new memben were welcomed Into tht club Fred Ryckmtn\nind Arthur Bowley. Chirlw Bennett, tudltor for tht Ctnidlan Bank\not Commerce, wu t guut it the\nclub.\nMr. ind Mn. A. Chliholm htvt\nleft for Sin Diego. Ctlifornlt, whert\nthey will ipeno the winter.\nMlu Lily Mttion li a guett ot\nMlu Kty Morrlion tt Klmberlty.\nMr, tnd Mn. H. Thompson tnd\nbiby diughter, tnd Mn. C. Hamrln\nof wtrdner wert Cranbrook vlilt*\non.\nMn. A. MontpeUier ot Moyie It a\nCrinbrook vliltor. ,\nThe home ot Mr. end Mn. T.\nMitheton. tbout two mllu touth of\ntown, wu completely dutroyed by\nfire Tueidiy evening\nA meeting of tht Crinbrook Ath*\nletlc anoclatlon wu held. The election of officen took plice, ruult*\n-PAOI PIVI\ning u followi:\nHoi\n-on. Pruldenti\u2014Hon. F. M. Mte*\nPhenon, Dr. t. W. Orten tnd City\nEngineer Phllpot.\nPrtsldent-A. I. Leigh.\nSec-Treu.\u2014Stanley Moffit.\nExecutive committee\u2014Angus Mc\nPhee, trom high ichool; Jtck Mc\nUrea, softball. C. A. Sneath, hockey\nrtprutntttlve; Miu Gertrude Pit-\nmore, Central ichool; G. M. Argue,\ntrack tnd titld and W. M. Htrrli,\nex-officio.\nThe city council offered the it\nKclttion the rink at t reduced ren*\nttl ot $139 for tht nuon. The offer\nwu accepted.\nMlu Helen Spruell, who wu ul\nled horn* by the duth of her moth*\ner, hu returned to Idmonton where\nihe ii ittendlng tht Univenlty.\nRtttlwntket\npairs.\nuiutlly  travtl  in\nmm*Vm*tX7\u00bb'?\u00bb)VmV**^^\nAsk Your Grocer for\nBULMANS\n*\u2014FANCY OR\n\"EATMORE BRAND\u2014FANCY DRY PACK\"\nMakes\nMora and\n|i Better Pies\nPer Tin\nRicher\nin Color\nand Finer\nin  Flavor\n'jl*m\u00bbmrmmm*itt\u00ab\u00bbtl>mmm*ttlm*tmlt^^\nI\nThla column ia eonductid by\nMn. M 7 Vlgntu*. A_ ntwt ef a\ntodal tutur t, including reeepUent,\nprivttt entarttinmeaa, ptrtoml\nitem, mtrrltgu. tte.. will tppetr\nIn thlt oolumn. Ttlaphon* Mn.\nVilnius at btr home. Ut Billet\nMn. J. Foggo. Mill itreet, entertained tht mtmbtn of Mn. Hector\nMickemle'i clrel* ot St Ptul'i\nUnited chureh Thunday tfttmoon\n5hen tho** pruent wer* Mn.\nhtrltt Wattt, Mn. W. I. Shaw,\nMn. M. Dtrrough, Mn. Dtvld Mtloney, Mn. John Stobo, Mn. J. M.\nArmttrong, Mn. W. A. Robtrtion,\nMn. R. A. Orlmu, Mn. WlUlam\nDlok, Mn. Fr*d\u00abrlek Johniton tnd\nMn. Mackenilt.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. tnd Mn. lohn Ta wu of Ctdtr\nPoint vliittd Nelion yetttrdiy.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMiu Dudlty Blickwood, Hill Mlnu\nraid, hu rtturntd trom viiltlng htr\nbrother-ln-ltw ind tlittr, Mr. md\nMn. WUIltm B. Hunter ln TnU.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nBiihop of Kootenty Rt, Rev. Adtm\nof Vtrnon wu a Nelton visitor yu-\nterdiy.\n\u2022 .  \u2022\nMn. Jotlph DuMont of Bride*\nvlllc, who hu been vititing It tht\nhome on Ctrbonttt itrut of her\nbrothcr-in-liw tnd iliter, Mr. tnd\nMrt Henri Gtgnon, luvu today\ntor htr homt. j\nJoieph   Strelt\ntown yuttrdty.\not  Kulo  vlilted\nMn. P. W. Weibe of Plulion wu\nIn Ntlion yuttrdty, leivlng littr\nln th* dty to vltlt friendi In Ymlr.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nB. N. Sharp, MX, Of tht Dundu\nmint, who hat rtturntd from t viiit\nto hil family ln Spoktne, vliittd\nNtlion yesterdiy.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nI. Tltiworth Ittvet thit morning\nto mike hit homt in Enchant, Alta.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ, C. Hansen ef Sheep Cruk wu\nt Ntlion ihopper yuterdty.\nC. V. Gtgnon, who hu bun confined to hit horn* on SlUci ttrttt,\nIt improving.\n\u00bb . t\nMn. C. I. Prlct tnd htr brothir\nBob Quin. both of Hirrop, motond\nto th* city yuterdty.\nMr. and Mn. Oeorg* Htndtrwn\nof Sloctn City tpent yuterdty ln\nNtlion.\n...\nC. I. Squint of Robion wu in\nNtlion Thuradiy.\nTe  \u00bb\nMn. J. F. Stevmton et Htrrop\nvliittd Nelaon yuterdty.\ntr *  *\nAmong ihoppers in town yuterdty wu Mn. 1. Thompion of Soutb\nSlocan.\nMr. and Mn. Harry Stevens et\nYmlr vlilted *e eitjr yuterday.\nMn. I. C. Llttleberry, who it viiltlng rtlatlvu at Harrop, tpent yu\nterdiy in town.\nMlu N. McOregor ot Crawford\nBty wu in Ntlion ihopplng yuttrdty.\nRev. Clydt Htrviy et Procter\n\u25a0pent yuterday in If (lion.\nlln. L. V. Rolen, Ktrr totrt-\nm*ntt, returned lut \u00abv\u00abning tram\nl few weeki vtcttlon tptnt ln Vtn*\ncouver tnd Spoktne.\nMr. tnd Mrt. C. H. Cooper ot\nYthk tnd thtlr ftmily hivt takin\nup reildence tt 130 Silica itrtet.\nr \u2022   \u2022  \u2022\nMn. Scott of South Sloctn tpent\nyuttrdty in town ihopplng.\nMn. J. W. Dow of Cruton Is In\nthe city, t gutet tt tht homt of\nMn. W. R. Cimplon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong ihopptn in Nelion yuterdty wu Mn. W. Friiby of South\nSloctn.\n...\nMn. J. W. Clirk. Kerr iptrtmtnti,\nwho hu betn confined to her nilte,\nit Improving.\t\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND. B.C Oct. 1\u00bb-Tht\nmemben ot the Women'i luxllltry\nto tht Roultnd branch of tht Ctnidlan Legion. B.E.S.L., wtrt guutt\nof Mn. F. Leuon it \u25a0 pleutnt u-\ncltl githtring in htr homt Wedneidiy evening. Arrangement! were\nmad* to entertain the memben of\nthe Cinadiin Legion tnd thtlr wlvu\nit mpptr next month. The following committee! were inpolnttd:\nSupptr- Mn. WUIltm Oruly\nJonts, Mn. Thomu Wood tnd Mn.\nChirlu Symmondi.\nIntertilnmtnt \u2014 Mn. Jimu\nHtrdy, Mn. Hirry A. Btthl* tnd\nMn. Howtrd Ferguion.\nFlnt priie In Ihe \"tet\" eontut\nwu won by Mn. R. Crawford tnd\nthe coniolaUon by Mn. Townttnd.\nThoie preMnt were Mr. Arthur\nE. Trtfford, Mn. Towniend. Mn.\nWllllim Buick. Mn. J. J. Culllnane\nSr\u201e Mn. J. J. Cullintn* Jr, Mn. J.\nMcCulloulh, Mn. Percy E. Ttylor,\nMn. R. Crawford. Mlu Robtrtion,\nMn. T. Wood, Mn. Wlllltm Greily-\nJonei, Mn. Chtrles Symmondi,\nMn. W. F. Un#. Mn. A. O'Reilly,\nMn. M. Power, Mn. Howird Ferguion tnd the hoitui.\n\u2022 \u2022  *\nJ. A. Henderion hu returned\nfrom t hunting trip in the Windermere\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nSidney Nonnin. mining editor ot\nthe Vincouver Sun. hu lien spending i few dipt In tht dt?, tnd wu\n\u25a0 guut of t few of the old tlmen\ntt t social evening in tht Roultnd\nclub.\nt  *  \u2022\nL**nder Mlcklcton of R\u00abv*lltoke,\nRoultnd old-tlmtr hu bun r*-\nIU*?\n<Swt\/\n\u00ab\"\"!     You vm m little ki a t\nrmuiuM CATMM .\nTOK__T.D0O0-lAilC0.LTD.      Why U*Ot UM th- bcfllT\nJ&\nButcherteria News\nT. I. SHORTHOUSI\nPHONES 517\u2014528 FREE DELIVERY\nSPECIALS SATURDAY AND MONDAY\n14*\ntut 10*\nCHOICI ROLLID\n\u2022ROAITS BllP-Pir lb,\nCHOICI RIB left\nROAITI IIIF-Pir Ib.   **-*>\nPRIM! OVIN ROASTS\n-Ptr lb\t\nPRIMI POT\nROASTS-Ptr  II.\nCRIAMIRY BUTTIR - With\nmut trdir, Mb. limit;   eu\nptr lb \u2022***>\nSH0ULDIRS YOUNO IAMB-\nR*llid in nquut; 1ti<\nptr   Ib.   .1    '-Wr*\nCHOICI LAMS CHOPI   4A4\nPtr Ib ******\nLIAN ITEWINQ LAMB   tttA\n-Ptr Ib. **v*~~-\nBRIAKPAIT IAUIAQI |Qg\n-Pir Ib.\nCHOICE VIAL mm Ifi^\nOVIN ROASTB-Lb. **9 *'BF\nOHOIOI VIAL POT\nROAITB-Ptr Ib\t\nLIAN ITEWINQ VIAL\n-4 lb\t\nVIAL STIAKS-Ttndtr; _tmA\nI lbi.  ******\nFRESH   MINCED\n8TIAK-1 lbi, \t\nLIAN BONIO tnd ROLLID\nHAM-No  Wi*-?; JBC\nCOTTAGE ROLLS- IM\nI to 5 lbi. tach; pir Ib. m**r\nNIPPY ONTARIO _tgA\nCHIISI-Ptr Ib m~*\nTASTY JELLIED VEAL   JM\nty\nm\nW\nPtr Ib,\nTwo Trueki it Your Service!\nOverwaitea\u2014Nelson\n100% i.e.\n21 Branches In tht Province owned tnd operated by\n_Dj\u00a3lo|j^iSljirjholder^>\nPHONE 707\nP. 0. BOX 48\nSPECIALS\nSATURDAY AND MONDAY\nNO LIMIT \t\nTEA\u2014Our Own Dentil, All Reduced. JA*, iM, ECl\nCOPPEE\u2014Preihly ground for uch   9Af, *tt, AM\nCUttOITIfr.    Lb*    ***e*e\u00ab\u00abv\u00abtt**t*** *\" wv \u00bbV\nSUGAR\nIUY BY THI SACK. SPECIAL OPFER\u2014      f\u00a3 0 A\nPer 100 lbi <$0\"V\nKIRK'S CASTILE SOAP\u20144 eikei  25*\nSESQUI MATCHES\u20142 packed for\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 e\n35*\nHANDY AMMONIA\u20143 pkrt. for 25*\nSODA BISCUITS\u20142-lb. packett 25*\nRECKITT'S BLUE\u2014per pkt      5*\nHONEY\u2014Very Special, Mb. jars\n15*\n      '*\nBRUNSWICK SARDINES\u20146 tint \t\n 25*\nr                                                                                                                 ~\nSPRATT'S BIRD SEED\u20142 packets\t\n 35*\nBON AMI POWDER\u2014per tin\n15*\nAUSTRALIAN ORANGES\u2014Urge site; per doi. 45*\nthe\nIng   c\ncity*\n401 VOTERS AT\nKASLO\nKASLO, %.C. Oct. \u00bb-tomt 401\ncltiieni of Katlo in ihown U\ntll|iblt to vou tt tht next ttdtrll\ntlectlon Ui the prtllmlntry lilt c\u00abm-\n)l*Ud by S. J. Mtyiu, anumtritof\nor thli city, tht Kootanatin uyt.\nOld Surrey theater, Blackfnin\nroid, will it* no more dramt. Tiw\nRoyil Eye hotplttl, Wtttrloo rotd,\nhta bought the lite to build thereon\nt new eye hospital, to coil \u00a3100,OW'\nL\nPhone Your Order in and Pay on Delivery.\nCity 9\u2014H md 4. Fairview, 10\u20142 md 3:30\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nPHONES\n831\nVASSAR'S\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nGood Buying for Soturdoy and Monday\nChoice Steer Beef\nPOT ROASTS:     7 & 0*\nGood; Ib *      0\nRUMP ROASTS:        1 kt\nRIB'ROAST'ROLLED: 10*\nSIRLOIn'sTEAKS:\" Qt*\n2 Ibs OJ\nBLADE ROAST: IA*\nLAMB LECS:\nLb\t\nLAMB CHOPS:\nLb\t\nPORK LEG\nROASTS: lb\t\nPORK: SHOULDER\nROAST, good; lb. .\nVEAL, FILLET\nROAST: Ib\t\nVEAL OVEN ROAST:\nLb\t\n22\n18\n23\n18\n18\n12\nECCS: Local Crade A QC*>\nPullets; doz Ov\nBUTTER: Creamery;   00*\nHAMBURGER: Fresh OC<\nmade; 3 lbs LO\nBREAKFAST IA*\nSAUSAGE: lb IV\nROASTING OC*\nCHICKEN: good; Ib. t.0\nFOWL: Fresh 1C& 1C*\nkilled; Ib. . id     10\nBREAKFAST     BACON\nFresh sliced;\nLb\t\nCOTTAGE CHEESE:\n2 Ibs\t\nOLD CHEESE:\nNippy; Ib.\t\nSMALL PORK\nSAUSAGE:  Ib.   ..\n40*\n25'\n28\"\nW\n '\n\t\nPAGE SIX *\nJMamt latly 5i>w*\nEitibllihed April 22. 1902.\n\"Inter\"    >t British Columbia! Family Newspaper\"\nAU THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished   erery   morning   except   Sundiy   by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY  LIMITED.\n211   Biker   Street   Nelion.   British   Columbia.\nPhone 144. Prlvite Exchinge Connecting ill Departments\nMtmber of the Audit Buretu of Clrculttioni tnd\nThl Canadian Preu Leased Wire News Service.\n, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1934.\u00bb\nENFORCING GAME LAWS\nRecently a New York game warden haled a youth\ninto court for attempting to sell him two dozen young\nbluefish ot less than marketable size. He admitted quite\nreadily that he had asked the boy if they were for sale;\nthat he had not been asked to buy them. The lad was\nwithout any legal representation and it looked as though\nit was going to be merely another cut-and-dried trial for\na minor infraction of the game laws.\nSuddenly, however, a number of volunteer witnesses,\nfor the defence were projected into the picture, including\nseveral prominent Long Island sportsmen. Led by the\npresident of th North Shore Game protective association, they testified that there had been a growing tendency on the part of the game guardians to justify their\nexistence by making a big demonstraton at the expense of\nminor and unintentional offenders while allowing major\nand influential miscreants complete leeway. The judge\nof the court, letting down the bars of decorum to a large\nextent, allowed the trial to swing so freely that for a\nconsiderable time it appeared that the game guardian\nhad become the defendant rather than the youth.\nThe result, so far as the latter was concerned, was\nthat he was dismissed- and forgotten, but such has not\nbeen the fate of 150 policemen of the State Conservation Department. The unexpected ending of the charge\nagainst the little bluefish angler has created an unhappy\nand disturbing state of affairs among those guardians\nof the law, particularly as the matter has receive, considerable publicity.\n^   The incident, while not of direct importance to the\ng&mtinent as a whole, has pretty general implications.\nShe business of making a brave show in the area of un-\nfesentials so as to cover up gross incompetence in regard\njto duties that really matter, is something all too com-\nMfton in the existence of a number of public bodies and\nprivate individuals.   Some time, sooner or later, the\ntuff is bound to be challenged in all probability from a\nlost unexpected angle.   The unhappy predicament in\nrhich that officious New York game guardian found\naimself, juat at the moment of his pompous glory,\njliontains a lesson that might well bo absorbed in many\nfuarters.\nMAN WHO DIDN'T GET TO PARIS\nThe report telling of the death of General von Kluck\nin Germany undoubtedly came as a surprise to many who\nclearly recalled the .early days of the Great War. The\nsurprise was not that tho general should have died but\nbecause of the discovery that he had not passed on before.\nIn the great German drive of 1914 it was von Kluck\nwho led the forces that caused the famous British retreat from Mons. With Paris seemingly doomed, his\nname became a household word, not only in Germany but\nthroughout thc world. Then came the turn in thc battle.\nHis name ceased to be synonymous with crushing success.\nEarly in 1915 a burst of shrapnel put him out of active\nservice and, as far as the casual students of history were\nconcerned, his wounds might as well have been fatal.\nHad he received them at the height of that first,\nterrific onslaught of 1914, the course of history might\nhave been altered very greatly. Certainly he would have\nachieved a place as h national hero had he been incapaci-\nated before the Marne. There are so many \"if's\" in military history, though. It was his fate that his death, at\nthe age of 88, aroused comment from the man in the\nstreet such as, \"Why, I thought he was gone years ago,\"\nor, \"isn't it remarkable how many generals live to a ripe\nold age?\"\nTHE FIRST AERONAUT\ni-'rom Vincenzo Lunardi to Jean Piccard, Max Co-\nsyns and Van de Elst and other aeronauts of 1934 is a\nmatter of only a century and a half. Lunardi's balloon,\nfilled with hot air, rose from the Artillery Grounds,\nMoorsfields, London, on September 15, 1784, its flight\nwatched by 150,000 spectators, among whom were the\nPrince of Wales, Fox, Eurke and Sheridan. The crowd\nwhich had been incredulous, even menacing, went wild\nwith enthusiasm. A conference of the King with his\nMinisters broke up to witness the monster floating\nthrough the air, and a jury acquitted a prisoner forthwith to watch the novel sight. The balloon came to earth\nwithin two and a quarter hours after a flight of twenty-\nsix miles. Lunardi's comparatively small flyer had a\ndiameter of thirty-three feet and rose 600 feet. Picccard's\naerial venture is as tall as a ten-story building, requires\na ground crew of 200 men and is designed to explore the\nunknown region of the straosphere some ten mile\u00ab up.\nThe pioneer acrona'it enjoyed the first bird' -ve view\nof London. Piccard and the moderns mount upward to\nget acquainted with the cosmic ray.\nBetween\nYou and\nMe'\nBy J. B. C.\nHOCKEY IN THE AIR\nWinter must be in the air. Out\nFairview way yesteaday I watched\na bunch of young lr - on the Hume\nschool grounds playing hockey on\nthe ground. They were stickhan-\ntf'ng and shooting in great style.\nIt must be a sign of winter, but\nwhat I wonder is how ' ds can dig\nup a last winter's hockey stick. They\nare usually the most wanted and\nunavailable thin*? at this time of\nyear, especially if there are young\nbrothen in the house. However, I\nam glad'to see the boys playing\nwith hockey sticks, even on bare\nground. It gives them the feel of\nthe stick and the id . of how it\nshould be handled. I know for a\nfact that some of our most prominent hockey players have learned\nand perfected their stickhandling\nb;* playing with a matchblock or\ntin can on a sidewalk during the\npre and after winter season.\n* *   \u2022\nGETTING BACK TO SCHOOL\n. Sat for a time wailing for a friend\nbehind the Hume school. He was in\nvisiting Rev. Mr. SUvcrwood who\nis indisposed, but is on the mend.\nWhile musing and puffing my pipe\nI looked over thc Hume school\nbuilding and thought about old\ntimes. Remember when there were\nbut two rooms to the brick structure and it made a great place\nfor the bouncing of tennis balls.\nThought of the good idea of providing a hand-railing on the wall\nside of thc fire escape. Wondered\nwhen they intend painting the old\nwooden school buildin*-. It is now\nuied as a gymnasium. It has the\nsame paint it had on there, well\nmust be 20 yeare ago. Recalled playing \"Aunty, Aunty High Over,\" hope\nthit is the way they spell lt. We\ndid it over the old wooden building and used to break a window a\nweek. Recalled thc old slide-for\nlife and other things that made\nschool days happy.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nOUT FAIRVIEW WAY\nTalked for a time with Alderman\nRoss \"' -ming who plans a trip this\nweek-end\u2014He didn t say Juat where\nhe was going\u2014wc discussed Kokanee Glacier park\u2014and its scenic\nwonders\u2014Alderman Fleming was\nweighing out brown sugar\u2014and R.\nS. Brereton was there waiting to\nget a word In\u2014Noticed the street\nrailway men are doing a fine job\non the track on Behnsen street-\nMade eyes at Eric Chapman's baby\nboy\u2014They call him Bobbie and he\nhas big dark eyes like his mother\u2014I\nknow Eric won't mind that reference\u2014for after all Mrs. Chapman\nused to belong to our staff on this\npaper-\nDick Barnes swung hii nice car\ndown the street and <-irked beside\nhis home\u2014a man was clearing up\nhis front yard\u2014Con Cummins was\ncomplaining of trouble with his\nnose\u2014Seems to have a boil In the\nproce s of getting somewhere\u2014Art\nBush spoke of newspaper men travelling in pairs for protection sake-\nSpurge Langill was looking for a\nblack widow spider\u2014George Massey\nhas a nice home in Fairview\u2014Keeps\nin nice repair\u2014Recalled the days\nwhen Len Gobe resided on Third\nstreet and wc stole his plums and\ncherries\u2014I think \"Silent\" Bill Jones\nr. 'des In that neighborhood now\u2014\nDid you ever hear Bill in an argument?\u2014Sneak up on him sometime.\nSTORMS SHATTER\n'MIRRORS'\nThunderstorms shatter the radio\n\"mirrors\" of electrical particles hundreds of miles above the earth and\nbring \"bad luck\" to radio listeners\nIn the form of poor reception. This,\nin substance, is the report of J. A.\nRatcliffe, of Cambridge's Cavendish Laboratory, to the British Association for thc Advancement of\nScience.\nThe radio \"mirrors,\" which reflect\nradio waves and make possible\ntransmission over long distances,\nare in thc ionosphere. Each mirror\nis a layer of air atoms split apart\nand in this way electrified. Radio\nwaves bounce off the under side of\nthese layers and are reflected back\nto earth. Mr. Ratcliffe used radio\nsignals to study the height of such\nreflcctir. layers during thunderstorms. The method is essentially\nan \"echo\" one and similar to the\nsystem of determining the depths\nof the ocean by sending sound\nwaves and waiting for the echo.\nHe found one electrical layer 78\nmiles above the earth before a\nthunderstorm arrived. During the\nstorm the electrical discharge pushed the layer down to 65 miles. With\nthe cessation of the storm the height\nof the layer rose again to 78 miles,\nbut within fifteen minutes it mounted to 93 miles. The electrical reflecting surface, therefore, undergoes great oscillatory motion during the storm.\nBecause of the up and down motion the fidelity of radio reception\nvaries d'oring the thunderstorm\njust as a beam of light reflected\nfrom a still pool is greatly different\nfrom that reflected by the water in\nthe pool when waves arc stirred up\nin it.\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWI. NELSON. B.C~-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. 27. 1934 *\nSTONE OF SCONE TO BE IN THE\nPUBLIC EYE\nA ipeciil object of Interest, even\nveneration, wlil be the Coronation\nchair, datli fro a the time of -W-\nwtrd I, and enclosing the \"stone of\ndestiny\" \u2014 the Stone of Scone \u2014\nwhen the royal jubilee celebration\ntake: place next year.\nBetore Edward I carried lt to\nEngland the kings of Scc.land had\nbeen crowned, while leatc' c * it,'\nfor centuries. The chair ii Kept in\nWestminster Abbey, covered with\na cloth of gold.\nAs the accepted itory of the coronation stone goes it originally came\nfrom Egypt. From Egypt it waa\ntaken to Spain. And then there was\na king of Spain who wanted to conquer Ireland. In hii i overweening\npride he took the stone with him\nthat he might be crowned king of\nIreland on it. But the Irish beat\nhim and robbed him ot his stone.\nIt went to Scotland ln the wars,\nit came to England in the wars. War\ntook the st*****\"- from r'-ce to I'-re.\nThe ' jigs of Scotland were crowned on tt up to and including John\nBalliol. Then the English kl ((i up\nto and Including the present King.\nThere Is a legend, of whatever\ncredibility that suffragette bomb\nplaced on the chair exploded but\ndamaged neither chair nor stone.\nAnother tale touches the imagination, but lacks probability, despite\nits atmosphere. It concerns the innumerable initials carved on the\nworn timbers of the coronation\nchair. Many people blame the\nWestminster boys, and the itory is\nthat one of them got himself locked\nin the abbey all night to carve his\nname on the seat itself.\nOne nlctures him In tht twilight\nwith those king's tombi ill round\nhim, and Edward Ill's sword tnd\nshield beside him, md tht helm\nmd taddle of the victor ot Agin-\ncourt on the beam ibove, forming\nweird shipes: the Westminster boy\nwho declared ill poslble historic\nghosts surely deserves hli baUad!\n\"I hoped Uut the German guide\nwho annotated so comprehensively\nfor his large flock wu telling thii\nstory,\" comments t recent writer,\nwho viewed the itone with othet\ncurious observers. \"Certainly the\nFrench guide, with a scarcely smaller flock, omitted it. He wis logic-\ncal ana exact, dropping 'dry1 facts\nlike biscuits.' He went very quickly\npast the chair md the itone. But\nhe paused at Edward Ill's iword of\nstate. 'Grande epee,' he said firmly,\n'huit kilos!' \"\nRound the stone, which, legend\nsays, ii the one used as a plUow by\nJacob, appears the words engraved\non tt: \"lf fatei go right, where'er\nthis stone ii found, the Scots of thlt\nrealm be found.\"\nThere li mother coronation atone\nIn England, 'twas uied by the ancient Saxon kings. Its royal purposes are abandoned. It stands in\nthe market place of Kingston. It\nalso contains inscriptions \u2014 the\nnames of seven kings\u2014but lt has\naltogether failed to attach to itself\na living md growing legend. It Is\nblack, and has a lumpish thrusting\nshape such as one would expect of\na sacred stone. And the Kingston\ninhabitants are very proud of it.\nIt mlrron the name of the town.\nGARGLING FOR SORE THROAT HAS\nBEEN PROVEN OF NO GREAT VALUE\nThat popular method of nesting\na sore throat, gargling, hu been subjected to scientific scrutiny and\nfound  wanting.\n\"Gargling Is Ineffective and should\nbe replaced by the gravity Irrigation\nmethod,\" Dr\u00bb. William Snow and J.\nK. Stern, of New -Tork, reported to\nthe American Medical association.\nTheir conclusion was baaed on\ntests ln which subjects gargled wltb\na thin .liquid suspension of barium\nwhile x-ray picture! of the head\nand neck were made. The subjects\ntried violent gargling, gentle gargling and tilting the head backward\nand letting the liquid run aa fu\nback as poaalble without gargling\nThe X-ray pictures ahowed that\nwith all these methods the tongue\nti firmly pressed agalnit the soft\npalate ln auch a way that tbe liquid can not reach tbe throat.\nGravity Irrigation! with the held\nand neck bent, such as many physicians use tn treating the throat,\nwere found to be lucoeuful ln getting the liquid back Into the throat.\nCONTRACT\n. BRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nA VERY IMPORTANT RULE\nSome rulei ire important enough\nto embroider on some players' pyjamas, so that they may be read\nnight and morning. Here is one\nsuch rule: With the same top honor the shorter the suit the greater\niti probable defensive value. Discregard of thia important rule alone\nenabled South'! opponents to icore\ngame and rubber. Perhaps he will\nbe more careful next time.\nI\n\u2666 10 61\nftlt\n\u2666 10 9 8\n\u2666 8746\n\u2666 A742\nVK664\n\u2666 A2\nf-AlOZ\n77.\ni\n\u2666 KQ9S\ntAJS\n\u2666 64 \u00bb\n\u2666 948\nHUMANS INHABITED JAVA 40,000\nYEARS AGO\nHomo soloensli, a prehistoric race\nthat lived ln Java 40,000 years or\nmore ago, had tool! and weapon! resembling those of Neanderthal Man\nIn Europe..\nThla li the conclusion of Dr. P. V.\nVan Stein Callcnfels, based on a\nstudy of a large collection of audi\nImplement! ot itone, bone and horn\ncollected on a terrace of the River\nSolo. Thla terrace wu apparently\nformed during pleistocene or loe\nAge times. The animal bonea found\nassociated with the relic* of human\noccupation Included an extinct elephant, a hlppopotamua, and other\nanlmala no longer known ln Java.\nTHE ULTIMATE\nFLEA\nDrouoht Endangers\nPlants in Winter\nThere arc droughts in winter as\nwell as in summer, and the winter\ndroughts are as likely to cause severe damage to plants that have to\nface them, said Prof. Howard E.\nPulling of Wellesley College, In\nan address at Bostoi under the auspices of Science Service.\n\"When a northerner talks of\nplants being winter-killed, he generally thinks that they die of cold.\nThis is rarely true for any but tropical olants,\" Prof. Pulling explained. \"For instance, those evergreens\nthat were transplanted this fall\nhave damaged roots. Unless they\nare given extra amount\/ of water\nJust as long as the ground can absorb It, they may enter the winter\nwithout enough to last them until\nsnrinr. When what Chaucer called\nthe \"Drought of Mnrch\" arrives with\nIts bright sun and high winds, the\nlast of their inadequate stores will\nvanish into the air, and almost over\nnight they will turn brown and probably die.\"\nEmma Goldman finds the close ot\nher revolutionary days bitter and\ntragic. The Bourbons,. bourgeoise,\ncapitalistic police agents, md old\ntime exploiters are not the dark\nfigures on her clouded horizon. The\noppressors are the radicals, the extremists, md the men of blood and\niron who have sought and obtained\npower in the name of revolution\nmd humanity.\nRussia is no land of light md hope\nto this veteran of revolutionary\nthought It is only mother land of\ntyranny and oppression. Emma says\nthat the barbarity ot Fascism and\nNaiism is condemned by persons\nindifefrent to the \"Golgotha of the\nRussian politicals.\"\n\"Men and women with a heroic\nrecord of revolutionary activity,\npersons who have consecrated\nthemselves to their ideals, who went\nthrough untold sufferings under the\nRomanoffs, are maligned, misrepresented, dubbed with vile names,\nand hounded without mercy.\" Emma names some of the victims \u2014\nNikolai Rogdayeve, Katherine Bre*\nshkovsky, Maria Spiridonova, Angelica Balabonor. These and other\npioneers of Russian revolution who\nsuffered under czardom have had\na martyrdom of arrest, exile, torture, md death under the G.P.U.\nmd Stalin's commi* lata.\nThe terrorism under Fascism and\nNaziism, the martyrdom of Erich\nMuhsam, the agony of Enrico Mal-\natesta, Emma Ts forced to understand, the doctrines of present day\nGermany and Italy being for the\nextermination of the anarchists and\nAnarcho-syndicalists.\nEmma, in brief, ii merely surveying a familiar scene. \"Great fleas\nhave little fleas upon their backs to\nbite 'em, md little fleas have lesser\nfleas, md so on ad infinitum. And\nbt great fleas themselves, in turn,\nhave greater fleas to go on, while\nthese again have greater still md\ngreater still, md so on.\"\nSome aspects of Simeon Fess\nmight appear dangerously radical\nto Andrew Mellon, although it\nwould pain Mr. Fess to discover it.\nDr. Tugtfell, if he gave Mr. Fess a\nthought, would think of him as\nsomething geological rather than\nbiological. Norman Thomas regards Dr. Tugwell as a half-baked\ntheorists, with his feet stuck in\nTory capitalism. Zack Foster regards Dr. Thomai as a dilettante\nevangelist whose ideas are too\nfeeble to merit the consideration\nof an intelligent revolutionary.\nZack is regarded by the comrades\not the Third Internationale as a\nskimmed milk representative of\nMarxism In a land ripe for the overthrow of capitalism. And so It\ngoes.\nThe curious, open-mouthed person, thinking that somewhere there\nmust be m Idea to oure, so transparently and dominatingly altruistic\nthat it would stand out as the final\nhaven ot mm, the safe harbor of\nall his aspirations and agonized\nefforts to attain the unattainable,\nseeks in vain. Whatever form Eden\nlakes, from some part of lt arises the\nBronx cheer of a critic who has\nlooked it over and found it wron\u00bb.\nNo idealist ii ideal. No radical Is\nradical enough for some other radical. No one's purposes are sufficiently free from dron, impurity,\nand stupidity to comms-1 the unrestricted admiration of tome one\nelse with other plans.\nEach critic haa hia critics, each\nrevolutionary his transcend-otai\nopponent, each flea his other fleas.\nSomewhere there ought to be the\nultimate flea whom no one could\nreach, a flea unvexed by any others.\nBut he Is never discovered.\nAUNT HET\n\"Maybe Tom don't care If his wife\nsmokes But If that's so. he don't\ncare what else she does, either \"\n\u2666 J 8\nVQ102\n\u2666KQJ7S\n\u2666 KQJ\nSouth's score stood tt 80 points\u2014\nthe worst possible time to make a\nlight opening bid. His opponents\nwere vulnerable, with no score toward! the second game. Bidding\nwent: South 1 diamond, wett doubled, East, 1 spade, South 2 dlamondi, West 3 spades, to urge partner to bid game, provided he held\n4 probable tricks; East, 4 spades,\nby slightly stretching his values,\nending bidding.\nAs most playen would have done,\nSouth lead hli K of diamonds,\ndummy's ace won the trick. Three\nrounds of trumps followed, leavinr\nthe lead in dummy. A low heart\nwas led. South's Q won on a finesse\nof the J. South led hii K of clubs.\nDummy's ace won. The ace, K md\na long heart ln dummy won the\nnext 3 tricks. The declare discarded \u25a0 losing club on dummy's lonn\nhetrt. Nine tricks had been plryed,\nof which the declaring side had\nwon 8.\nSouth was given a diamond trick.\nThen he took a club trick, giving\nhim his third md last trick. Dummy's last trump ruffed the last\ndiamond held by Eait, and the declarer's last trump rutted the third\nclub beld by dummy.\nThe average defensive value of 8\ncards headed by K-Q-J is only 0.84\nof t trick. The average defensive\nvalue of 3 cards consisting of\nK-Q-J is 1.34 tricks agalnit a trump\ncall, or just one-ha'' probable\ntrick greater than the same honors\nin the longer suit. It Is proper to\nopen thc longer suit at no trumps,\nor against a trump call when you\nwish to weaken the declarer by\nconstantly ruffing him. In this case\nSouth should have led his K of\nclubt, instead of the K of the longer suit.\nThe opening lead of the K of\nclubi will give the defenc- rs 2\nclub tricks, 1 heart trick and 1 diamond trick. This will def ea' the contract a single trick. It you must lead\na K from K-Q, lead it from i long\nsuit, but leid the K from K-Q-J\nfrom a shorter suit. These rules tor\nmaking opening leads arc ot vital\nimportance.\nTEN YEARS AGO\nQUESTIONING THE NEUROTIC PATIENT\nBY JAMES W  BARTON, M.O.\nBRITISH DEATH\nDUTIES\nIt is exactly forty years, the London Observer says since Great Britain first imposed death duties on\nall property, whether real or personal, settled or unsettled \u2014 \"the\ngreatest financial revolution since\nWalpole,\" as it was once called. This\nwas not the first British \"death\nduty\" ever enacted. A probate duty\nwas first imposed in 1894; a legacy\nduty in 1780, md a succession duty\nin 1853 but it was not until 1894\nthat a graduated tax was imposed\non the full value of estates.\nI The Observer recordi the gross\namount collected from the death\nduties since August, 1894, as \u00a31,493 -\n962,806, of which more than \u00a31,000 -\n000,000 has been collected since the\nclosing of the war. \"It Is interesting.\"\nthat newspaper comments, \"to consider how much greater thc national\nincome would be today \"iad the \u00a31 -\n493,000,000 been left Intact Reckoning a yield of 5 per cent, It would\nhave been about \u00a375,000,000 a year\ngreater, on which income tax and\nsurtax would jyie!d about \u00a330,000.-\n000.\"\nThere probably are fewer than\n100 trumpeter swans left in thc\nUnited States.\nFIRST AID MIGHT HAVE\nSAVED BARTHOU\nAccording to reports of the Marseilles double tragedy. Louis Barthou, French Foreign Minister, literally bled to death because the\ntaxi in which he waa being taken\nto a hospital was delayed for two\nhours in a traffic jam and the oo-\niceman accompanying him did not\nknow how to apply a tourniquet\nproperly.\nThis provides a ihockingly striking example of the value of universal training in first aid. Barthou's\nlife might have been saved by\nknowledge possessed by many a\nschool boy in America and doubtless in France, also, Science Service points out.\nThe first principle of first aia\ntreatment is to keep the patient\nlying down, without moving him\nfrom the scene of the accHent,\nuntil a physician arrive! or It has\nbeen determined that the injury is\nnot serious.\n\"Keep cool and do not be hurried\ninto moving the injured person, unless absoluWv necessery, until a\nclear idee of the neture and er\u00bb*snt\nof the Injury is obtained end first\naid has been rendered,\" is the first\nstep Is directions for the first aid\nissued by the Red Crois.\nThe necessity of moving the injured person is of courie r* \u2022\u2022\u2022--'ter\nof judgement, but !\u25a0 wer.-\"*** t-'cen\nto mean moving him from a gas-\nfil'ed room into the open air oi from\na bt|ming building or other dang-\neroui spot.\n(From Nelaon Dilly Newi of Oct.\n27,1924)\nJtck Wright, former Nelson boy,\nmd member ot the Canadian Davis\ncup team, won another title when\nhe beat D. R. Morrice In the final\nfor Canadian indoor tennis championship at Montreal.\n\u2022   .   \u2022\nJoseph Smith, prominent Nelson\nsports worker, died here yesterday\nat the age of 42.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nWilliam Irvine, a Nelson delegate\nto the grand lodge of Knights of\nPythias held at Revelstoke reported that over 300 were present. New\nlodgei had been started during the\nyear at Kimberley, Corbin and\nNorth Bend, he said.\n20 YEAttS AGO\n(From Nelion Dtlly Newt of Oct.\n27,1913)\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Miller have\nreturned from a trip to Halifax.\n\u2022 *   *\nW. R. Cochrane, police magistrate at Grand Forks, is a Nelson\nvisitor.\n\u2022 *   *\nR. Randolph Bruce of Wllmer\nspent yesterday here and will leave\ntoday by Crow boat for his home.\n\\.   .   .\nConstruction h-s been started by\nJ. S. Deschamps, Rossland lum*-**.*-\nman, ot t new mill nt Kirnalr**1. It\nwill have a capacity of 20,000 feet\nper day. >\n30 YEARS AGO\n(From Nelson Dally Newi of Oot.\n27,1904)\nJ. W. Ross, J. P., died Oct. 25 at\nhis home tt Ymlr.   He had resided there, since 1897.\n^       \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nW. B. Poole of Nelson has been\nname 1 president and director of\nGreat Northern Mine-  I td.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nBorn, Oct. 28, to Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Darcy, McDonald block, a\ndaughter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nJ. E. Annable has received a letter from his brother who is Conservative candidate for a federal\nseat in Asslniboia, declaring that\neven money was being bet at Reglna that the Conservatives will\ncarry the general election.\nA patient may consult a number\nof pbyalclana who, after examination,\ncannot find any c uu for the symptoms oi which the patient complains.\nTbe examination! may Include the\nteeth, tonsils, nose, throat, metabollam teat\u2014rate it which the body\nproceaeea work when at reat\u2014x-ray\nexamination! and examination ot\nblood, urine, and fiecea\u2014waitei from\nlnteatlne.\nSome physicians wlll dlacuu the\naymptomt carefully and try to abow\nthe patient that even lt they are\npresent there li nothing about them\nthat need cauae any worry, other\nphya'lchni may bluntly itate tbat\nthere li really nothing wrong becauu the complete and thorough\nexamination reveala no trouble.\nNow there may not be an; physical or organic trouble, but there\nla trouble somewhere and lt li the\npatient psychiatrist or nerve specialist to whom the patient is uae-lly\nunt thit fimlly geta at the cauae\nof the lymptoma.\nFrom the hlsto-y of the case ai\nsupplied him by the other pbyalclana and by hli flrat questioning\nof the patient, he knows that there\nla no organic symptoms and that\ntbe   patient   haa  some   reason   for\nhiving thi lymptomi or complaints\nof tbe symptom!.\nAi Dr. D. Thorn ln the America\nJournal of paychlatry polnti ou\nthe question la, \"Wbat purpose dol\nthe neurdala -imaginary symptoms-\nserve ln the life of the Indlviduill\nIn other words there la Krrxtbli\nIn the home, bualneae or profeMlom\nlife of the patient tbit u upeettlt\nthe patlent'a balance to aome extol\nand he or abe li utlng tht \"aym|\ntoma\" aa a aort of outlet or pn\ntectlon.\nThU meam tbat tbe doctor h\nto queatlon and queatlon tbe\ntlent to find out Juit whit li \"ui\nderneith.\" It may be a feeling I\nInjustice In thi office, a lack\nlove ot reaped in tbe bome. perha\na Uttle Jealouay, not getting hil i\nher own way about thlnga, a ftelli\nof belnt alighted, or aome oth\nalight or serious matter.\nIt Isn't any wonder that eiamln\ntloni by these psychiatrists an loi\nand frequent as It take* some tin\nto get the Pitlent'e confidence li\nhave him fully unburden him\"\nabout bis \"wrongs.\" The peychlatrl\nfinally learni the \"reiaon\" for\nsymptoms and treats tbl patient \u25a0\ncordlngly.\nWEEKLY WEATHER BULLETIN\nFor Western and Central Ctnada,\nembracing British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and\nOntario.\nMonday, Oct. 39, 1934.\u2014In most\nsections of the c.ntral provinces\nslightly warmer and unsettled, with\nlight precipitation, especially about\nthe south and south-eastern sections.\nTuesday, Oct. 30. \u2014 Unsettled\nweathtr ln general, but not much\nChangs In temperatures. Most of\nclouds carrying preclptatlon drift\ntb Oreat Lakes regions and southeast.\nWednesday, Oct. 31. \u2014 Xn west\nchanges to colder and ln general\nbecomes clearer except about the\nsoutheast of central provinces and\non Pacific slope, where light precipitation Is expected.\nThursday, Hoy 1.\u2014-Generally clear,\nmild weather, but a cold wave aoon\ndevelops ln the northwest, though\nln southeast temperatures remain\nnearly stationary with some precipitation.\nFriday, Nov. 2.\u2014Weather ln nearly\nall sections now turns clearer and\ncolder, with but light preclptatlon,\nmoslty ln southeastern sections.\nSaturday, Nov. 8.\u2014This Is a per-\nlad of clear, cold weather In nearly\nall sections, though about this time\nsome moderating ln tbe west.   -\nSunday, Nov. 4. -Generally clear\nand cold, but ln central regions\nclouds up and In a few spots very\nlight snows, mostly about the Great\nLakes regions.\nWeek Oct. 39 to No. 4, 1934, ln\ncentral provinces begins with mild\nor warm. weather for the season\nand probably some precipitation,\nthought no heavy storm Is expected\nduring the week. About Nov. 3 a\nclearing spell sets In from the west\nand temperatures in general decline\nto lower levels. At last ot week lrt\noentral and southeastern sections\nsome cloudy weather is expected\nbut probably not much preclptatlon.\nthough light snows may occur along\nths southern borders and In the\nregions about Great Lakes of Manitoba\nWith the beginning of November\nIn theee regions the winter cold\nmoet generally sets ln with a cold\nspap, and this week the comparatively mild weather of late autumn\nwill  probably give way to a clear.\ncold spell, permanently closing\nopen waters wtth the winter\nIn the basin of the aouth Saak\nchewan river and most sections n\nthe southern borders there\nhowever, several warmer periods\nto the last of December. ThU j\nthe milder days, according to\ncharted forecasts, would seem\ncome about November IS, SS,\nand In December near 15 and 37.\nCUSHION SOCKET\nCOMFORT\nFOR OLD A NEW LIMB\nCiliary Artificial Limb Factory\nCaloary. Alt!.\nRuptured?\nAftir Handling Truasei miny\nyun wi hive decided thi\n' .TTLE DOCTOR TRUSJ\nle thi belt on thi mu\nfeet, and ti tbe anawi\nto all rupture auffir\nera Neat, almple, effl\nclent. no ateel to ru\u00bb\nno elaatlc. no pm\nsure on the bick c\nhlpa no leg atrip\nweight 0 oz No mlt\nter now good vour true\nta If Interested ln tb\nneweit and best, al\nthli one Free demonstration. Al\nwork done lubject to your doc\ntor'e approval unlimited fr*\naervlce at ur one of 200 Weit.\nern Aaenti.\nWRITE TO\nSCHIND'.ER ARTIFICIAL\nLIMB CO.\n407 Sprague Ave., Spokini, Wuk\nts*S\u00ab!W'\"W\"ffiraa!!\u00bbK1S\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\nWhen\nOther\nBaby\nFall Sown Annuals    Food\nFailed\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\nCentral Pren Girden Expert\nIn most seed catalogues you will\nfind directions for planting annuals\nsomething like this: \"Sow seed in\nopen ground as soon as all danger\nfrom frost is past.\" ,\nOnce in a while you will read of\nplanti that should be started early\nindoori, as they have a long period\nof growth before flowering, and\nwould not otherwise come to maturity.\nMention Is rarely made of a third\npossible and very practical way of\nsowing seed, though it is often the\nmost satisfactory way of all. This\nis to sow the teed in the fall. The\nprocess Is no different from the\nsowing of seed in the spring, but it\nil done either late in the fall just\nbefore a freeze, or else somewhat\nearlier, so as to give the plants a\nchance to germinate and become\nhusky young seedlings before winter sets ln \u25a0\nMany of our native annuals live\nover in this way, and there is no\nreason why the grrden plants should\nnot do so as well. When a tender\nplant like chhkweed can live ovm\nfrom plants which germinated in\nthe fall, to become the rank garden\npest that it is in th\" spring doesn't it\nseem lotical thit other plants less\ntender should be able to do the\nsame?\nm\nMothers forced to find a substltu\nfood for their babies have bee\ngratefully surprised to find in Pt\ncific Milk\u2014so easily obtained an\nat so little cost\u2014just the nourisl\nment they have been seeking. Tt\nin a number of cases Pacific Mil\nhas proven itself when all othi\nfoods have failed. It has even n\nstored children who were seriousl\nill.   Doctors recommend iL\nPacific Milk\n\u2022100% B.C Owned md Controlled\nPlint it Abbutstord\n'\u00ab? \u25a0\u2022trttimiMSili\ntot\nMINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are a suitable\ngrade for all mining\nand other camp build-\nin**?. It is strong\n. waterproof, light and\nvery easy to handle.\nDistrict Distributor!\nWood, Val a   ce\nHardware Co.; Ltd.\n\"FESS\"\nOil Heating\nin your home will add\nmuch to your enjoyment\nof life.\nIT'S QUIET\nIT'S AUTOMATIC\nIT'S CONVENIENT\nPhom ui ind we wlll demon-\n\u2022trite thli auperlor oil burner.\nKOOTENAY\nPlir-ins*.' Heating\nCompiny, Limited\nSkoting on Water\nThe belt lubrlc ti allow motion\nbetween two pieces of metal \/hen\nthey act ln the fashion of a small\nboy ikating on Ice, lays \"Science.\"\nWhere high pressure and elttreme\ntemperaturei occur the best lubricants are not the conveniently\npistelike greases but solid wax-like\nmaterials. Such lubricants act very\nmuch as ice does under the runner\nof a skate; they turn to i liquid and\nthen back to the solid form. Dr.\nWilllsmi pc'nled out thit one reall\nikates on a film of witer formed\nby the pressure of \u25a0 skite runner.\nThe water turns back to solid ice\nas soon as the pressure ia removed.\nWHAT!\nAbout that furnace of yours, does it\nneed repairing before the cold weather? Get our Expert to look it over.\nHeaters at All Prices\nNelson Hardware Co\u00bb\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNelton, B.C.\n,\n \u2014\n\u2014\nNET STAR WEDS\nTrack ond Field - Fishing - Motor Booting - Boxing - Wrestling - Swimming - Football\nMIh Virginia Rice, tennli itar, and her husband, Mel Johnson.\nJOE CR0N1N, BOY MANAGER,\nSOLD FOR COOL $150,000\n^     \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014^\u2014\u2014\n\u25a0Baseball's Biggest Deal Sends Joe From the\nSenators to Boston Red Sox; He Get?\na Five-Year Contract\nlatlg\n\u2022$___\u2022\nNpuis\nBaseball - Softball - Tennis - Lacrosse U Rowing - Golf - Lawn Bowling - Rugby, Etc.\nPAOI SEVEN\n-THI NIUON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. 27. 1934-\nPAGE SEVIN   Theie husklei form the forward wall of the Fordhim university teim.\nJOI CRO\n\u25a0y BILL KINO\n(Aneclatid  Prill Sporti Writer)\nBOSTON, Oct. 26 (AP).\u2014\nBaseball's biggest deal, the\n1150,000 purchase of Play-\ning-Manager Joe Cronin from\nWashin-jton Senators, today\nincreased Tom Yawkey's investment in Boston Red Sox\nto well.over the $3,000,000\nmark.\nAnd he's just itching to\nspend additional hundreds of\nthousands on the club that is\nthe pet of his numerous and\nwidely scattered holdings.\nClark Griffith, veteran owner\nof Senators, stunned the baseball world by announcing\nfrom Washington he had sold\nCronin for a price that even\novershadowed the Babe Ruth\npurchase tag of $126,000.\nNot only did Yawkey part\nwith $150,000 cash but he\nalso-threw in Lyn Lary, the\nsmart-fielding shortstop, for\nwhom about $35,000 was paid\nthe Yankees in a mid-season\ndeal.\nCronin will be given a five-\nyear contract it is intimated\nKnown as \"Boy Manager\nNo. 2,\" Cronin succeeds Stanley (Bucky) Harris, baseball's original youthful mas-\n:er mind.\nZupp Taket \"Tickle\"\nut of \"Ptp\" Tolk\nJACK RILEY IS\nMENTIONEDAS\nAMERMAN\nNewsy Lalonde Hopes\nHim to Fill Morenz'\nPlace\n] Grimm Adds Young\nCatcher to Team\nCHICAOO, Oct. 28 (AP)-Charlle\nGrimm, mmager ot Chicago Cubi\naad elected to a vice-preiidency today, made hi! flnt move to itretigth-\nen the team for IMS by trading the\nveteran pitcher. Pat Malone, to St.\nLouii Cardinal!, for a promliing\nyoung catcher, James O'Dae.i\nO'Die ii 21 yean old, \u2022 ilx-footer\nand weight ISO poundi. He played\nwith the Columbui club of the\nAmerican association lait year and\nbatted .263 for 111 garnet.\nFATHER WELL\nKNOWN HERE\nMONCTON KEEPS HER HAWKS\nAS BODYGUARD FOR TROPHY\nPercy Nlcklln\nDetermined to Retain\nAllan Cup; Shy of\nPro Contracts\n\u25a0y VICTOR SERVICE\nCentral Pren Cinadlan Sporti\nWrlttr\nMONCTON, N.B., Oct. 26.-There\nlint a chance In the world Moncton\nHawka, twice\n1 n lucceitlon\n, amateur chimpion! ot Canada, and alao in\n1934 V. S.\nchamps, being\nbroken up by\nraids of National Hockey\n' League clubi,\naccording to\n\u25a0 Percy Nlcklln,\nof Fort Prances,\nOntario, coach\nol the Allan\nCup holden.\nSammy Mc-\nMaims, of Toronto and Aubrey Webster,\nof Kenora, wingers on the Hawks,\nwill only work out with the Montreal Maroons, sayi Nicklin. McManui and Webster were offered\ncontraclt by the Maroons, but refuted to sign. The vital reason ii\nthat the aalary offered wai not\nmuch better than thit available\nfrom the Hawks. A contributing\nfactor was that the going ll much\ntougher in the N.H.L. thin in tha\namateur rinks. Still another phaie\nii that the Hawks' promoter! want\nto be fint to win the Allan mug\nthrice In luccesiion. Moreover,\nwinning tor 1939 will install the\nHawka as representatives of Canada at the 1936 Olympic games.\nMcManus and Webster will return to the Hawks for the tint\neime In the Maritime Hockey\ncague, which Includes Halifax\nWolves, St. John Beavers and Chir-\nlottetown Abbiea. Bert Connolly, of\nMontreal, Hawk wingman and\ncenter, tried out with New York\nMERCURY\nGOAL\nThe heuttwivti' delight\n\u2014no clinkers\u2014No 'dirt\n\u2014burm te ths lait cinder\u2014For range, heater er\nfurnace yen csnnet best\nthit coal \u2014 Try t Ten\nToday\nLUMP \u2014 STOVE\n$10.50     $9.00\nJHONi 797\nPOR COAL tERVICE\nRENWICKS\nRangen lut fall and will repeat\nthis year. There ll no doubt about\nhim returning to the maritime\nhockey wan. The Hawki club ll in\nfavor of their playen working out\nwith major league rotten, thui\ngaining valuable experience for the\nplayen and the team.\nNO PRO. SIGNERS\nSince the cloae ot the 1934 season\npotential signers with N.H.L. clubs\nhave repudiated their reported intentions.\nBill Gill, of Broadview, Saik.,\ngiant bad man on defence, wu to\nnave Joined thc Boiton Bruin! or\nDetroit Red Wingi. Jimmy Foiter,\nof Winnipeg, snippy goalie, wai\nrumored replacing the late \"Chuck\"\nGardiner in Chicago Black Hawk\ncage. Bill Miller, of Campbellton.\nN.B., center and defenceman, wu\nscheduled to book with Bruim.\nAll the champlonahlp team ot the\nput two seasons will be available\nfor the 34-35 season, K ii claimed\nby Pilot Nicklin, who welded together a machine assembled from\nevery province in Canada except\nBritish Columbia.\nAt goal will be Jimmy Foster, ot\nWinnipeg. Foater ii one of the best\nof amateur goalies in Canada. He\ngraduated from junior championship hockey with Elmwoodi of Winnipeg direct to the Hawks.\nOn the defence the Hawki will\nhive Bill Gill, Len Burrage, Winnipeg, and Gordon McLean, alio ot\nWinnipeg. Bill Miller of Campbell-\nton, N.B,, will do utility duty on the\nbarrier, but with the acquisition Ot\nMcLeln il expected to be seen more\noffensively. McLean ll new to the\nHawki.\nFor the offence, the Moncton\nbirdi of hockey, prey have: McManus, Toronto; Weblter, Kenora,\nOnt.; Duke McDonald, Winnipeg;\nMonty Muckle, Winnipeg; Dud\nJamea, Sunny Brae, N.B.; Bill Miller, Cimpbellton, N.B.; Bert Connolly, Montreil; Nucker Irvine, Freder-\nicton, N.B.; Charlie Manhall, Ottawa, with possibility of Rene Bou-\ndreau, of Montreal, formerly a\njunior hockeylit at Moncton, alio\nbeing on the list. James la the only\nresident of the Moncton zone Included, his home, Sunny Brae, being\na Moncton suburb. Manhall, the\noffence acquisition, wai a right\nwinger for Ottawa Shamrocki ln\ntheir tour ot Europe lut winter.\nSETTER PAID\nConilderable trouble within the\nHawki hai been reported again this\nicaion, but thii will be tolerated,\nIt li uld. Just is last winter, because of the objective. The Moncton backer! are zeiloui in their\neffort to place Moncton on the Olympic hockey map, and to eitab-\njlih Moncton u the only community to cop the big Allan trophy\nthrice in lucceitlon. Aa for the\nplayen, they reallie they are getting better wagea than prevailing in\nany of the minor pro hockey circuits, with lesi hazards and strumous buffeting typlctl of the proi.\nIn the International and Canadian-American hockey leagues, top\nsilify lut leuon and thii season,\nli tw weekly during the leaion.\nSome of the playen In theie routes,\nare getting only S30 weekly. Whereas, the Hawki are being paid $35 to\nM0 per week from the tint hockey\ntun till the skates are tucked away.\nBy AL DEMAREE\nThe college drum major and the\ncollege cheer leaden take them-\nlelvei juit u lerlouily u the member! of the football team, and have\nto train almost as hard.\nGeorge Hallas of tha Chicago\nBears, profeuional champions, tells\nme a good yam on George Trafton,\nhli former gigantic center. Trafton\nwaa pretty well brulaed up around\nthe body and he uied big piecei ot\nraw steak, cut thick under hit uniform to protect hia tore ipota.\nDuring the gama he warmed up\nand the iteaka began to feel uncomfortable. Every few minute! he\nwould reich In hit Jeney and pull\nout a piece of raw meat and throw it\naway.\nThe player oppoaite him wai icir-\ned to death, thinking Trafton was\ntearing his own flesh apart Bob\nZuppke, coach at Illinoii uys he\nhu ordered non-tickliih underwear\ntor hit athlete! io they will tike\ntheir work more seriously. Some\nplayer laughed lut year during a\n''pep-talk\" between halvei and\nblamed it on hla fuzzy underwear.\nAniwer to yesterdiy'i quutlon\u2014\nJohn Mantenuto of Rhode Island\nmade a run of 100 yardi on an intercepted forward pau in 1933.\nToday'i queatlon\u2014What player laat\nyear made the longeit mn bick of\na punt? Aniwer Monday.\nTA.A.A. HEAD\nLEAVES TRAIL\nC. Ltuder Is Trtnsferred to\nC.  M.  & S.  Comptny\nOffices st Kimberley\nCanadiens Start on\nSeason Training\nProgram\nAi Lu Canadian!' puck camp be*\nSm to itir with training activities\nlek in St. John, N.B., Jack Riley,\ntmooth-working itickhandler of the\nflying Frenchmen, and ton of Jack\nRiley Sr., well-known C.P.R. ex-\nprew man. running between Nelion and Vancouver, it being mentioned u a poulble successor to\nHowie Morenz on the Jollat and\nLaroohelle line.\nManager Lalonde hai decided to\nwork Jack with Jollat and Laro-\nchelle, and it looks like a tow-up\nbetween  the  Vancouver  Iriihmin\nTRAIL, B.C., Oet. 2S.-The city\nof Kimberley will gain by Trail'!\nlou of a capable young man ot\nathletic executive abilities; namely,\nGerry Lauder. Mr. Lauder, who for\nthe pait three yean hu been president of the Trail Amateur Athletic\nassociation hu been -transferred\nfrom the Tadanac office! of the\nC. M. k S. company to Kimberley.\nHe left Trail Friday afternoon on\nthe 5:25 train.\nDuring hii termi of office the\ndestiniea ot the aaaoclatlon have\nbeen guided to th* hearty approval\nof all membera ot the association\nand clubi which it governs.\nAs il the customary procedure,\nW. O. Williami, vice-prendent, will\nin all probability take over the\npreildential dutlu until next March\nor April when the association will\nhold iti annual meetinf and election of officen.\nMr. Lauder wai an active participant of rugby up until a few\nyun ago and wai one of the belt\nswimmers in this dlitrlct.\nTORONTO LEAFS\nHAVE HARD DAY\nGALT, Ont., Oct 26 (CP)-The\nToronto Mipl* Leafi of the Nitlonil\nHockey league today held their\n\u25a0tiffest practice ao far this leason\nwith the defence \"laying it on\" and\nhanding opposing forward! stiff\nJolta on their way goalwird. Conny\nSmythe, here to iee hii Leah perform, addreiied the Kiwanii club\nat their luncheon. The Leaf mentor\nwai Introduced by \"Ace\" Ballejr.\nSmythe laid pro hockey offered\nu much u any profusion. It the\nlayer took care of himielf and wis\nJirifty, when the time came to hang\nup hla skates he would be ln a financial position where he would\nnot need to worry u to his future.\n\"TIP\" O'NIILL WILL\nJOIN VANCOUVIMTIS\nCALGARY, Oct. 26 (CP).-\nChirles \"Tip\" O'Nell. wbo wu given\nhil release lut WMk by Buffalo\nBisons of the International Hockey\nleegue.'vMl line up with Vaacouver\nLloni of the Northwutern league\nthii winter, it WM announced here\ntonight.\nMoreover, thoie who stayed ln\nMonclon during th* off-ieason had\ntheir board and room paid for.\nHandling the Hawka ii a difficult\nproblem. Although individually\nitrong In amatuir hockey, they are,\npersonally, tough to guide, and keep\non amiable termi with each other.\nLast winter the westternen and the\neasterner! on the team had a feud,\nat the start of the icaion. but all ex-\nSect to play a winning brand of\nockey.\nJACK  RILEY\nand Pete Lcpine for the tint line\ncenter job.\nMr. Riley Sr. haa the following\ndope on the Canadlens which appeared in an eaatern Canada publication:\n\"After a light ikating werkout at\nthe Forum at St. John, N.B., Wed-\nneidiy evening, when the playen\ntook to the ice like a duck to water,\nthe candidate! tor Job! with the\nCinadien Hockey club thii coming\ntenon worked out Thursday morn-\nin\u00bb in team formation for the fint\ntime.\n20 FORWAROt OUT\n\"Manager Lalonde did not overwork hli men, ordering hli 20 forward! out for 15 minutes each only.\nSix Unu were lent out during the\nmorning, three on each end of th*\nrink, two mor* men, who had not\nnporttd up to noon today, Desilets\nind Frankie LeBlanc, will get their\ntint laate of hockey Saturday\nmorning. They were expected ln\nlite Friday afternoon.\n\"There ii not the preponderance\not defencemen there wu at the\ntraining camp last year, but lix are\non hand, Caraon, Portland, Sylvio\nMentha, Jenkins, Arcand and Savage.\n\"Lalonde will gradually Increase\nthe practice period at thii week goea\non, and probably by Saturday he\nstales he will order two workout!\na day. <I\n\"Th* opening ikating practice has\nnot al yet hid iti effect on the\nfiliyen' legs, but tbey were expect-\nng the limbs to stiffen up by Friday. Continuoua work will won limber them up again after thc tint\nreaction.\n\"Lalonde hai decided to work\nJick Riley with Joliat and Lafo-\nchelle. The aoft spoken John McGill il another who was well\ngrounded in the fundamentals ot\nsock apd block. John look! like a\nprofessor of theology, hu the air\nof a chuterfield off ice. He was a bit\nof a buzz ln amateur hockey, who\nseldom atarted anything, but wu a\nneat finither. So Canucki are getting plenty Of moxie in their lineups with this twain. In addition\nthere it Jenkins, whom no leu a\njudge than Letter Patrick rates as\nOne of the best blocken in the\ngame.\n\"Jack Riley should help a lot He\nwu well seasoned lut year, and\nadvanced to the point where he li\nbeing talked about ai flnt line center. When it comei to further ipeed\nthere ii alw-yi Wlldore Larochelle.\nGMrge Mentha and Armand Mon-\ndou who can alwayi be relied on to\nturn on the heat at the least opportunity.\"\nGoldman Wins $812\non Horse Races\nDALLAS, Oct 28 (AP)-The luck\nDavid (Spec) Goldman ot Dallas\nneeded but didn't hav* playing\nagalnit Lawson Little in the finals\not the United Statu amateur golf\ntournament thii year, appeared today when he cashed a 12 daily\ndouble ticket for $11240 at the Fair\npark race track here.\nHe selected Waterfront and Game\nAnnie ai the winnen in his combination ticket and they won In\nthc tint and lecond races.\nAT KIMBERLEY\nPlayers and Fans Are\nResponding to\nSnow\nWiU] the Trail and Rouland hockey camps already astir, the Kimberley camp is now waking from\nIts lummer \"hibernation.\" Flurries\nof snow ln the mining city have\nbrought hockey talk, and the club\nhad its fint meetlnt latt night. Just\nwhat wu decided, suggested or\nplanned, ll ai yet unknown. There\nii no doubt, however, that u remit ot the fine ihowing made by\nthe devastating Dynamiters last\nspring, that the hockey boys and\ntans are anxioui to iee things start.\nThe president and committee have\nfurther plans for putting Kimberley\non the hockey map again this year,\nand ther* art any number of fani\nJuit waiting to give their lupport to\nsuch an idea.\nNothing hu been forwarded from\nKlmberley ai to training practises,\nbut undoubtedly, like the Smoke\nEaters and the Miners, they are buiy\ngetting lome ot the lummer wrln-\nklei out of muscles md are looking\ncarefully to \"wind.\"\nKlmberley will have the cream\nof lut year's team and two or thre*\nntw men. Their namu ahd pedigrees are unknown here, but they\nare expected to be good.\nGOLF FACTS\nNOT THEORIES\n\u25a0y ALEX. MORRItON\nThe reil miming of roiuistencj in\ngolf teemt to be the subject ot much\ndoubt.\nCertainly there It little doubt ai\nto the rareness of conilittney ln\nperformance. Yet any number of\ngolteri believe thty are reilly con-\nalitent performers.\nThty alwaya picture themaelvw going 'round In flgurei dote to their\nbett scores, and when they ahoot\nmany atrokea above thtlr expectation! they dismiss Uie upset by calling It m \"off diy.\" A! a matter\nof tact their good icorei were \"luok\"\nscores.\nIt they itopped to inalyia thoae\ngood scores thty would be amazed\n\u2022t the number ot \"breika\" that\nalden them ln cutting of! strokes.\nThi reilly consistent playen, like\nSarazen and other first-flight pro*,\niliy golf that la mechanically and\nlUlculy lound.\nThere U Uttle chinci ot error In\nthtlr iwlngi. And the secret Is\ntrained muscles.\nDEFINITELY TURNED PRO\nBERLIN, Oct 26 (AP)-Walfrled\nWinkler and Arthur Gelaa today\nclairtied a new world motorcycle\nipeed record of 1817.0 kilometen\n(approximately 1123 mllu) ln 24\nhoun, an average ot about 47 miles\nan hour, tor enginu of below 100\ncubic centimeter piston displacement\nSENATOR BOSS JINGLES COIN HE\nGOT FOR CRONIN-SEEKS HURLER\nAMATEUR HOCKEY\nSCHOOL CLOSES\nDOWN IN LONDON\nLONDON, Ont, Oct. 21 <CP>-\nThe amateur hockey ichool, which\nhu been operated for the put few\ndays by the London club of tht\nInternational Pro league, closed its\ndoo:. today.\nLack of promising pupils who had\nofficial sanction of the amateur authorities wai said to be the reaion\nfor ciuses being called off.\nUM. RUGGERS\nCHANGE MINDS\nThey Want to Pity Alberta in\n\u25a0Htrdy Cup Playdowns\nVANCOUVER. Oct. 26 (CP)-The\nUniversity of Britlih Columbia today reversed their decision not to\ncompete this season for the Hardy\ncup, emblematic of western Canada\nintercollegiate rugby supremacy,\nand they wired to the Univeraity ot\nAlberta offering them a guarantee\nof $100 and 90 per cen' of the gate\ntor a game to be played here on\nMonday, November S.\nThe Albertana have already been\nguaranteed $1110 to come to Vancouver to meet Meralomas. British\nColumbia senior champions, In a\ntwo-game western Canada semifinal scries as part of the Dominion\nsenior pliy-down program. Theie\ngamei will be played November 1\nand 3.\nPrevlouily, Britlih Columbia Varsity had refuted to participate in\nthe Hlrdy cup competition, laying\nthey would retire from Canadian\nIntercollegiate rugby and would\nplay. American football with college\nteams from the northwestern United\nStatei. \u201e\nTV guarantee, though small,\nwould Cover the Albertana' expenses In remaining here from Saturday to Monday for the intcrvar-\nslty game.\nGOLF FINAL IS\nALL CALIFORNIA\nMrs Cheney tnd Miss Traung\nFinalists In Western\nTitle Play\nLOS ANGELES. Oct 26 (APV-\nCellfomla. already ln poueulon of\nthree of the world's greateit golfing titlei, wu usured of tht United\nStates woman't wutern championihip todtrv \"when two of the golden\nstate's stan advanced to the final\nround.\nMri. L. D. Cheney, aeven timei'a\nllat* champion and twice winner\not the wutem title, defeated Mn.\nW. E. Shepherd, Lot Angclei, 9 and\n4, while Misi Dorothy Traung. 20-\nyur-old San Franciico girl, turned\nback the middle weit's last hope,\nwhite-haired Mn. Melvin Jones of\nChicago, by the name icore. Mrs.\nCheney, playing the finest golf of\nher career, was favored to win tomorrow over the 36-hole i.*\u2014-\nAlso Must Pick New Manager\nfor Washington; Pleased\nWith Big Trade\nBy DILLON ORAHAM\nWASHINGTON, Oct 26 (AP).\n\u2014Clark Orlfflth, mitttr trader of\ntha big luguet, Jlngltd money\nipltnty In hli Joint todiy\u2014a remit of battball'i blggut swap In\nytira\u2014and looked for a pitcher\nand pirhapi an lnfielder to buy.\nwith hli turplut cuh.\nTha   gray-haired   pruldent  of\ntht Wuhlngton American leigue\nclub aold Managtr Joieph Cronln\nto Boiton Rid Sox for a huge\nturn and arranged tht deal io that\nCronln,   who   recently   married\nGriffith'! idopted daughter, would\nbt   playing   managtr  of   Boiton\nundtr a flvi-yiir oontraet By tht\nUlt, howtvtr, Griffith knocked a\nhugt  holt In  hit  inf Itld  and\nbrought down upon hlmulf tht\nproblem of selecting anothtr man-\nagir for hli National!.\nAlthough he got Lrnford Lary,\nthe Botton shortstop, In the trade,\nand may use him, baseball experts\nhere rather expect Griffith to uie\nLary in another swap that will bring\na stronger player to the Senators.\nThe \"old fox\" concede! he il in\nthe market for a top-notch pitcher\nor two and may need a first baseman it Joe Kuhel, who was out part\nof last aeason with a broken ankle,\ntails to regain hit past form.\nAtked if Babe Ruth might be\nchosen as field boss of the Senaton, Griffith laid he hadn't conaldered Ruth or any other baieball\nmm for the Job.\nMcManus, Webster\nto Make Debut\nTuesday\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 26 (CP).-Thr**\namateurs aspiring for berths In professional hockey will remain on the\nsidelines tomorrow night when 16\nregulars and one rookie of both\nNew York Rangers and Montreal\nMaroom fight earpeilly for approval of their coaches, and a ipot on\nthe 1034-36 lineup, \u2022\u25a0 the teuns\nstage the first of a three-game exhibition seriei.\nSammy McManui and Aubrey\nWeblter, Moncton Hawk luminiriw\nduring the lut two Allan cup play-\ndowni, will probably make their\nirofeiiional debuts with Maroom\nlere next Tueaday in the second\nSame. The other amateur, Leater\natrlck'i ion, Lynn, may Join\nRangen later. Lester Is not quite\ncertain the smart young forward ii\nripe for the moneyed ranks.' Bert\nConnolly, from Moncton, hai turned pro, and Patrick will take him\nInto the Ranger lineup it the opening of the N.H.L. campaign. He believea Connolly will hold a regular\nplace.\nA Maroon recruit from the Portland entry in the Northweitern\nProfeuional league, Bob Gilmore, li\nexpected to Join Windior Bulldogs\nas player and probably play-manager. Gilmore, 22 yun old, carrlei\n\u2022\u00bb,\n196 pounds and perform! u defence-\nman.\nSECRET INSTRUCTIONS\nIn making preparation! to fill thc\ngap made by the abaence ot Karl\nSelbert and Chlng Johnion, defence-\nmen. Later Patrick hu been in-\nitructlng hli new tearguardi, Bill\nCook, Alex, Levlntky and Ott Heller, behind cloied doon. He anticipates a good showing from theae\nplayen in the serin. Seibert jvai reported en route to Join hli mitu.\nTommy Gorman lent hli turn\nthrough a fut workout In which the\nlinemen were speedy and the defence bruising. They concentrated\non back checking and shooting.\nJimmie Ward, vetrean right winger,\nalong with Sammy McManui, new\nforward, were outstanding penalty\nshooters. In the Ranger c: ip, Bun.\nCook lea li the way u penalty shot-\nmaker. He possesses a unique style,\nbatting at tbe puck with terrific\nforce to get a bullet drive away.\nRanger forwards practiced wave\nformations and later the aquad\nscrimmaged.\nAbsence ot big Lionel Conacher\ndisappointed a large gallery, but\nGorman itated Lionel would be In\nuniform tomorrow. He hu been taking a ihort rest after ccmpletlng a\nheavy gridiron leuon ln eutern\nCanada.\nPlayen on both squads are in fine\ncondition although Cy\" Wentworth\nand Davie Kerr suffered sllghj\nJuriei today. Each team wff\nIhrough light ikating practlB\nmorrow betore the game.\n\"AH TH WE'RE BETTER THAN\nMAX BAER EVEN IF WE DON'T\nSING AND DANCE,\" SAYS DIZZY\nBrothers Dean go Through\nthe Motions on Vaudeville Stage\n'\u25a0-\nNEW YORK. Oct 26 (AP)-Th\u00ab\ndazzling Deani launched their\nvaudeville act today In a crowded\ntheater.\nThe curtains rung up with a great\nblare of trumpet!, and there the\nIn the drculng room, whet\nInaugural wu over, Dizzy,,\ntired, itretched out to rut 1\nJuit aat.\n\"A1*1 think we're better than L\nBaer even it we dont ling t*\/i\ndance,\" aaid Dizzy.\nboyi are, facing each other betore\na backdrop that\nout on a ball field.\" They are toss\nbackdrop that represents a dug'\ning a ball back and forth. They are\ndressed in their St Louis Cardinals\nuniforms, and the dialogue indicates they are about to atart a ball\ngame.\nThis Is difficult to beilev* because they are wearing patent\nleather shoes.\nThey are on the stage ilx mlnutu, and they are Interviewed.\nDizzy, as usual, dou most of the\ntalking. Daffy standi around, looking as though he'd like to climb\ndown Into the orchettra pit and\nhl>. They get $3900 for a week of\nthis.\nIn the course of the discussion\nthey reveal that this is Urn-tier than\nfacing Charlie Gehringer with the\nbases full, three balls and two strikes\non the hitter, and the tying run on\nthird.\nWHO WOULDNT BE?\nThey are grateful for what baseball has done for them. They are\nthankful for everything ind to\neverybody. Would they like to uy\nsomething to the audience?\nDizzy itepi up to the microphone,\nchikes. and says:\n\"If Hank Greenberg is out there.\nAh'd like him to come here. Ah'd\nlike to itrlke him out once more.\"\nA blonde girl In icanty attire runs\nout on the stage and demands Dizzy's\nautograph.\n'Ah'm a married man,\" says Dizzy,\n\"see Paul about that.\"\nWho do you think Is the best\npitcher in baseball?\" aski the stooge.\n\"Dizzy Dean,\" aays Dizzy.\n\"Daffy Dean,\" sayi Daffy, and\nthey both look relieved.\nPublic ichooli of New York OM\nopened recently with aproxlmawl\n1.290.000 pupils, a gain of about ltO,*\n000 over lut year.\nBooki numbering a million and a a\nquarter, ln 24,000 cues, were mend\nIn ilx dayi when the unlvjH\nlibrary, Cambridge, entered lt^|\npremises.\nmtt&XStmmmmMt&Imm*\nTry Our\nSpecial ior\nBreakfast\nTwo Eggt, cooked in any\nef our popular styles.\nFried Potatoes\nTont\nCoffee\n25c\nN I C K'S\nGOLDEN GATE\nCAFE\n\u25a0\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab4\u00ab*\u00bb\u00bb$\u00bb>*\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbW\u00ab\u00bbWO\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\nHUDSON'S BAY\nBEST PROCURABLE\nSCOICHMISKf\nThis fine liqtfof'is thc pride of the\nCompany's list and of a quality that\nhas won first place with connoisseurs\neverywhere.\nBU-HOED AND BOTTLED IN SCOTIAND\n\u25a04\u00b0?\nHudson* Bay Demerara Rum \u00bbl\u00abo htt ton|\nbeen a favorite\nIn Ib-oz.\nSfce\nfynpeftitVvL fot mote, thttrt, tuitrt\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia\n PAGE EIGHT-\n\u201e\t\nICT. V. 1184\n\t\n% ClASSIHED SECTION  ttHERtBiyER^EllERMill\n(tmmVM-mWfi^X-mmmmVmmmm^^\n, jiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimij:\nI SOMEONE\nII TO LOVE\nby VERNI5 CONNELLY\n\u25a0fllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIHIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIII^\n*&-tmwilHlHmw'**-w'\nINSTALMENT 24\nBruce wu back incredibly soon\nit seemed. The truth waa that June\nhad been too occupied to miss him\ngreatly. She did not see him immediately. He telephoned, but waa buiy\ngetting the man he'd brought back\nfrom Prance itarted on his talk of\nunravelling Kay'i fate. Now. hia\nse .nd day in New York, they were\ngoing to luncheon together.\nSeeking a quiet place where they\nwould not be recognized and could\ntalk in peace, they finally decided\non a Fifty-third street speakeasy.\nAs they settled in a booth, Bruce's\nhand reached over to dose upon\nhers in a cruihing hold. \"Dear,\nyou're 10 iweet\"\nJune wanted to cry. He looked\nworn, almost ill. The strain wai\ntelling on him. If only she could\nhelp him. \"I'm so glad you are home,\nBruce,\" she said.\n\"Do you want anything to drink?\"\n\"No\u2014Just aome food. I haven't had\nany breakfast. I don't get up be*\nfo** eleven or twelve any more.\"\n\"You ehouldn't \u2014you need thc\nsleep. I think you are looking great.\nNow tell me all the news. There\nis nothing I can tell you\u2014I've got\nthings started and I am hoping for\nthe best\u2014that is all.\"\n\"Something thrilling has happened to me lince you've been gone.\nI've had a screen test and lt looks\nas if I could go to Hollywood it\nI want to.\"\n\"But you don't\u2014surely you don't\nwint to do that?\"\n\"Why? It means success\u2014r, .'. mon-\ne- \"\n\"But you wouldn't be here\u2014I\ncouldn't see you.\"\n\"I didn't seek tt. Dr. Henderson\nintroduced a director to me\u2014that\nis how lt happened.\"\n\"So you did see him\u2014after I\natked you not to?\"\n\"He was at a night club\u2014I went\nthere with Phil, and then he came\nlo the Fountain Room. I had to\nlet him come\u2014it'i a public place.\nBesides, he wai being kind. He hai\nalwayi been kind to me.\"\n\"I iee. Suppose I order. What\nwould you like\u2014some Persian melon\nto begin with?\"\n\"Yes. And a tomato omelet with\nbacon. Tell him to bring some of\nthose Uttie crescent rolls\u2014hot ones\n\u2014they are delicious here.\"\n\"I came with Phil.\"\n\"You've been here before? I\nthought you didn't go to ipeak-\neasiea.\"\nWhen the waiter had gone their\neyei met acrosa the table.\n\"I ran Into Brownie Sylvester on\nthe street last night.\" Bruce said,\n\"and he took great delight in retailing some gossip\u2014he says that\nPhil is furnishing a penthouse, and\nthe rumor is that it'i for you.\"\nJune was furious at herself for\nflushing.   She  wished   she  would\nSet over the childish habit. \"I can't\nelp it, Bruce- it isn't my fault\"\n\"I didn't think it was. I know Phil\nloo well. He may think he can\nrush you into it, but I know you\nhaven't encouraged him, except by\ngoing about with him.\"\n\"The truth is. I enjoy going around\nwith Phil. He is good company, and\nwe have grand timei. You have\nbeen away so much....\"\n\"I know it. Perhapi that will soon\nbe over. But what about thii picture business? You are going to\npass that. up. aren't you?\"\n\"I don't know. Why don't we\nwait and iee if there is really anything to it? In the meantime. I am\nhanging on to the Job I have, and\nmighty glad to do it. I like it.\"\nJune dated a tiny feeling of resentment against Bruce from that\nday. It seemed more and more\nfoolish to her that they ihould be\naoarl. Phil had succeeded in shak*\ninn her faith In the fact that Bruce\nloved her as much as he thought he\ndid. He was sincere, in his thought\nnf courae. but as Phil pointed out,\nif lie really loved her. how could he\nstay away from her. How could he\nfit acroas the table frorh her like\nthis, knowing that she might go to\nHollywood and leave him. and not\nmake an effort lo hold her? It would\nserve him right if she did go. This\nbitter thought would not subside.\nAfter that he made several short\ntrips, and much of his time was occupied, so that they did no' see each\nother often.\nPhil made the most of his opportunities. Sprln\" was struggling into\nmanifestation, and they had long\ndrives, on the Island and in Westchester, lunching at the club, forgetting the city behind them. Phil\nreminded her of a wish to ride a\nhorse again as she did at home.\n\"Dont do anything about it\" she'\nurged, \"until my future is decided\n1 may go to Hollywood, you know.\nAnd I've had an offer to sing over\nthe radio\u2014a candy hour. But that\nis a very great secret and you mustn't tell anypne.\"\n\"I've heard of walkaways before,\nbut you Juat simply run! Congratulation!! And advice. Take the candy\n\u00bbffer, and it won't interfere with our\ntnarried regime, except when we go\nabroad.\"\n\"Will you be itill!\"\n\"You are weakening. I can feel\nJt Now, have I apprised you of the\niact fair lady, that our houiewarm-\ning takei place on Eaater Eve? I'm\nplanning a grand party, and I want\nto borrow your Sumhine Yodeler.\"\n\"I'm lure he will be glad to come.\nAnd am I thrilled over a grand\nptrty! But I'm having company ov-\nThey're So Good.'\n\u00ab   DIFFERENT   VARIETIES\nASK YOUR DEALER\ner Easter\u2014a boy friend from Rolla,\nHickory Ferguson, and the Harts\nfrom California\u2014you know I've told\nyou about them. Will you invite\nthem?\"\nTd invite the whole Six and\nSeven Club if you aiked me.\"\n\"Who is coming to your party?\"\n\"A hundred or so. Will you marry\nme before then?\"\n\"Are you laughing at mt or with\nme?\"\n\"I'm serious for once in my life,\nand you know it.\"\n\"Are you going to uk Bruce to\nthe party?\"\n\"If you lay n. But tell him he\nhu to wear a imile\u2014that'i the\npassword at our houie, isn't it\nsweetness?\"\nThe days flew. June discussed the\npros and cons of film work venui\nradio with Linder and he persuaded\nher not to be too premature about\nchanges. The Fountain Room would\nbe closed fo the summer, and they\ncould suspend the Between Six and\nSeven Club until fall. During the\nsummer months the could try out\nthc films, and if she didn't go\nover, could come back to the Gilmore in the fall. In the meantime,\nshe could accept the radio contract\nwith the candy company. They could\nput her on the air at 0:30.\nSo she signed a contract to ling\nthree times a week and added two\nhundred dollan to her weekly lal-\n\u2022ry. It wis a fabulous sum. She looked it the figures again and again.\nThen she cried. It couldn't be true.\nThere was some awful mistake. Misi\nJune Varick of Rolla, Missouri. Now\nthe Show-Me girl was alio the\nSweetheart girl. New songs to learn.\nBy thc time she went on the air\nwith her first program ahe had regained her balance, lost her awe. She\nhad learned that the sum she wai\nreceiving wu modest in comparison\nwith what many radio singers were\npaid. And familiarity with the songs\nbrought eue. Fan mail poured in,\na.d she was launched,\nShe spent her first salary from\nthe candy company for a new evening frock to wear to Phil's party.\nIt was the most intriguing creation of filmy white lace ever launched, she was positive. With it went a\ncape of white transparent velvet.\nThen she shopped for gold slippers,\ncleverly cut, from which she had\nIhe heels removed and blue rhlne-\nstones substituted, for sh meant to\nwear Bruce's saphires on this great\noccasion.\nThe Harts arrived Thursday. June\nwas in her office, which she rare-\nI*- visited now, consulting with Mlis\nWest, the girl who had assumed\nmuch of the work June formerly\ncarried.\nLucy blew in a breath of spring\nair. She held the chubby hand of a\ntwo and a half year-old-boy clasped tightly in hers, a diminutive reproduction of his father, who\nbrought up the rear with a happy\ngrin.\n\"You darlings!\" June iprang to\nembrace all three in a wide swoop\nof her eager arma. \"Oh, I'm so glad\nto aee you! It'i limply superb thit\nyou've come for Eaeter. And we're\njoing to a swell party. Come here,\nPrecious....\"\nShe picked up the child. \"He's ab-\norable!\"\n\"Now that you've given a pretty\nsatisfactory demonstration of appreciating our offspring,\" Hcrtley said,\n\"what do you think of Mamma and\nPapa? Hasn't Mamma unfolded\nlike\u2014well, like ihe ihould?\"\n\"You look slick, Lucy. He'l being\ngood to you, isn't he?\"\n\"Can you find us a reliable nurse?\"\nLucy ns!;ed.\n'I don't know\u2014what about It,\nMiss West?\"\n\"There's a trained nurse staying\nin the house\u2014ihe'i off duty. She\nmight do it.\"\n\"Fine,\" slid Lucy. \"Will you aend\nher up for an interview?\" We've\ngot' a double luite on your floor,\nJune.\"\n\"That'i splendid. You'll be down\nto dinner, won't you Lucy?\"\n\"You couldn't keep us away.\"\n\"You'll love Sammy, my Sunshine\nYodeler. Brush up your iongs\u2014he'11\nling anything you want. Oh yei\u2014\nnews\u2014the scared blonde member of\nthe club and the boy from Australia\ngot married last week. And the\ngirl from Wyoming and th * widower from Foreit Hills are engaged.\"\n\"Quite a little matrimonial bur\neau.\" Hartley observed. \"Any proposals for yourself?\"\n\"Slews! And all 10 nice, I'd have\nto flip a coin to make a choice.\"\nHickory arrived the following\nmorning and they had a noonday\nbreakfast ln June's apartment.\n\"| thought it wai time I came\nherr and looked you over,\" he said.\n\"I don't want New York to entirely\nspoil you before we get you back\nagain.\"\n\"Nonsense. I'll bet you needed new\nspring suits\u2014that's why you came.\"\n\"Do I look as If I did?\"\n\"No, you look like a Park avenue\npromenader.\"\n\"Heaven forbid. I'm Just a Missouri\napple grower'! aon.\"\n\"I hope you brought evening\nclothes, for If you didn't you'll hive\nto buy some. We are going to a wild\npenthouse parly tomorrow night.\"\n\"Am I promiied a murder?\"\n\"You're apt to be the murder victim if you don't atop sneerln- at\neasterners. Come and meet Lucy\nHart now\u2014you'll love her.\"\n\"I stl!' love you, June. Isn't there\never going to be any hop* for me?\"\n\"Hickory, I love Bruce\u2014I told\nyou. ...\"\n\"But It's 10 hopeless! You'll wute\nyour life waiting tor him. Sugar, I\nnever told you before\u2014your Dad\napproved of our  getting married\n: suspected he did. Come, let's not\nbe serious. It's like a house party\nto have you and the Harts all here.\n(To  Be Continued)\nDick Christensen. observer on\nHuckleberry lookout in Glacier national park, reports that although\nhis summer station is one ot the\nmost remote in the park, he hit\nplenty of visitora every day. in thc\nform of deer, bean, and other wild\ngame.\nNfbun Baihi -\\puib\nMember of th* Canadian Daily\nNcwipeperi Auoditlon\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrlvati Exchange connecting to\nall Department!\nSubscription Rates\nSingI* copy   t  .05\nBy carrier, per week      _5\nBy carrier, per year,    ... 13.00\nBy mail in Canada, tn tub-\nscribers living outalde regular\ncarrier areas, per month, 00c;\nthree montha, $1.80; six months.\n$3.00; one year, $6.00.\nUnited \"tates and Great Britain, one month. 73c; ilx months,\nK00; one year, $7.50.\nForeign countries, ('.her than\nU.S., lame ai above plus any\nextra postage.\nillllllillillllllllilililililllilliillllilil\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nRATES\n11c a line\nMinimum 2 llnu\n2 lines, onei  $ -2\n3 llnu, onca    .33\n4 llnu, one*     .44\n2 llnu,\u00ab tlmu    Jt\n3 llnei, 8 tlmu  1.32\n4 llnu, t tlm  1.70\n2 llnei, 1 month  2.86\n3 Mnn, 1 month 4.21\n4 llnu, 1 month  6.72\nAll above leu 10% for prompt\npayment\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nAdvertiaen who deiire miy\nhave repliei addressed to a box\nat tha Nelson Daily Newi and\nforwarded daily to their ad-\ndress. 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Chir-\nncter analysis. 25c; send btr'hdate.\nM Kleman, V) Baton St., Wli.r.lpe**.\nManitoba. , (1923)\nUNMARRIED: LADIES AND OEN-\ntlemen have been joining The\nHome Club since 1938. Exchange\nletters, photos, etc., with members\nall agee, everywhere. Many happy\nmarriages. Confidential, reliable.\nWrite fully enclosing 26c. Bos 140.\nVancouver,   Canada. t4t72i\nMARRY-INTRODUCTIONS BY htl-\nvate letten. New system, hundred! ot lady members. Farmer's\ndaughters teachers, nurses and\nwidows with property. Many\nweilthy memben. Particulars 10c.\nCanadian Correspondence Club.\nBox   128,  Calgary.  Alta. (42501\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR.\nLlat of wanted Inventions and full\nformation sent free. The Ramsay\nCompany, world Patent Attorneys,\n273 Bank etreet, Ottawa, Canada.\n143581\nSAVE BY DRY CLEANWOYOUR\nown suits, sample dry cleans one\nsuit. Mailed postpaid for 10c.\nAgent! wanted Seven seals salea\nByitema, Winnipeg. Man. (4683)\nOENTLEMBN. SAVE JO'*-. BUY YOUR\nSanitary requirements by mall.\nStamp brlnga catalogue. Banl-\nTex Company 709 Dunsmuir street.\nVincouver. B- C. (4366)\nWANTED. IMMEDIATELY, TOANs\"-\nnortatlon   to   Pentlcton   for   two.\n' Share expenses. 812 Cedar street.\n (43071\nPRIVATE HOME KINDERGARTENS\npay. We itart you. The Canadian\nKindergarten lmtitute, Winnipeg.\n(4373)\nEcaema itch Pllei Ulcere. Try Oeo Lee's\nChina Remedy at Hudion*! Bay Co\n \u2022    (4277)\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED\u2014OIRL FOR HOUSEWORK.\nMuit hare aome experience with\nchildren Box 4561, Dally News.\n(4561)\nWOMEN WANTED TO HEW POR US\nat home, sewing machine necci-\nnry. No Mlllng. Ontario Neckweir\nCompany. Dept. 292, Toronto 8.\n(4814)\nHOW TO QBT A OOVERNMENT\nlob. Free Booklet. The M. C. O\nLtd., Winnipeg.   (4372)\nAGENTS WANTED\nAGENTS WANTED TO SELL SILK\nneckties for us. we sell you at a\nprice tbat allow! you to make\nloo*;*, commission, write today for\ntree sample** and particular!. Ontario Neckwear Company Dept. S69.\nToronto 8, Ont,       (4313)\nWANTED FOR INTERIOR TOWNS,\nmen anxious to earn a good living. \"You can do thla.\" See for\npartlculara. or write L. j. Deshar-\nmls,   cranbrook,   B.   C.      (4318)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n3TENOORAPHER-BKPR. WISHES\nImmediate position. Box 4552.\nDally   NIWI. (4552)\nWORK WAITED BY  YOUNO OIItL.\nApply  to Box  797. Ferule. B. C.\n(45771\nOIRL   WANTS   WORK.   ANY   KIND\nPhone 3\u00bb0R. (45751\nROOM AND^ BOARD\nWANTED BY BUBINESS MAN. STATE\nrate. Apply Box 4569, Dally News.\n(4589)\nTrout weighing as much as 40\npounds are not an uncommon catch\nin Great Bear lake, N.W.T., Canada.\nFOR RENT\nHOUSES. ETC.\nFOR RENT - STORE ON BAKER\nstreet, opposite Dally News, suitable for ofrice or abop or atore.\nRent $25 per month. Apply to L.\nSimpson, phone 667L. (46001\n5    RM.    NEW   BUNGALOW   TOLLY\nmodern. Good location. Ph. 777U.\n2 ROOM CABIN CLOSED IN PORCH.\nPartly furnished. 18 month. Mrs.\nR.   Ball,   6th   Bt.,   Oordon   Road.\n\u25a0  145281\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent. Annibli Block.\n(4281)\nFURN     OR    UNFURN.    APT8Bl\nweek or month. Medical Arti Bldg\n(4282)\nSjR     ROOMS.     STEAU     HEATED.\n\u25a0bower, term! mod. Cin. Legion.\n(4283)\n7-ROOMED HOUSE V\u00bb1T_ OARAGE\nPhone 88QR. _ M4666)\nSlX   ROOM   H6US8   NEWLY   REN-\n(4564)\novated- Phone 48\nTWO    ROOM    FURNI8HED    SUITE\nfor  rent,  Stirling  Hotel.      i42M)\nHOUSE    FOR    RENT,    CLOSE    IN.\nPhone 828X.  (4620)\nTERRACE   APTS   Beautiful  Uodlrn\nFrtgHlalre equipped luttei. (4284)\n3  ROOM  SUITE  113.  PER MONTH\nUnion   Roomi.\n(4186)\nFOR SALE\nHEAVY LOOGINO TRAILER ALSO\nportable saw-mill cheap for caah.\nOan be aeen it 1416 Vancouver\nSt. W. A. Latta.         (4673)\nPOTATOES. HAY AND BREEDING\newes. Apply Box 4568, Daily News.\n (46*8)\nfor   Sale - barrels,   keob\n\u25a0ugir sack!. Unera. McDonald Jim\nCo., Ltd '\u26663W*\nFOR sale circulator heater.\ncheap, phone 744L. (4676)_\nLOST AND FOUND\nBATTERIES. YOU CAN RECHARGE\nyonr radio or automobile battery\nat small coat. Price of formula\n11.00. Seven seals Salea Systems.\nWinnipeg, Man. (4688)\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or a dog a\npockitbook lewelrj or fur or\nanything else of value, teliphoni\nThe D\u00abiH News A \"Found' Ad\nwill be Inserted without cost to\nvou w* will collect from the\nowner. \t\nEDUCATIONAL\nTHE ACADEMY OF USEFUL ARTS\nteachei profeuional Pattern-drafting, Designing. Dressmaking. Thret\nOables Hotel, Pentlcton.        (4631)\nMININC PROPERTIES\nSIX ,6) CROWN GRANTED CLAIMS.\n18 lnchea ore In open cut, two\nfeet ora In tunnel, 400 aacke ore\nIn lacks Alao hive aeveral good\nclaims not crown granted. Seven\nmiles truck road to boat lauding\nat Argenta. four mills truck road\nto railway. Norman McLeod. Ho*a-\n_er. B. C, ?434*\u00bb\nBUSINESS    OPPORTUNITIES\nEarn $5.00 to $35 Weekly\ngrowing mushrooms. Our famous\n\"Jumbo\" ipawn prepared under\nDominion patented process. We\nwiy buy your mushroomi. Send\n5c for complete proposition and\nillustrated booklet North American Spawn company, 421 Somerset Bldg., Winnipeg.\n(4367)\nMISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE       RANCHES FOR RENT\nCrystal\nBUTTER\nPURE\u2014RICH\u2014FRESH\nCosts no more thin\nother well known brands.\nOrder from your Grocer\nor Butcher.\nFred Williams\nAgent for Crystal Dairy Ltd.\n\u00ab00 Ward St. Nelion\n(4566)\nECZEMA\nFOR ECZEMA, PSORIASIS,\nITCHING PILES. RINGWORM\nITCH. HEAD AND SCALP\nDISEASES AND OTHER SIMILAR SKIN TROUBLES, TRY\nA BOTTLB OF SEMO GUARANTEED TO BRING RESULTS\nOR MONEY REFUNDED.\nManufactured and Sold at\nSuite 1\nCHRISTIE GRANT BLDG.,\nEdmonton, Alta.\n>   Write for particular!\n(1985)\nQALVANIZEO IRON PIPE AND FIT-\ntinga Beltings. eto.-New Wire\nNiili 114\" IS* _ 314\". M.60 per\n100 IU Full line ol new ind und\nOilv and Blick Pip* ind fitting!\nit. Oalv new etto, 1\" Black 6c,\n3\" Slick lUltibli for Irrlgitlpn and\nwater line lOo. other ilaei low\nprlcea niw corrugated galv Iron\n16 00 per 100 equirt feet Poultry\nwin netting 8 md 6 feet Full\n\u2022tor, of iteel ipUt pullesi, Potato\n\u2022nd grain ucki Barbed win Wire\nRope, Canvia Doon, Window!\nRooflm Flit. Girden md Air bow\nBoom Chains Mirchudlie ind\nEquipment of ill deicrlptloua En-\nqulrlei   lolicited.\nB.C. JUNK CO.\n135   Powell   tt.    Vancouver.   B.C\n  (4816)\nHO-MAYDE BREAD\nIMPROVER\nMakea bread ot finer texture and flavor, better\ncolor and quality, from\nthe same quality flour.\nGivei larger loaf. Packet\n20c sufficient for 100\nloaves.\nC. tt J. JONES, Limited,\nWinnipeg, Mln,\n(4513)\nPW and ini'lirafe\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd..\n360   Prior   St.,   Vancouver,   B.   C.\n. (4538)\nThe emperor penguin of the Ant\narctic spends Its life without touching land; it is content to ipend its\ntime on solid ice when not swimming in the open water tor food.\nTO RELIABLE PARTY. SMALL\nranch home about mile west of\nNelaon. Good houae. free furl,\nwater piped Into houae. 130 per\nmonth. Charlee F. McHardy. Nelson   B_C. (4500)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nOENTLE YOUNO COW. THIRD CALF\nend of this month. Oood milker\n165. L. Rabtnlaui. P. O. Box 1831.\n___.U__B_C* 146681\nVJ, YEAR OLD REGISTERED AYR-\nahlre bull, or would trade for\nsimilar younger one. Box 4678.\nDally sewa. (46781\nDOCS\nBEAUTIFUL SAINT BERNARD PUPS.\nreasonable. Box 539, Cranbrook. B.C.\n(45431\n_, PUPPIES. REGISTERED\nStock  116. None better anywhere\nat any price. Box 1007 Trail, B, C.\n(4574)\nRABBITS\nBELGIAN HARES, FLEMISH GIANTS,\nSiberian Black or Chinchillas for\nfur. AH \u00abood itock. The Rabbltry,\nBox 135, Nelson. Phone 535. Acton.\n(4581)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nTHIRTY ROOM MODERN HOTEL,\nCut Bank, Montana. Price 116.000,\n16000 cash, balance to ault. John\nW. Huntsberger, Sunburst, Mont.\n  (4584)\nMOTORCYCLES\nINDIAN\nMOTORCYCLES .\nThe choice of Experts. Watch\nthem win at the HILLCLIMB,\nSunday at Trail. Don't mln it.\nlev   Di\nand Indian!.\nRIDE A WINNERI\nPALMER RUTLEDGE\nTRAIL, B.C.\n(4315)\nMISCELLANEOUS  -WANTED\nGOOD CLEAN  RAGS WANTED-AP-\nDlv   Dallv   News   Office. .33681\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nMunicipal and Commercial Audit!\nP   O   Bn  1131. Nelaon   B   C\n(4288)\nAtttyert\nE w WIDDOWSON establlihed 1900\n305 Josephine St. Nelaon. B O\n(4380)\nGRENVILXB II. (IRTShVOOD\n618 Baker St.. Nelion. Box 736\nCuitom and Control aisavs. Chemical analyala. Representative at\nTrail for Shlppera' interests. ,4443)\nKOOTENAY    LABORATORIES\nAuayen tt CbemUtl\nBox   1343 Trill.   B C.\n(4301)\nChiropodiits\nDr. Mildred Slmondi Foot Specialist\n406 Fernwell  Bldg.  Spokane.   Wash\n(4303)\nChiropractor!\nE. M. WARREN. D. C. BOX 872\nGood results Lady attendant by\nappointment. Phone 116.       (4261)\nElectrical\nJ. F   COATES\u2014The  Electrlo  8tora\nSupplies and installations.\nPhom 760. P. O. Box 116\n* (4393)\nEnglneert tnd Surveyori\nA   H   GREEN CO., LTD.   516 WARD\nBt. Phone 264, NeUon. B.C.  (43061\nt   8.   PETERS\nMining  Engineer\nExamination operation and management of mines and mineral\nproperties. Rouland. B.C\n4307)\nH.  D DAWSON-NELSON\nENGINEER  AND  SURVEYOR\n(4308)\nBoyd C. Affleck. Fruitvale, B. C.\nLandi.-Mlneral Clalma. Waterworks\n\u2022tc. Survey!. Plans and Estimates.\n (4309)\nHair Coodi\nEngland  publishes   14,000  books\nannually. ' I\nLidlei'   wigs,  awltcbea.   triniforma-\nt'ons,  gentlemen's wlgi and  .uu-\npees,   write   for   free   Illustrated\ncittlog. Hanson Co., Vincouver.\n(4356)\nFlorists\nBEAUTIFUL MUMS FOR YOUR TE**I\ntable or the dinner party. Thli ll\ntheir seaaon.\nNELSON   FLOWER  SHOPPE.\nPhone 333 or 289R3.\n_____\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES. Phon\n343 cut (lower! potted planta\nand floral designs^ (43961\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD\nRea. eatate. Insurance, rentali\nAberdeen  block,  Biker Bt.   (43071\nIF DU'ERES'llSD IN REDUCING\nyour Insurance costs: aee T. D\nRosling. 3 Royal Bank Bldg. (43981\nR W DAWSON, Real Eatate Insurance Rentals Next Hlpperson\nHardware, Baker itreet.        (4299)\nC D BLACKWOOD Insurance of\nevery description. Real Eit Ph 99.\n_^__         143001\nK E DILL. AUTO AND FIRE W-\nlurance. Real Eatate 608 Ward St,\n(4301)\nE.    ANlAlBLE.    REAL    EST ATS\nrentals, insurance. Annsbli block.\n__430!_\nLIFE, FIRE * AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nanci. P. E  Poulln. Ph. 70. (.aoH.\nCHAS   F   MCHARDY    INSURANCE-\nReal Eatate\u2014Phone 186.\n(4304)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all chasea of Metal work Lathi\nWork. Drilling, Boring and Grinding,\nMotor Rewinding acetylene Welding.\nPhone 593.\n324 Vernon Strut\n  (4305)\nMusical Tuition\nVIOLIN     AND    THEORY     PUPIIA\nMary Heddle. Phone 311M. (4MM\nSash  Factory\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY   HARD-\nwood merchant 317 Baku atreet.\n-\u25a0 <\"\u2022\"\nSecond Haid Storw\nMCE    QUEEN    HEATERS    CHEAP.\n__ Mrs. Radclllfc'a, (4315)\nUSE   THE 'CLASSIFIED   4DS.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nYOU ACT STRANGE\nDON'T,-YOU' LOVE:\nMS ANYMORE?,'\n^\nWHY-MAGGIE-\nYOU KNOWI\nOO-OUT EVERY\nTIME YOU Kl-S\nME \\ GIT\nPAINT ALL\nOVER ME\nFACE-\nON', t FORGOT ABOUT\nTHAT- IT 19 TRUE- I'LL\nTo SE CAREFUL IM\nTHE FUTURE -\nBUTI AM WONDERING\nIF YOULL LOVE ME\nWHEN MY HAIR tS\nCHANGED TO\nCRAY-?\n-fr,\nBy Geo. McManus\nWHY NOT?\nI'VE LOVEO\nYOO\nTHROUGH\nAU.THE\nOTHER\nCOLOR.\nIT HA--\nCHANGED\"\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Westover\nTHE GUMPS\nLOST\u2014ONE LARGE MEAL TICKET\n>MiN-0UST <rBT THIS.' *UMP-06STao\u00bb5\n*. vlS^c^-SI.^*1***\"1\" SOCIAL EV*NT OF\nK^2__S?i_ST' b&*-~ \u2022**\u2022\u2022 frfteATuvvyaiiT *-\u00bb\nI   INMARftlAA*- FIRST PICTURES OF B__AUT\u00bbui\n*   BRIDE AND HANDSO-ME \u00a3ft0OM- HAPPVOTitt    L\nYi\u00a35yl-_<_L_ tJ_\u00abSSwNOM^\u00bb^ONy\n' J*?__i&7r*>_-.&T\u00a7.*!!^^\nJ\u00bb\u00bb6_\u00abC_-_>\n\/ AND THIS UTTUE CHILD HEW\u00bb-YMIN- TOR       \\\nHOW MV HEART BLBBDS FOR     \/HfcAveM'S SAK^\nMV HEART BU5HM FOR\nHIM-THS SWBSTINMOCENT\nIKiP_^X.WH0,MBV'*n\u00bb HARMED\nA\u00abOULIN HIS LIFE-\n4^BSTSRQAVWeHBlRTD ,\nA BILLION DOLLARS -TODAY\nA PAUDER-ANB YOU\n\"STAND THERE \u2022SIWER1W6\nOVER A NEwsVW>e|-\nHBAVEW'S SAKE-\nI HOPE YOU\n&ONT BLAME\nTHIS ALLOW\nTITui'i\nH.'H\nX.\n\\jfcir\n \t\n^^^^^^^^^\n^m^^        .\n_________________\n____________\u25a0\n 13$\n-THI NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON   l,C.-8ATURDAY MORNING. OOT. 27. 1934-\nRLL STREET\nPRICES SLIP\nthlehem Steel Is Off\n6V2 Cents; Rails\nAre Down\nly FREDERICK GARDNER\nleeltttd Pnu Flmnelil Writer)\nIW YORK, Oct. 26 (AP). -\nkl yielded with other markets\nmood of depression todty and\nN were again revised downward\nground. Turnover declined to\nMO ihares.\ninkers ucrlbed heiviness of\nIn in part to liquidation by dls-\ntinted holden.\nIthlehem Steel pfd. broke \u00ab*\u2022\u25a0\u00bb\nitt to 56Vi on thc omission of a\nI dividend.\nS. Steel common and preferred,\nUblic Steel and other shares rep-\nntttive of the industry lost frac-\ng to more than a point. .\nIlls slipped despite a seasonal\ni ln carloadings last week. Santa\nNew York Central, Union Pa-\nI, J. I. Case, General Moton, Air\nUction, Du Pont, Inte-national\nMl and International Cement\na tmong issues showing losses\ntactions to about 3 points.\nle Standard Statistics company\nage for 00 stocks dropped 1\nt to 60.9.\nie weekly carloading statement\ntied 1 gain of 4641 jars to 640,-\nbut fell 16,725 short of the total\ner tgo.\nillar valut of United States ex-\nI In September, at $191. 90,000,\neased the total for the same\nth in tht preceding three years\nlett a tavorable balance over\narts of more than 360,000,000.'\nMarked and Mining News\ntEREST DROPS\nON MAST LBT\nIdlan, Pioneer, Cariboo Cold\n\u2022nd Braiorne All Off\nLNCOtrV-H, Oct. 26 (CPl\u2014In-\n* wia lacking on tbt Vincouver\nt eichange todty ind thi gold\np lost heavily.\nHome fell >> oents to 11.80.\nittn wti down 19, Ctrlboo Oold\nPioneer each dropped 5 and\nIt. X. wu 3 etnta lower. Den-\nwu thi heaviest trtder and\nId unchanged it 43 tfter sell-\nlis high as 44. Reno lost 3 cents\nMUlet trsdlng.\nC Nickel wu ott 4 tnd Big\nJourl lott 1 rent. Noble rive\notf Vt while Porter Idaho\ng the same amount,\nhyalite sold tt 15.00 but closed\npanged it 14.79. Calgary and Ed-\ngton was oft 4 and the rest of\noils were practicilly unchinged.\nLOANS HEAVY\nkW TORK. Oct. 26 (API\u2014Sec.\n\u25a0ry loins wire noticeably heavy\nlodsy't bond market, but prime\nlitment Issues, as 1 whole, wen\nyt steady.\nB.   government   securities   de.\nringed    from     l-32nd    to\n|2nds of \u25a0 point.\nfonlgn group wis dull ind\n|ular.\nWinnipeg Grain\nflNNIPEa, Oct. 3s (CP)\u2014putures\nOpen High Ww Close\n|hest:\n. . 78V, 7814 75 761\/,\n.... 76(4 76>i 75J4 75>A\n... 80=4 B1M, 80 (i 81>i\nlta:\n.... 40% 40'4 401', 40%\n_:\u00ab n m as\nhrley:\n... 51(4 5114 50-ti 61U\n.... 61*14 63% 51 92>4\n.... 93% 84'J 32% 94!i\n...   \u2014        \u2014        \u2014      131\n...131%    133'\/,    131H    132'i\n... 137       13714    136       13714\nITt:\n\"     ....   83%     63%     92 53%\n. . 93% 94% 92% 9414\n67% 68(4 69% 58\nbah whut: No, 1 hlrd 79%: No.\nlor 17%: No. 3 nor. 73%: No. 3\nI 7114: No. 4 nor. 68%; No. 5.\nJt; No. 6, 00%; feed 56%: No. 1\npim 91%: ON. 1 AR.W. 72%; track\nscreenings 16 per ton.\njlore Gold From Every\nTon of Ore\nThe gold you\nmint d o 11 n't\ncount If lt \u00aboea\nto waste. Save\nlt. with one of\nthese\nlib-cone  Ball  Mills\u2014$220\n\u25a0l ton ctptclty: 850 lbs.; he.iv-\nK niece only 385 lbt. Hrqulrci\n\u25a04 H.P. tnd little water, othera\nm to 250 tons capacity. Send for\nulletln   no.   118   living. details\ncomplete   milling   equipment\nlow factory prices I\nIsince    Straub Mfg. Co\nion? 681  Chestnut  Bt.\n\u2122* Otklmd., Ctl\nCNR. SHOWS\nMONTREAL, Oct. 26 (CP)-An\nimprovement of W,235,000 in net\nrevenues ot the Canadian National\nrailways tor the nine months ended\nSeptember 30 over Uie same period\nlast year was shown in a statement\nissued here today. Operating revenues od-.-at.ced to $121,962,000 from\n$108,216,000, while opentini expenses increased trom $107,308,000\nto $114,820,000. Net revenues were\n$7,142,000 against $907,000.\nIn the month of September alone,\nnet revenues were $2,010,000 a decrease from September, 1933, of\n$48,000. Operating revenues advanced to $14,940,000 from $14,082,000.\nOperating expenses moved up from\n$12,023,000 to $12,930,000,\nBright Spots\nof the Week\nBy   Tllfc   CANADIAN   TRESS\nOttawa: Oenerai Index of Ctntdltn employment averaged 17.9 per\ncent greiter in first nine months of\n1934 thin ln corresponding period of\n1933.\nTlllsonburg, Ont.: A new company has Uken over the Tlllsonburg\nshoe factory and opentlon of tht\nplant wlll be returned ahortly\nBrantford, Ont.: Brinttord Cordate company wlll resume operations next week with mtny former\nemployeee engaged,\nMontreal: Port of Montreil reports\nIncresss of 690,480 tons ot coil Imported up to end of September ii\ncornpired with corresponding period\nof 1933.\nVancouver: The log seal! of Britlih Columbia for first eight months\nof 1934 was 1.3 billion feet, Increase\not 35 per cent over 1933.\nEast Windsor, Ont.: For compiny\nbsi called for tender! for erection\nof 1438,000 electric furnace foundry\n\u2022t their plint here.\nStratford. Ont.: Stratford Chslr\ncompsny, prictlcilly closed through\nmost of summer, Is now opentlng\nto capacity.\nOtUwa: Dominion bureau of statistics reporU etrloidlngi for weekended Oct. 30 Increased 1267 cin\nover total for same period of lut\nyear.\nPort Albtrnl, B. C: The Albernl\nPiclflc Lumber company'! sawmill\nwas reopened this week when 390\nmen returned to work, following\nshut-down due to strike of loggers.\nDow Jones Averages\n30 industrials  93.01 off 1.18\n20 rails  34.98 off .8'\n20 utilities      19.21 off .23\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nA P Con   . ..-\t\nAmil  Oil  ... .\t\nLC  Pickti-s   \naver  Silver  \t\nf radian    \nrilorne   \t\nBridge  River  \t\nB R X Oold \t\nCirlboo  Oold \t\nC ft 1 Corp \t\nCoast Brew \t\nOold   Belt   \t\nHome Oil  .....\nInt Cosl\t\nMak  Slccar   \t\nMcDougal Segur Ex\nMcLeod Oil      \t\nMercury Oil \t\nMerldltn   \t\nModel      .\nMornlni! Stir .........\nNit  Silver  ..\t\nNlcoli \t\nOkllts   Oil!\t\npioneer Oold \t\nPremier Oold  \t\nQuatalno  ....\nReno   Oold   \t\nSally   Mlnei   \t\nSpooner   Oil\t\nTsylor   Bridge   \t\nVanalU    \t\nWayside\t\n(IBB\nAlexandria   \t\nAnaconda\t\nBayvlew    ..\t\ntC Silver  \nC Nickel    \t\nBig  Missouri \t\nButte I X !_ \t\nCtn R:nd \t\nCongress   \t\nCrows   Nest      \t\nDalhousle Mines\nDalhousle  Oils \t\nDentonia    \t\nDevenlsh \t\nHlghwood SaroH   ....\nRanchmen'! . .\t\nMd\n.06%\n16.00\n\u25a008 'A\n183\n11.80\nJ01\n.19\n1.08\n.60\n.39\nM\n.02\n.31\n.12\n.12 li\n.18\n.1314\n\u202203%\n11.00\n1.39\nii\n.30\n_2\n.24\nM*,.\n.01%\n.03\n.01%\n.61\n.31\n.06\n.06'\/,\n.01\n.26\n.43\nAsk\n.09\ntn\n165\n13.00\n.07%\n.23\nl3\n11.35\n.30\n.69\n.35\n.30\n.38\n.13\n\u25a0k\n.18\n.04%\n.30\n.06\n11.30\ni\n1.00\n.31\n.36\n.07%\n.03\n.93\n.89\n.33\n.08\n.10\n.36\n.37%\n.44\n.02%\n.14%\nPicslU    _      .08\nDlcUtor     08\nAtlln   Piclflc     1?\nPilot        M\nsunshine     9.40\nQlscler Citek           .06\nDunwell     16\nFalrvlew      .18\nFrethold O-S'.i\nOto   Copper         \u2014\nOolcondi  37\nSold  MounUln    10\neo   River      .01\nOrandvlew    01%\nOrange        _1\n8rull   Wlhkint        .0514\nedley Amal        .30\nHercules con      .03%\nHome  oold        .10\nIndian Mines  01\nIndependent     01%\nKoot   Belle    48\nKoot  Flor    00%\nKoot King  00%\nLakevlew        .01\nLucky Jim  _....     \u2014\nMar   Jon    09%\nMerlind      .30\nMill  City   11\nMlnto 16\nMortonWoltey         .01\nfoble Flvt 07%\nsvlllon             \u2014\nend OnllU   46\nPorter Idtho  08%\nRtwtrd    04\nRoytUU      14.76\nRufua ArgenU      .01\nRuth Hope          .03\nSalmon Oold       .11%\nSllvercrest       .01%\nSnowflske            .01\nTtylor Wind       \u2014\nuniud Kmplrt      \u2014 ,\nUnited Oil  03%\nVldetU     76\nVulcan      13\nWaUrloo     06\nWaverley Ting  01\nWellington      \u25a0$!%\nWhlUwtter          .04%\n:23\n.06%\n9.60\n.06%\n.16\n.20\n3\n.03%\n.3\n.06%\n.35\n.03\n!l3\n.03\nM\n.01%\n\u25a0h**\n.02\n.10\n.17\n.0114\nT\n.04%\n19.00\n.03\n\u25a00314-\n.01%\n.34\n.15\n.09\n.60\n.01%\n.09\nToronto Stock Quotations\nPound and American\nDollar Lower\nMONTREAL, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014Thl\npound sterling, UnlUd States dolltr and French fnnc deollped on\nMontreil fonlgn exchanges todiy,\nThe pound eased 1 3-16 cants at\n84-9 23-32, the American dollar lost\n3-16 of ona per cent at 2 3-32 per\ncent discount and the franc wit\ndown .02 of a cent at 6.46 cents.-\nMinneapolii Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 26 (API-\nWheat, No. 1 northern 108 to 112,\nNo. 1 red durum 112 to 118, Dec.\n103. May 100%.\nCorn, No. 3 yellow 74 to 70.\nOats, NO. 3 white 52% to 53%.\nFlax, No. 1, 180 to 188.\nFlour unchanged: shipments 24,-\n586. Bran 22.50 to 2?.00,\nEASTERN SALES\nMONTREAL, Oct. 20 (CP)-Sales\nof 100 or more shares on the Montreal stock exchange today were:\n592 Brazilian. 1235 CPR, 130 Cockshutt, 764 Nickel, 350 Mtl Power,\n1000 Ogilvie.\nTORONTO, Oct. 26 (CP)-Sales\nof 100 or more shares on the Toronto stock exchange, industrial section, today were: 3395 Brazilian,\n740 Br tt Dis. 1700 CPR. 345 Cons\nBak. 945 Int Nickel. 25 Steel of C,\n6270 H Walkers, 4320 Dist Seag.\nAlexandria \u2014\t\nAlgoma .........\nAmity        _ -\t\nAshley aold -\t\nBankfleld        \t\nBarry   Hollinger    \u2014\nBase   Metali\t\nBear  Exploration  \t\nBig   Missouri    \t\nBoolo       - \u2014\ntradlin \u2014\nrtlorne\nBridge R Explontlon ....\nBrownlet  -\nBuf Can Oold\t\ngunker HIU  - \u2014...\nin Klrkland _ ...\nCm Mtlirttc \t\nCariboo Oold Quarta\t\nCastle Trethewiy \t\nCentral  Manitoba\t\ncentral Pttrlcla  \u2014\nChlbougamou   -\t\nClerlcy\t\nCoast Copptr \t\nCobalt   Oonttct\t\nColumirlo   ...\t\nConirlum     .   \t\nCom M It s\t\nDome        .. \u2022\nDom Explontlon\t\nEldorado \t\nFalconbridgi   - \u25a0\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0\nOod'i   Ltkt   \t\nOranadi    - \u2014\nSardrock - \nranada\t\nHardrcck     \t\nHoUlnger  \t\nHowey\t\nHudson Bay  \t\nInt Nickel       -,\t\nKlrkland Lake ...: \t\nLittle Long lee \t\nLake Shore \t\nMcLeod  Cockshutt \t\nNTclntyre      .    \t\nMcvitt'e Qrahammi\t\nMcWatUrs Oold\t\nMacssaa\t\nMalroblc     \t\nMaple Lfif      \t\nMining  Corp  \t\nMoffatt HtU \t\nNlplaslng\t\npirkhill\t\nPaymaster \u00ab...\t\nPend Orellle\t\nPioneer  Oold  ..-.-.\nPnmler Gold\t\nReno\t\nSakooee\t\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 26 \u2014 Mining\nshiresold on tht Vancouver stock\nexchinge today:\nListed: Bradlan 870; Brslorne 1900:\nB R Con 1300; B R X Oold 10900;\nCirlboo 1900; MUr C & C 1100;\nMak Slccar 3800; Meridian 8600;\nMorning 8 9300; Nat S 7000; Nlcolt\n3800: Pioneer 190; Prem O 1700;\nReno 3225; Taylor B 1050; wayside\n6000.\nCurb: Atlln Pae 150; B C Nickel\n6400: Big Missouri 800: congress 500;\nDentonia 10.290; Dunwell 2000; Falrvlew 600; Oeorge Copper 200; oeorge\nR 5500; Glacier Creek 4000; orange\n400; Hald*. 1000; Hediey a 3000; Herculea 1000; Home 3900: Koot B 200;\nMlnto 3590; Noble Five 3600; pilot\n600; Porttr I 1000; Silmon 600; VI-\ndette 3200; Viking 1000; Wellington\n8000; WhIUwiter 1000.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAIL - BRITISH COLUMBIA\nManufacturers of\nLead-Zinc\u2014Cadmium Bismuth\n,    ELEPHANT Brand\nChemical Fertilizers\nAmmonium Phosphates\u2014Sulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates\u2014Complete Fertilizers\nProducers and Refiners of\nTADANAC Brand\nElectrolytic\n.01H\n\u202204'\/,\n.01\n.83\n.69\n.06%\n.77\n.33\n.31\n.87\n1.99\n12.00\n.03\n1.07\n.68\n.08\n.96\n.08\n.031,4\n3.61\n.03%\n.32\n1.50\n139.00\n37.60\n.08%\n1.92\n9.60\n.   3.07\n.29\n.69\n.39\n.66\n19.26\n1.19\n11.65\n23.76\n.64\n9.79\n6300\n30\n43.50\n.37\n.43\n3.68\n.02\n.16\n1.40\n.03\n33.00\ntl'A\n.19\n.46\nlino\n1.38\n.98\n.30\nAntonio\nTltt Oordon\nSm ,\nSherrlt\nSlicot  _^^^^^^_\nSmelter's   Gold     ..\nSouth Tlblimont .......\nStldacont\t\nSt Anthony\t\nSudbury   Bisln\t\nSylvanlte      \t\nTeck   Hughes    _..\nTowagamac   \t\nTreadwell  ... _ -.\t\nVentures\t\nwnte Amulet\t\nWayside  .....\nWhlU  Eagle       \t\nWright Hargreivei ...\nOILS\nAcme\t\nAJix\t\nA P Con       \t\nAuociited -\t\nB A OU  \t\nBlltio    ....,\t\nCilmont     _\t\nC and - Corp\t\nOhem Reeearch \t\nDalhousle\t\nHomt Oil\nHomestead O tnd O .\nIraptrlil   Oil   \t\nInter Pete  .........\nLowery\t\nMerland \t\nNordon\t\nOil Selection! \t\nOlga\t\nRoyillU \t\nINDl'STRIALS\nBeitty Brot A \t\nBeauharnou\t\nBeU  Telephone    \nruUltn \u2014\nBrew tt Dlit \t\nCan   Bread    -.\nCan Cement    ...\nCsn Car & Foundry\nCan Ind Al A\t\nCan Dredge \t\ngin Ptc Railway  \nons  Bakeries\t\nDlat Sttgrimi\t\nDominion   Stortt   ...\nFord of Cm A \t\nOoodyear   Tin   \t\nHiram Wilker \t\nImperii!  fobtcco  ....\nLobltw A \t\nMaaeey   HtrrU    ...\nStandard Paving\t\nSteel of Ctntda \t\n4.40\n.37\ndt \u2022\n366\n3 08\n.34%\n.35\n.87\n.60\nffl\n6.86\n.\u00ab\n.19\n.86\n9\n13.87V\nMi,:\n.08\n.61\n1.45\n.36\n.70\n40\nIII,\n.10\n.30\n.06\n.03\n.10\n15.00\n6\n122\n_f\ni\n3_*\n12\n10\nIS\n14\n13^,4\nni\n\"I\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAllegheny   \t\nAU   Chem   \t\nAmerican Cm\nAm  For  Pow\nAm Ma ft Fdy\nAm Smelt Ac Re\nAm   Telephone\nAm    Tobacco\nAnaconda   \t\nAtchison   ....\nAuburn   Motors\nBaldwin\nBait   Ai    Ohio\nBendlv  Avla   ....\nBeth    Steel    ... .\nCanada Dry\nCerro Dt Psico\nChea   Sc   Ohio\nChrysler  .\nCom   _   South\nCon Gu N Y\nCorn   Prod\nO Wright Pfd\nDupont\nBastmanKodan    1\nElec Pow 6c Ll\nKrle\nFord English\nFord of cmada\nFirst Nt Stores\nFrerport   Texas\nOenenl   Electric\nOenerai   Foods\nGeneral Motors\nGold   Dust\nGoodrich    .\nOrt  North   Pfd\nOrt Wst Sugar\nHowe   Sound\nHudson   Motors\npit  Copper   ....\nInternet Nickel\ninter Til 6c Tel\nm\niio>;\n34'a\niii\nKi\\\n64%\nw'4 its\n14% \u2014\nH%     -\nM\nOr\nJewel   Tet     81%\nKenn Copper  17\nKresge 88 18%\nKregger it Toll 36 V,\nLehn  it  Fink\nMick Truck\nMllwiukee   pfd 3\nMont ward    37%\nNash    Motors 14%\nNit  DaUy  Prod 18%\nN   POW   &    U 7?(\nN   T   CentrtT\nPsc Gss At El\nPackard Motors\nPenn R R \t\nPhillips Peu \t\nPure      Oil   \u2022 ...\nRadio   Corp\nRadio  Keith\nRem    Rand      8'.a\nSafeway   Stores 44'4\n8 Louis Ac 8 F \\%\nShell   Union   .... 6%\nS Ctl Edison ... 13%\nSouth   Pacific 18\nSUn Oil Of Cll 39%\nSUn OH of lnd 33%\nStan Oil of N J 40%\nSUwart wtmer 8%\nTrxll   Corp 30\nTexas  Oulf  Sul 36%\nUnder    Type 49%\nUnion   Carbide 42%\nUnion Oil ot Oil 14%\nUnited   Alrcnft 8 4\nUnited  Biscuit 22%\nUnion   Piclflc 100\nU S Cst lm Ppe 17%\nU S Rubber 16%\nU  S  SUel 32%\nVanadium   Steel     16%\nWat   Erectrrc   . . 30%\nWoolworth       .. 60\nTeUow Truck 3\n60%\n18%\n18\n138%\n37\n44%\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBell Telephone  132\nBrulllan   11%\nB C Power A   37\nB c Power B  4%\nBuilding   Producu  32\nCm Car \u00abt Foundry   e%\nStn Cement   ..   ..     6%\ntn Cement pfd  \u201e  48\nCan Oen Electric  150\nCan Gypsum            5\nCan Ind Al A \u25a0\u2022\u2022 7%\nCan Ind Al B  7%\nOPR   11%\nCan   Steamen    \u201e  2\nSockahutt  Plow -  6%\non M tt S  129%\nDom  Bridge  33\nDom Glass  93\nOen   Steel   wint  8%\nHimllton  Brldgt   -     4%\nInt Nickel _  33%\nMatsey Hirrit  _  8%\nMontreil Power  31%\nNit   Brewing \u201e.  36%\nNtt   Steel   Car     -  14\npower Corn  -   9%\nPrice Broi ..      '..:.._  3%\nQuebec Power  -  16.\nfflitwtnlgin  17%\nSteel of Cinida  30\nCIRBS\nAse'd  Breweries    11\nBrew Ac Dist 55\nB A Oil     13%\nCan   Dredge  21\ncan Malting   28%\nCsn Vlckers  1\nCsn Wineries   6\nCosgrave   Brew     8\n&lst   Seagram  13%\nsm Engineer  30\nDominion   Tar  3\nimperial OU       18\nImperial Tob Can  11\nInt Petrol   28*\nMcColl  Frontenac  13\nNoranda  33;\npage Henty   71\nBANKS\ngansdlennt .-\u2022\nommiroa    \u00ab\t\nDominion - .__,\nImperlil ,.    187\nMontreal  200\nnovi   Scotia       364%\nRoyal -  163\nToronto      ....     313\nMIHL'I.LLAMIOI'S\nDom Storei  -   14\nFord Ctn  A         31%\nOoodyeir Tin    1M%\nLtun   Sioord         66\nLauft    secord    66\nLobltw Qrooerlet    17%\nWest Can Flour     6\nWilker Brew      6%\nSILVERS LOSE\nATMONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Oct. 31 (CP).-A\ndownwtrd trend prevailed among\ntilver futures on the Canadian commodity exchange today. At tht close\nfutures were steady with prices 16\nto 35 points lower. A tottl of 43 contracts changed handi againit 74 yetterday.\nMay was the active leader with\n33 contracts traded in. It opened\nwith a bid of 34.SS and sold it t\nhigh of 94.49 only to aa\" to a low of\n54.33. The close bid of 54.30 was\ndown 36 points. March with six contracts sold up to 83.95 and then receded to a low of 53.90 to be bid at\nthe close at 53.80, down 30 points.\nDecember was also off 30 points on\na closing bid of 52.89 after selling\nat a peak of 52.99 and a low of 52.90\nwith six contracts changing hands.\nBREWERIES STOCK\nGOES ON EXCHANGE\nAssociated  Issues Will Be\nTaken  Off  Montreal\n\/       Curb Market\nMONTRIAL. Oct. 30 (CP)-Com.\nmon snd preferred stock of Auocltttd Breweries of Canidi Llmittd hai\nMtn approved for lilting on tht\nMontreal atock exchange tnd wlll\nbt called for trading on Mondiy, tht\neichinte announced today.\nTht shares, which an tttm llsttd\non thl Montreal curb market, wUI ba\nUken from thi curb Hit it tbl\ncloee of butlniH on Saturday. Tbt\nIlttlng Includes 10,697 shires of pre-\nftmd itock now ouUtandlng with\na par vtlut ot 1100 ind 231.600\nshires of common stock laiued tnd\nouUUnding with no ptr vtlue.\nThl Auociited Brewerlei ownt\noutright four brewery unlU ln Alberts ind Sukitchewan. Tha constituent compinlei are: Rtglna Brewing Co., prince Albert Brewerlei\nLtd., Lethbridge Brewerlei Ltd.. ind\nEdmonton Breweries Ltd.\nCanadian Dollar\nUp 3-16\nNEW YORK, Oct. J8 (CP).-The\nCinadlan dollar advtnced fractionally in tht foreign exchange markeU\ntoday to close at 2 3-16 per cent premium, up 3-16. Sterling closed at\n$4.97%, Yt below yesterday's close.\nThe Trench frtnc cloied unchanged\nit 6.60 cents.\nCheese Goes Up\nMONTRIAL, Oct. 36 (OP)-CheeM\nprlcw idvinced on tht Montreil\nproduce mtrket todiy.\nCheese, No. l OnUrlo whites, 8%:\ncolonds,   9%.\nButUr fresh No. 1, 19%; sollde,\n30%; prlnu, 31.\nIggi sUtdy; grided A-Ltrke, 49;\nA-medlum, 99; A-pulleU, 30; B.\n33:   C. 90.\nPotatoes unchsnged; Quebec, 40;\nN. B. Mountains 43.\nLATE RALLIES\nIEP CHICAGO\nGains Registered in\nCorn and Wheat\nLosses Cut\nCHICAOO, Oct. 36 (AP)-Vloltnt\nutt nlliu thit resulted trom flurried buying In in ovtnold mtrket\nled to gtlni todty for corn, tnd\nprictlcilly overturns thorp lotm ln\nwhett.\nCorn cloted ttrong 14-14 hlghtr,\nMa; 76Vi, whtat Irregular V4 oft\nto '; up. Miy 6!4-*4. and otu\n\u2022t 14 decline to 14 gtln.\nTORONTO GOLDS\nSllPJURTHER\nEldorado, Premier and Noranda Off; Some Cheaper\nColds Strong\nTORONTO. Oct. 26 (CP)- The\ngold stocks slipped further into the\ntrough todty in the absence of support from the industrial markeU. A\nhigher price for bar gold in London\nwas Ignored by the big producers.\nTurnover wtt under 400,000\nshares.\nEldorado cloied at 1.92, down t\ncents. Losses by 1 to 2 cents ilso\nappeared tor Bear, Nlpiising. Cutle tnd Premier. Noranda drifted\nback to $33 for a lost ot 60 centt.\nWright Hargreaves and Teck\nHughes produced tht main tctlon\nin the big gold (roup, Teck gaining\n5 and Hargreaves losing 5. Brtlorne\nlott i centt tnd Ounntr Gold 10\ncents.\nThe chetptr gold group htrbortd\nt few strong spots, Including Sylvanlte, Aahley tnd Green Stibell\nbut tht mtjority were etsy.\nNickel blower\non Toronto List\nTORONTO, 0\u00abt. 98 (CP)\u2014Tht general decline mide tubaUntlal beid-\nway on the Induitrial board ot tha\nToronto ttock exchsnge todiy, the\nHit doling with 31 louts thowlng\nagalnit 14 advance!. Volume wtu\ntht bnt of tht week, 81.000 iharw.\nWalkera up IK ntt to 38K and\nDlatlllert Betgnmi H tol3'4. Ctnada Milting slipped bick Vi tnd\nWalkervUlt \u00bb4.\nNlokel declined *Ht to 33H. Ford\n\"A\" 14 to 33 ind c. P. R. tnd\nBrulllan Fnctloni. olla wen firm.\nOUt were firm.\nRecessions of t point or mort tp-\npaired for Brewing Corporation Pfd..\nCinida Vlnegan, Ooodyiir Tin oommon, Ltura Btcordt and Moon Corporation \"A.\"\nCarloadings Up\nOTTAWA. Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014Car lo\\d-\nfngs for thc week ended Oct, 20\namounted to 86,673 can tgtlnst 61,-\n705 last year and 49.875 In 1932. Although the toUl wit an increase ot\n6318 etrs over tht previous week,\ntft\u00abr idjuitlng for the liolldty on\nOct. a thi Index number dropped\nfrom 74.36 to 73.25.\nOraln loading ln tht western division continued light for thlt\ntlmt of tht yetr tlthough It wtu\n1467 can above list yetrt.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Oct. 26 (AP) .-Stirling exchtnge Irregular tt $4.96W\nfor 60-day bills, and at *4.87Vt tor\ndemind.\nCanadian dollars: Today 2 3-16\nper cent premium; yesterday 2 ptr\ncent premium; week tgo 2 1-16 per\ncent premium.\nFrtnc 6.60 centt.\nItaly 6.87 centt.\nUruguiy 80.92 centt.\nCalgary Live Stock\nCALGARY. Oct. 26 (CP)- Receipts Thursday, 230 cattle, 101\ncalves, 1017 hogs, 145 sheep and\nlambs, chiefly the latter. Friday 49\ncattle. 2 calves, 13 hogs.\nCattle market was steady for\nquality offered. There was a fair\ncleanup of the yards for the week.\nHogs steady, selects $7.79; bacons\n$7.26, butchers $6.7S, off trucks.\nGood lambs were steady, $4.65 to\n$4.75.\nCattle, common butcher steers\n$1.60 to $2, good butcher heifers\n$2.50: common to medium $1.75 to $2.\nMedium to good butcher cows $1.25\nto $1.50: common cows $1. Good veal\ncalves $2.50 to $2.75; medium calves\n$2. Good stoeker cows and heifers\n$1.25 toJ2. >\nExchanges\nMONTRFAL. Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014British\nand foreign exchange ln relation to\nthe Canadian dollir is compiled by\nthe Roysl Bank o( Canidt, cloted\ntodiy 11 follows:\nArgentine,  peso     3646\nAuitrtlli, pound   3.8720\nAuitrli, schilling 1863\nBelgium, belga  -    .2290\nSrisJl.  mllreli      \/)T3i\nulgirlt. liv    .011\"\nChlni, Hong Kong dollin ....   .4034\nCceehoilovull, crown     .041'\ngenmark, krone    Mt;\nInltnd. finmirk    -Oiin\nFnnoe. fnno     .0646\nOtrminy, nlchimtrk    494'\nOnit Britain, pound  44671\nHolland, florin     663:\nHungary,   pengo 294_\nIndls, rupee      .8686\nItiUy. llrt :    J084*\nJiptn. yen\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (AP).\u2014Clotlng\nquotttions: Brazilian Traction $11H;\nCanadian Pacific $12%; International Nickel $23tt; British-American\nTobacco \u00a36; Central Mining 619%;\nCourtaulds 44s 6d; Dunlop Rubber\n47s 9d; Hudson Bay 24a IVid; Imperial Chemical 35s; Imperial Tobacco\n131s 9d; Mining Trust Ltd. 2s 3d;\nRand Mines \u00a36\"i; Rhodesian Anglo\nAm. Hi; Rhokana Corp. (4H:\nCrowns \u00a3121.4; Springs 18; East\nGeduld \u00a3BH; Rio Tfntos HM! Vickers 9s lOHd.\nBONDS\u2014Canadian 4 ptr cent lotn\n1953-58 \u00a3111%; British 2% per cent\nConsols \u00a382 5-16; British 3% per\ncent war lotn \u00a3104% excint.; British funding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3115%.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Oct 26 (AP)-Cop-\nptr quiet; eleetrolyUc spot tnd future, blue etgle, 9.00.\nTin itetdy; spot and nearby and\nfuture 51.15.\nIron quiet, unchtnged.\nLetd steady; ipot New York 3.70;\nEut St Louit 3.55.\nZinc barely study; Eut St. Louli\nspot ant\" future 3.82.\nAluminum 20.00 to 23.30.\nAntimony ipot 9.50.\nBar silver sttady tnd unchanged\nat 53.%.\nLondon\u2014 Copptr, ittndtrd spot\ntrn 7s 6d; futurt \u00a328 lb; electrolytic, spot \u00a331 61; future \u00a331 15s.\nTin, ipot \u00a3229 15s; future 0128\n10s.\nLead, ipot tnd futurt \u00a310 17t 6d.\nZinc, tpot pnd futurt \u00a312 Hi.\nBtr sliver steady, unchanged at\n23 13-16d.\nPRICES DOWN\nATMOKTREAL\nMONTRIAL. Oct. 36 (Cp)-Trtd-\ning on tht Montreil stock exchinge\nwu t low tbb todiy with prioes\nexhibiting a general decline. Only\na single Issue registered in advtnce.\nTht tlump followed a decline tt\nNew yorg,\nIU tint botrd lot ult since Mirch,\n1931. Jamaica Public Service ilump-\n\u2022d 30 polnU it 30. Montreal Trtm-\nwiyi it 92 wu off 1V4 polnU Conaolldated Smelten dipped 2% polnu\n\u25a0t 13914. Dominion Coll Preferred tt\n100 tnd Ftnmtnt it 62 wen both\ndown 1 point.\nNickel lott % tt 33% with the\nmtjority of othir letden ot motions.\nCockihutt plow idvinoed Va at 614.\nSalu 7378 iharei; bond! 111.700.\nEight-Cent Jump\nin Bar Gold\nMONTRIAL, Oct. 26 (OP)-Bir\ngold ln London up light ctnU at\n13417 in ounce ln ctntdltn fundi;\nI40i 3d ln British fundi. The tiled\n$05 Washington price amounted to\n$6433 ln Cinadlan.\nPAOI NINI\nRALLY GIVES\nPEG GAINS\nEarly Losses Wiped\nOut in a Swift\nReversal\nWINNIPEG , Oct 26  (CP)-In\nont of tht iwifteit rtvtrttlt ot\ntrends teen on the Wlnnlptf grtln\nexchange tn weeki, early loues wen\nreplaced by ntt glint today it whett\nfuturu pricei cloud % to % etnt\nhigher, October tt 71%, December\n65% and May 81% ctntt.\nThe trading picture changed with\nlUrtling luddennen In tnt final\nminutes u futuru thot trom tht\nsession's low poinu to clow tt tbe\nhigh for tht dty. Fifteen mlnutu\nbetore the close, October whut wu\ntrading tt 73% centa; by tht tlntl\nbell thtt option htd gtined a full\ncent to close % cent higher.\nReports of frostt In tht Argentine\nwere coupled with idvicra trom\nAustralia to the effect too much rtln\nUltra hid brought teir of crop\ndimage. Former tellert quickly\nturned buyen on receipt ot this\nnews to tend pricet shooting upward.\nIn trading 1 repetition ot the ptst\nfew days, high-grade whett wu\nagain in demand In cuh grains but\nlightness of offerings restricted tales.\nFit trade In coarse grains wu dull,\nfutures rallying ln tht latt trading.\nStill on Upgrade\nWINNIPEG, oct. 26 (CP)\u2014Ctntdltn bualneu wu itlll on the up-\nindt thli week with continued Improvement reporud from mott cities,\n\u2022wording to thi weekly nport of\ntht Canadian Credit Men'i Trust aiaoclation. Limited, Issued hen today.\nTht dry goods and Uitut Industries headed tht upswing in nearly\nall centres, thl report ihowi, with\nthi Maritime provlncu reporting\nules ln these lines well ibove those\nof the same period last yeir.\nMONTREAL SILVER PRICES\nMONTREAL, Oct. 25 (CP)-\u2014Silver futures were steady\non the Canadian commodity exchange, today. Sales were 45\ncontractu; six Dec, six March and 83 May.\nDec\t\nJan - *\u2014\u25a0\nFeb\t\nMarch \u2014\nApril\t\nMay  \t\nJune  -  \u2014\nJuly  -\u2022 \u2014\nAugust  r \u2014   \u2014\nSept  \u2014\nN-Nominal; B-Bid\nOpen\n58.00B\n53.20B\nHigh\n52.95\nLow\n52.90\n58.95      58.90\n54.55B      54.49      54.82\nCloae\n52.85B\n53.15N\n53.47N\n53.80B\n54.05N\n54.80B\n54.60N\n54.90B\n65.20N\n55.50N\nRecommend for Income and Appreciation:\nPOWER CORPORATION OF CANADA   St' m!!\n4Vk% Dtbinturei     5.70%\nDUKE PRICE POWER 6% Bondi     6.50%\nASSOCIATED T. tr T. 5V_%  D.binturet   11.70%\nACNEW SURPASS 7% Preferred    7.50%\nCOAST BREWERIES, Common     8.50%\nPREMIER COLD MINES      9.50%\nS. G. COX\u2014Financial Broker\n309 ROGERS BUILDING\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\njugpifivli. dlntr           .0Jj*i\nNtw Zetland, pound     3.88\"\nNorway, krone              Mf\nPound, riotl      1!'.\n\u25a0outh Afrlci, pound      4.857:\nSpain,   peseta        -13J\"\nSweden, krone ..        ..    2811\nSwitzerland,   franc 3198\nUnited   gtitet,   dollar,   2   3-32   per\ncent discount.\nPRINTING\nFOR\n-MINES-\nAssay Forms\nTime Cards\nPayroll Forms\nInvoice Forms\nSynoptics\nSpecial Forms\nStock Certificates\nMining Prospectus\nRuled Forms\nLetterheads\nEnvelopes\nRequisitions\n\u2014OFFICE-\nLoose Leaf Forms\nSynoptics\nLedgers, (Any Size)\nLedger Sheets\nStatements\nBillheads\nShipping Tags\nLetterheads\nEnvelopes\nRuled Forms\nVoucher Checks\nPamphlets\nWe Con Give You Immediate Service ... Let Ut Know\nYour Printing Requirements. . . We Will Submit Prices\nand Samples.\nTELEPHONE 144\n$ty Nf .son latig Nf wa\nQlommrrrial Printing Stnartmntt\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u25a0\n\u2014\nPAOI TIN -\n THI NILSON DAILY NIW*. NIUON. l.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. V. 1IM-\nBULBS\nTULIPS\u2014Our own mixture\nof many varieties.\nHYACINTHS-CROCUS\nDAFFODILS\nMaan, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nREX JARVIS\nElectrical Contractor ind\nEngineer\nRepalra ind Supplln\nFor Service Phone 844\n502 Jouphlni Street\nSNAP SHOTS\nAT NIGHT\nA roll of Supersensitive film and two\nphoto flood lights are\nall that is necessary.\nBoth of these items\nhave been greatly reduced in price. Ask us\nfor booklet, \"How to\ntake Snap Shots at\nnight.\" No charge for\nbooklet.\nAllen's Art Shoppe\nHeadquarters for Christmas\nJCards.\n*jt\\wsWiiWsmmmw>*mwi\nTRY A CLASSIFIED AD.\nTRAIL JUNIORS\nIN CITY SUNDAY\nSecond Rugby Gome\nto Be Played\nin Nelson\nThe Junior rugby gime between\nTrail and Nelson here Sunday alter-\nnoofi ii definitely on. Th*. ban on\nthe city ti being lilted Sundiy moru-\nine and the city ii open Sunday.\nThis will be the second game in\nthe Junior schedule, rfclson played\nin Trill leveral weeki ago and\nBrought home the bacon to the tune\nof 11-0. The Trail boyi were fumbling ln sickening fashion and did\nnot get their feet until towird the\nend of the game. Nelion, however,\n-. alle playing fine rugby, was play-\nin- without much practise and the\nlake city aquad should be even better lit its lecond game. The boys\nhive hid i few skirmishes during\nthe past week that might be termed\na practise. They are looking forward\nto the game.\nVI. 0. Williams has a fine bunch\nof boys at Trail, and they were undoubtedly a little overanxious on\nthe other occasion. They should do\nmuch better In Nelson. If they start\nclicking like they were at the end\nof the first game the Sunday match\nwill be well worth seeing.\nThe game start! at 2:30 nm.\nNelson will have the following\nteam on the field: Stan Horswill\ncenter; J. Proudfoot and T. Kraft,\ninsides;  Jonei and Stewirt, mid-\nSmythe's\nU-Need-a Gargle\nAl a Preventive Agilnst\nGerm Dlienei\nPHONE 1\nPreierlptlom Our Specialty\nMonth-End Specials\n\u2022Coats\u2014\nAs a month-end attraction we arc\nclearing the balance of our lower\npriced coats, both fur-trimmed and\nplain tailored, regularly priced at\n$19 and $21. ffli QC\nSPECIAL  *}l*i.\\1d\n\u2022Dresses\u2014\nAnnouncing the arrival of \u2022 new\nshipment of Sunday Nite Frocks in\nvaried styles, colors and\nmaterials. SPECIAL  ...\nPhone 151\nLook for the Neon Sign\ndl_; Sld Honwlll, Hiwklru, line\nhalves; J. Bishop and Munroe, ends;\nKlrby and McLeod, halves; Buchanan, quarterback; Moryii Graves,\nMcQuaig and Brooks, spares.\nMORE ABOUT\nBAN LIFTED\n(Contlnuad From Pigi One)\nirlct people, who have been await -\nIni  the lifting o( the  bin, will\nsgiln be welcomed by Nelson trading houses. Nelson's moving picture theater will open Mondiy.\nFriday Medical Health  officer E.\na. Blmmonds innounced tbit condltloni u regard! poliomyelltli and\ndiphtheria were much Improved. No\nfurther  cases developed for eeveral\ndayi and the few patient! now In\nnotation    are    malting   satisfactory\nprogress.\nOf aeven caaea ot diphtheria and\nfive cues of poliomyelltli treited\nit Nelson, there remain but three\ndiphtheria and two poliomyelltli\ncaaea now ln Isolation. Tbey are Pat\nand Haiel Kellog, Lawrence Oaua-\ndal, Tommy pennlniton, Reggie Newell. John McGuire and D. 3. Blaney.\nNeed of cloae cooperation between\nthe public and the medical profeulon itlll ealsta however, and ll\nli requested that al) caws of sore\nthroit be promptly reported to the\nfimlly physician.\nPure Food\nMarket\nPhone 50\nFree Delivery\nSee Our Windows for\nChoicest Meat ot Lowest Prices\nCHOICEST BOILING \u00a3<\u2022\nBEEF:  Ib 0\nPOT ROASTS: 0 Q 1A<\nChoicest: Ib. .03 IU\nPRIME RIB ROLLED: OA<.\nFRESh'vEALSTEW: tir*\n3 Ibs Ld\nCHOICE   ROASTI NC:\nTf: 1012''\nLOIN MUTTON\nCHOPS: 2 Ibs.\nVEAL STEAK:\n2 Ibs\t\nFRESH MINCED\nSUET: Ib\t\nFRESH KILLED\nFOWL: Ib. ...\nEGGS: Grade C;\n2 doz\t\n35*\n25'\n15f\n16*\n45'\nBURNS & Co., Ltd.\nSTONE\nCROCKS\nFROM 2 TO 15 GALLONS\n)UST THI THING YOU NEED\nFOR PICKLES, ECCS, ETC.\n400 PER GALLON\nLIDS EXTRA\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nWHOLESALE RETAIL\nMORE ABOOT\nAUSTRIAM\n(Continued From Fiji Oni)\nthe end of the yeir, and said \"great\nmasses of armi are smuggled across\nAustrian borders.\"\nSocialists and Communists opposition continued to harass the government.\nDEMAND PENALTY\nBELGRADE, Oct. 26 (AP).\u2014Pre*\nmier Nikola Usonovitch today promised Yugoslavia that his government\nwill never reit until the assassins of\nthe late King Alexander have bten\nbrought to Yugoslavia.\nIn the new government's first\ndeclaration before the full parliament, he pledged, ln addition, unceasing efforts to root out Yugoslav\nterrorists living In neighboring\nstatei.\n(French authorities laid the Mar*\nleilie murder gang had been harbored in Hungary, and the Little\nEntente in iti recent meeting it\nBelgrade discussed steps to end Balkan terrorism through International\naction.)\nTo the cheen and acclamations of\nthe entire house, the cabinet chieftain declared that his government\nwould carry out Alexander's last\ntestament to the letter and defend\nYugoslavia to the uttermost.\nCROATIANS THREATENED\nBUDAPEST, Oct. 26 (AP).\u2014All\nCroatian political refugees in Hungary will be placed under permanent police control, authorities announced today.\nARRE8T IN TURKEY\nISTANBUL, Oct. 26 (AP) .-Acting on information aupplied by the\nTrench police, Turkish authoritiei\ntoday arrested a man suspected of\ncomplicity in the assassination! of\nKing Alexander of Yugoslavia and\nForeign Minister Louis Barthou of\nFrance.\nThe police declined to reveal the\nman's name.\nMcDonald\nCOMPANY\nPHONE  161\nFree Delivery\nSPECIALS FOR\nSATURDAY AND\nMONDAY\nButter: Sunnybrook J Ctf\nCreamery; 2 Ibs.  \u25a0 *mO\nCheeie: Canadian; \\Oc\nLb  10\nMincemeat\u2014Argood    New\nSeason's; OQtf\n2 Ibs **<\"\ni _______________\u2014-\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014-\u2014\nPumpkin: Large tins, fancy\nquality; \\A<*\ntin   '-x\n4 Cakes Lux Toilet Soap:\n1 pkt. Rimo: OCc\nAll  for    LO\nKetchup: Heinz, 01 <\u25a0\nlarge  bottles;  each Ll\nCoffee: Chase & OQc\nSanborn's; tin Oj\nPeai: Royal City, Sieve No.\n5, 2s; OC*\n2 tins  LO\nTiuue: Purex, Large OCtf\nrolls; 3 rolls LO\nMarmalade: Empress 0O<>\n32-oz. jar; each .. OL\nSweet Potatoes: OQf\n3 Ibs LV\nApples: Extra fancy, Mcintosh; OC*\n5. Ibs LO\nbox   \u00ab?1.05\nCelery: White Crest; IP*\n2 bunches   10\nLettuce: Large IA*;*\nheads;  each   .....  lv\nTomatoes: Firm 1A0\nselected; Ib IU\n_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_B_-___r\nMORE ABOUT\nH.\n(Continued Fram Piji Oni)    *\nuld be ww not yet In a politico\nto make any statement on the\nmatter. He Intimated, howenr, he\nmight make one before tbe mass\nbuylni commission itarted hearings next week.\nThe iltuation save rise to many\nrumors tonl|ht that Mr.  Stevens\nhad declined to alter hli position\nand would ml|n from tbe chairmanship  ol  the commission  and\npossibly  from  the cabinet.  These\ncould not he verified.\nMr. Stevens could not bs reached\nand   other   ministers   declined   to\ncomment further than to Ultimata\nthat  the  members  of   tbe  cabinet\nwere not all  critical  ot  tbe  head\nof the commlulon.\nMeanwhile, work of preparing for\nthe opening of the Inquiry next\nweek went on apace. It waa evident\nthat unttl yuterday Mr. Steveni bad\nno plans for relinquishing tbe chair*\nmanshlp of the royal commlulon.\nThe booklet whleb started the\ntrouble was Issued by Mr. Stevens\ndated July 37 and 3000 copies were\nprlnftd ln English. It wai wld to\nbe the text of a ipeech delivered\nby him before tbe Study club of\nConservative members. Early ln Aug\nust copies became available ln con\nslderable numbers.\nException was taken that lt con\ntalned observations which ihould\nnot hive been made by one member\nof a commlulon before tbe Inquiry\nwas completed. Premier Bennett\nreached the decision that the book*\nlet ahould be suppressed. He gave\nInstructions accordingly and, while\nno more copies went out. thow\nalready ln circulation were reprinted and became available to thi\npublic.\nAt that time Mr. Stevens wu itlll\nln western Canada aod. before he\nnturned, eut, Mr. Bennett bad\nsailed for Europe to attend the\nLeague of Nations awembly. Accord\nIngly they never met to discuss the\nsituation until Mr. Bennett return-\ned. Secretary ot State C. H. Cahan\nwbo wm reported to have objected\nto the pamphlet, ww on a trip to\nthe orient and returned reoently.\nThis meeting preunted the first\nopportunity for cabinet meetings ln\nwhich ao many memben were present with the prime mlnllter presiding. An executive uulon ln private\non Monday afternoon will be the\nfirst sitting of tbe prloa spreads and\nmass buying commission to take up\nthe work left uncompleted by thl\nSteveni parliamentary committee.\nPublic hearings wlll begin on\nTuesday with Inquiry Into the flah*\nIng  Industry  under way.\nAdditional Information hu bMn\nsecured ln regard to the livestock\nmarketing, packing, canning, mill*\nIng and baking Industries. A report\nwlll be made on chain itore mer\nchandlilng.\nIn the by-election campaigns a\nmontb ago, Rt. Hon. Mackenale\nKing, Liberal leader, criticized Mr.\nStevens for luulng the pamphlet\nand questioned bla right to continue\nw chairman of the commlulon for\nthis reaaon. Repercussion! of the\npamphlet luue are expected to be\nhurd from Liberal members of thi\ncommlulon next wwk.\nThe commission la composed of\nfive government memben, thrw Lib\nerels and one United Farmen ot\nAlberta member. Additional to Mr.\nStevens en tha commlulon an 3.\nL. Haley (Llb.-Hantsklngs). E. J.\nToung (Lib.-Weyburn), Sam Factor,\n(Ltb.-Toronto Northwest), W. W.\nKennedy \u00abJons.-Wlnnlpe\u00bb South\nCenter), M. C. Senn (Cons.-Haldl-\nmand), Thomu Bell (Cons.-Saint\nJohn Albert), A. M. Edwards, (Cops.\nWaterloo South) and D. M. Kennedy\n(UTA-Peece Blver).\nMORE ABOUT\nOSBORNE\n(Continued From Page Oni)\nmost fortunate in securing Mr. Osborne's assistance and the benefit\nof hit wide experience, especially\nduring the period of organization\nand in the early stages of the operation of the Bank of Canada. We\nare indebted to Governor Montagu\nNorman and the directors of the\nBank of England for making available his services.\"\nThe minister' further announced\nthat a French-Canadian would\nshortly be appointed as assistant\ndeputy governor of the bank.\nMr. Osborne is 52 yean of age.\nHe was educated at Charterhouse\nand entered.the Bank of England\nat the age of 20. During his 32 years'\nconnection with the Bank of England he has had a wide and varied\nexperience.\nBefore taking over his present\nduties he organized the overseas\nand foreign departments as well as\nthe statistical department He has\nalso had European experience ln\nconnection with the stabilization ot\ncredits, organization of the bank for\ninternational settlements and other\nimportant financial matters.\nMORE ABOUT\nBRITISH PAIR\n(Continued From Page One)\ncout of Australia. On the 1388 mill\ntrip then was a possibility of their\nmeeting, other contenders in the\nEngland-to-Austrilla race, flying ln\nthe opposite direction.\nSquadron Leader Malcolm MacOngor and Henry walker, New Zealand flyers for whom anxiety had\nbeen felt for soma time, finally\nlanded at Cloncurry, about 800 milei\nfrom Darwin, Australia, on tbe direct route to tbe semi-final control\npoint here.\nAnother pair of New Zealanden.\nJ. D. Hewett and C. E. Kay took off\nfrom port Derwln for CharievUle\nonly a tew minutes after Mac-\nOregor's landing at Cloncurry, with\na chance of being fifth to finish.\nSeventh arrival on the Auatralla\ncontinent wu expected to be O. J.\nMelrow, a native of South Australia,\nwho hopped off from Batavia, Java,\nwrly today.\nSquadron Leader D. E. Stodart and\nK. O. Stodart of England wen unreported after leaving Batavia.\nBack at Singapore tbe lone Danish\nentry. Licit, m. Hansen, wu awaiting the arrival of baggage he hid\nleft behind at Alor star, the previous checking point In the Malay\nstatu\nThe Dutch plane of D. L. AsJW\nand Q. J. OeyUndorfer wu dutroyed\nby fin at Allahabad when tt collided with an automobile on thl\nairfield. No one wu inquired.\nHallowe'en Fun\nWill Be Scarce\nHtilowe'en tun li likely to bo\nscarce thli year for tho youngsters.\nTrail bM opposed tho Idea of having any organised tun, Klmberley\npolice have warned there muet be\nno pranks, and Kelson la taking no\nsteps to provide the usual frolic.\nMORE ABOUT\nMR. SINCLAIR\n(Continued From Pigi Om)\nministration would withhold support from Sinclair wu solidified today by publication ot a letter to\nthe Democratic gubernatorial can\ndldate from Oeorgi Creel, withdrawing hli bucking. Creel wu an unsuccessful candidate tor the nomination.\nIt ww established tbat Creel carried ln his pocket a copy of thla\nletter ot repudiation when he con-\nferred earlier tn the wwk with\nPresident Rooeevelt at tha white\nhouu and wltb Senator Olbba McAdoo of California.\nAt tbat time Crwl itated publicly he ww going to California to\n\"asseu\" tha situation.\nIt wu learned that form letters\nfor endorsing many Democratic candidate had been prepared at Democratic committee headquarten to\ngo out over parley's signature, to\nbe stamped ln green Ink, as the\nstory wu told, a Caltfornlan uked\nfor a letter on Sinclair and a minor\nemployee unt one befon It ww\nauthorized.\nThe recipient of the letter ln California wu reported to bave gotten ln touch with Emil Hurja, executive secretary, who ww uniformed\nof the developments. Hurja assumed\nthat Farley had wnctloned the letter since lt bon hli green Ink\nsignature and, upon requeat, said\nlt could be msde public.\nThus the comdey of erron progressed end now the Democrats hen\nare remaining u quiet w poulble.\nSAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 36 (AP)\u2014\nUpton Sinclair, Democratic candid\nate for governor of California, an\nnounoed today that hla epic or\nganlutlon would continue functioning regardleaa of the outcome of\ntbe approaching election.\nDeeplte growing prediction! of defut for Sinclair and victory for acting Oovernor Frank F. Merriam, Sinclair headquarten hen wld ln a\natatement tbat the pendulum of\npubllo feeling wu again turning to.\nward the Democratic candidate.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nHE   GYRO   HOEDOWN   AD\n(MM)\nBritish     Newspapers,     Magailnes,\nPeriodicals, WUllama Newa Stand.\n(4804)\nTURKEY DINNER \u00bbT. PAUL'S\nCHURCH MONDAY, NOV. ttb. TICKETS  80C. (4588)\nPROMPT,   COURTEOUS   SERVICE.\nPHONE 93 B.B. TAXI * BAOOAOE.\n(4S30)\nReserve   Thunday,   November  M,\nfor Kayla Mlteel, famoua Canadian\nviolinist. (4595)\nFor Rent\u20149 rm. unfura. suit*.\nWinter rates, 189. Alao turn, suites\n130 and up. Kerr Apia.        (4824)\nKeep December 7 for Dloken'i\n\"Cricket On Thi Hearth,\" by St.\nPaul'a playen. (4595)\nJunior rugby game, Trail vs. Nelson, Recrutlon grounds, Sunday,\nito p.m. (4893)\n\"TWENTY ORAND\" FINE CUT\nNOW IN 10c PACKAGES AT VALENTINE'S. (4341)\nWhen you wint i Taxi ride ln a\nBulck phone 35, Nelion Transfer\nCo.. Ltd. (4319)\nReid Dr. MCCoy'a artlclu on\nDiphtheria, ln Vancouver Sun. Oet\nyour coplw at Nelion Newi Depot.\nPhone 387. (4991)\nGENERAL ELECTRIC RADIOS hive\nthe greatest nnge of stations, short\n\u2022nd long wave. Investigate onr 193S\nmodels, wonderful values. FLEMING'S\nSTORE, FAIRVIEW. (1596)\nI. O. D. E. benefit bridge at members' homu November 1 to 13. Auction or contract. Anyone wishing to\nplay phone Mrs, W. O. Rou or Mn.\nW. S. King. (4993)\nContributions of flowen, frnlt,\nvegetable*! and other suitable decorations are requested for the HARVEST SERVICES at ST. SAVIOUR'S\nehnrch. These should be left at the\nCHURCH as early w poulble today.\n(4988)\nMORE ABOUT\nQUEEN MILL\n(Continued From Page One)\ncovered in the summer, and opened\nby a long drift, to the surface, at\nthe portal of No. 3 turnel, near\nwhich the shaft head will be, is 400\nfeet The lowest lection of the new\n\u2022haft ii being excavated first, by a\nraise from No. 7 levej to No. 5, which\nis 230 leet ibove. So far the raise\nhai gone up 150 feet When No. S\nis reached, a bulkhead will be built\nover the pit, and then tie section\nfrom No 9 to No. 3 will be excavated\nby raise, while simultaneously from\nNo. 7 a winze will be sunk 150 feet,\nfor a No. 8 level\nThe new shaft about SOO feet from\nthe old one, which goei down from\nr!o. 2, will eliminate a great deal of\nunderground haulage, as the direction in which the ore has developed\nii away from the old shaft\/ore under preient condltloni having to be\nhauled a considerable distance to\nthe shaft, and then, after being\nelevated to No. 3, hauled in the opposite direction an equal distance to\nissue from the portal. The vein is\npractic.-\/\/ vertical, and the new\nshaft is being located a little to one\nside from it.\nFrom the shaft-house to the coarse\ncrusher plant will be approximately\n400 feet and the ore cars will be propelled over a connecting surface\ntram.\nCREW NOW 54\nCamp accommodation is being increased by construction of a separate drying room for the crew, the\nspace ln the bunkhouse formerly\noccupied by the dry room being converted to rooms. This gives accommodation for about 50 men. In addition there are some cottages, while\nsome of the crew also live in Salmo.\nThe crew has been increaied recently, and now, Inclusive of staff,\nembraces 54 men.\nA representative of the General\nEngineer\/\" company of Salt Lake\nCity is designing the mill lant, and\nsupervising its construction and installation.\nSEATTLE. Oct 2\u00ab (AP)\u2014Rugby\nfootball will be introduced to Seattle sports fana in the near future.\nAt an enthusiastic meeting here\nthe Seattle Rugby Football club\nwas formed ana W. G. Coventry\nelected chairman. Memben of the\ncommittee are Frank D. JohnBOn,\nW. Allen and Robert W. Williamson.\nRaoul E. Gripenwaldt was elected\nsecretary.\nThe first practice of the new club\nwill be held at lower Woodland\npark on Sunday, November 4, starting at 10 o'clock.\nSecretary Gripenwaldt announced\nyesterday that any one Interested In\nthe rugt- club should call him.\nOne-third of all students in Initltutloni of higher education in\nSoviet Russia are women.\nMORE ABOUT\nBRITISH HOUSE\n(Continued From Page One)\nreconciled to carry on the fight\nfor independence along constitutional lines.\nAmong doihestlc business still on\nthe books for the present parliament are the betting and lotteries\nbill, the inc'tement to disaffection\nbill and the electricity supply bill.\nFor the new session might be added\nthe housing bill which will cause\nconsiderable debate, providing for\nmore vigorous measures to relieve\novercrowding, and greater expenditure! on rehousing in which it will\nbe cardinal point to extend the activities of preient public building\nsocieties.\nThe betting and lotteries bill is\nchiefly designed to curb gambling\nin connection with greyhound racing which has had a mushroom\ngrowth in England's cities. Dog\nraclnr will be restricted to 104 days\nin the year. The bill continues the\nprohibition on large lotteries but\npermits the small, sporadic lotteries.\nDoubtless there will be renewed\nclamor for approval of state lotteries.\nThe Croumore. N.C, school for\nmountain children is financed by the\nsale of old clothes.\nHEALTH\nBULLETIN\nCondition! II regards Poliomyelltli and Diphtheria have lm-\nproved very much. Ai no cases\nhave appeared In several days It\nll considered permlulble to remove ill reitrlctlom \u2022\u25a0 from\nSundiy morning, Oct. 28th.\nSchooli wlll reopen on Mondiy\nll uiuil.\nThl need for clou cooperation\nbetween the public and the profeulon itlll exists however, ind\nIt ll requested thlt all cases of\nsore throit bi reported promptly\nto the fimlly physician.\nSigned on behalf of the Medical Profeulon:\nW. O. ROSE, Pruldent;\nFRED M. AULD, Secretary.\nE. G. SIMMONDS, Medical\nOfficer of Health.\nSEATTLE TO SEE\nRUGBY FOOTBALL\nA Prevention Is Better Than a Cure\nIt Is Your Protection to\nWEAR GLEAN CLOTHES\nCLEAN CLOTHES MEAN GOOD HEALTH\nALL WORK DONE IN OUR LAUNDRY IS\nSTERILIZED\nAlio dil* to ths fact that all garments handled in our\nDry Cleaning Plant, operating only the mott modern\nand unitary equipment, are finished on Steam Presses,\nthey too are\nSTERILIZED\nSTERILIZATION by live steam is the best method ef\nkilling germs.\nWhy take a chance when you can have your flat work\nwashed and STERILIZED for only 40c per doien in\nmixed lots?\nWear Clean Clothes\nKOOTENAY STEAM\n\"ST LAUNDRY ,HS'\nand\nKootenay No-Odor Dry Cleaning Co.\nA MOPERe-lTl\nPRINKB\noi* Good\nBten.\nHf\\p?y\nMan!\nUTHEN you know lome\n** folk! are going to viiit\nyou, you ,can make lure that\nit will be an enjoyable party\nif you aend an invitation to a\ncase of our\nKootenay\nRainbow Beer\nIt's food and drink\nand sociability, and\ntt makes its appetizing appeal to\nboth rexes. Send\nfor lt\n^KOOTENAY\nBREWERIES LTD\nSmtewkMajut\nSwOllUrs\nnsxznmxr\nThis advertisement is nol published\nor displayed by the Liquor Conti 1\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia\nOvercoats\nTHAT ARE A\nCHALLENGE  TO\nFALL!\nExtfa cool days, un*\nseasonably warm days\nrain or sleet\u2014whatevti\nthe weather, wearers O\nthese Topcoats won'!\nmind it much.\nFall Topcoats anc\nOvercoats in handsoiro\ntweeds or worsteds, tsi\nlored with vigilant at\ntention to the smalles\ndetail. In rich shades o\nbrown and a full rang\nof greys.\n$18.50 to 935.00\nEMORY'g\nLimited\nTRY A CLASSIFIED AD.\nChristmas\nCards\nSee Our Display Befor\nYou Order\n50c to $1.00 Dot.\nPERSONAL CARDS\n85c to $1.35 Dos.\nThe finest selection\nin  the  city\nFLEURY'S\nPHARMAC\nThe Much Delayed\nGYRO HOEDOWN\nFriday, Nov. 2\nEAGLE HALL\nThere will be no paralysis that night.\nDig out your overalls and let's go.\nA Complete Line of\nHALLOWE'EN NOVELTIES\nIncluding\nRattles                      Everything\nCrepe Paper for\nServiettes the\nTalies, Scores,           Successful\nPriies Party\nNoisemakers\nDisplays\nMasks\nParty Favors\nGummed\nStickers\n1\u00ab\nGENUINE REXALL\nIEXT WEEK! Starts WEDNESDAY and\ncontinues to SATURDAY NICHT.\nThousands of genuine bargains. Come   .\nin and look around if you can or mail  SALE\nyour order to BOX 460.\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's Dispensing Chemists\nPhone 34 _.\u00bb\u2022\u2022.    a**,** Box 460\nX.      ~jt-l.i*AlJm}S~-.\nAnnouncingW L I \u25a0 I **- ---*\nGrand Reopening\nMonday\n# WITH A\n{ MAMMOTH DOUBLE PROGRAM\nJ LAUGHTER and DRAMA\nI WATCH MONDAY'S ANNOUNCEMENT!\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1934_10_27","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0406762","@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":"1934-10-27 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1934-10-27 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\/1.0406762"}